“The good news: We can save NOAA. The bad news: We actually have to do something about it.”
Surveyors, it’s time for a reality check. The days of quietly going about your work, trusting that the infrastructure supporting your profession will always be there, are over. If NOAA’s funding is slashed, surveying accuracy, professional credibility, and even public safety will take a direct hit.
And yet, many surveyors are still waiting for someone else to sound the alarm. No one else will. The hard truth? If surveyors don’t advocate for NOAA, it will disappear.
This isn’t just about saving an agency—it’s about defending the foundation of modern geospatial accuracy. Without NOAA, GPS corrections fail, boundary disputes skyrocket, floodplain data becomes unreliable, and private corporations swoop in to profit from the chaos.
Surveyors must take action now to educate lawmakers, the public, and even their own clients about why NOAA’s role is irreplaceable. Passivity isn’t an option—advocacy is a professional responsibility. (If you think NOAA’s loss won’t affect your work, see how privatized mapping is already reshaping the industry.)
If NOAA funding is cut, surveyors will be among the first to feel the impact. The question is: Will they act before it’s too late?
If you’re ready to push back against the threats to geospatial integrity, read about the growing movement to keep surveying data in professional hands.
Surveyors can’t afford to wait for someone else to defend NOAA. If you rely on GPS, floodplain maps, or accurate boundary data, this fight is your fight. The good news? Advocacy isn’t complicated—it just requires consistent, strategic action. Here’s how surveyors can make an immediate impact.
Collective advocacy is powerful. Organizations like the National Society of Professional Surveyors (NSPS) already have direct channels to lawmakers. If you’re not involved, now is the time.
Surveyors don’t need to act alone—professional networks amplify individual voices into real influence. (See how surveyors have successfully pushed back against geospatial deregulation before.)
Politicians respond to clear, concise, and locally relevant messaging. When engaging with legislators:
If lawmakers don’t hear from surveyors, they’ll assume NOAA is just another budget line with no real-world consequences. (See why understanding NOAA’s role is critical for policy decisions.)
The biggest challenge in saving NOAA? Most Americans have no idea what it does.
Public awareness is a force multiplier—when the public demands NOAA’s protection, lawmakers pay attention. (Learn how surveyors can shape public understanding of their work.)
Surveyors aren’t the only ones who rely on NOAA. Building alliances with engineers, urban planners, real estate professionals, and emergency responders strengthens advocacy efforts.
Talking about NOAA’s importance isn’t enough—surveyors must actively engage in shaping policy.
If you’re interested in how surveyors can stay ahead of threats to their profession, read about the battle for professional autonomy in geospatial data.
Surveyors must recognize that NOAA’s funding is far from secure. The agency faces constant political and financial threats, and without sustained advocacy, it could be weakened or dismantled. The biggest dangers? Budget politics, corporate lobbying, and widespread misunderstandings about NOAA’s role.
Surveyors can’t afford to be passive while NOAA’s funding hangs in the balance. Engagement must happen before budget decisions are finalized—not after the damage is done. (Learn how surveyors can shape policy to protect geospatial integrity.)
Here’s the thing: Surveyors aren’t powerless. When they show up, organize, and make their voices heard, they win. NOAA has been under threat before, and every single time, surveyors and their allies have fought back and won.
A proposed budget cut in 2018 nearly gutted NOAA’s CORS network. Had it passed, high-precision GPS positioning would have collapsed nationwide—not just for surveyors, but for engineers, emergency responders, and infrastructure planners.
Surveyors didn’t just sit back and hope for the best. They mobilized.
The result? Lawmakers backed off, funding was restored, and CORS remained intact. (Learn how surveyors are still fighting for professional autonomy.)
After Hurricane Katrina (2005) and Hurricane Harvey (2017), NOAA’s flood mapping program became a lifeline for rebuilding efforts. But as memory faded, politicians moved to slash its funding.
Surveyors joined forces with engineers, urban planners, and emergency response agencies to remind Congress why cutting NOAA’s flood mapping program was a disaster waiting to happen.
The funding cuts? Blocked. The flood mapping program? Preserved.
These weren’t flukes. Surveyors have the power to shape policy—if they use it. Every time NOAA funding comes under threat, it’s surveyors who understand the stakes. It’s surveyors who have to sound the alarm.
The question isn’t whether surveyors can make a difference. They already have. The real question is: Will they keep showing up when it matters?
If you’re wondering how to take action right now, start here.
Surveyors can’t afford to play defense anymore. Fighting for NOAA can’t be a one-time event—it has to be an ongoing effort. The threats to NOAA’s funding and independence won’t magically disappear after one round of advocacy. Lawmakers forget. Lobbyists don’t. If surveyors aren’t constantly making noise, someone else is—and that someone else wants NOAA’s services privatized, monetized, and sold back to you at a premium.
The solution? Surveyors must build long-term advocacy strategies that outlast budget cycles, political shifts, and corporate takeovers. Here’s how.
Most surveyors only engage with lawmakers when a direct threat to NOAA is already on the table. That’s like waiting until your house is on fire to start looking for a fire extinguisher. Advocacy should be constant, not just reactive.
Legislators don’t just listen to professionals—they listen to their voters. If surveyors educate the public on NOAA’s importance, they turn everyday citizens into advocates.
Surveyors aren’t the only ones who need NOAA—engineers, emergency responders, real estate developers, and even insurance companies rely on NOAA’s data. If surveyors coordinate with other industries, the advocacy effort becomes too big to ignore.
A coalition of industries speaking with a unified voice is exponentially more powerful than surveyors fighting this battle alone. (See how similar efforts have worked before.)
Most advocacy fails because it’s impersonal. A mass email blast? Ignored. A petition with thousands of signatures? Maybe a footnote in a legislative meeting.
But a surveyor sitting down with a lawmaker in their office? That’s powerful.
If surveyors become a familiar, respected presence in legislative offices, NOAA funding becomes a priority issue—not just another budget line item.
If surveyors don’t fight for NOAA, no one else will. The profession can either become a loud, organized force for geospatial integrity, or it can sit quietly and watch as private interests take control of the data surveyors need to do their jobs.
The tools for long-term protection are clear: Persistent engagement, public education, coalition-building, and direct outreach.
Will surveyors commit to making NOAA an untouchable institution? Or will they let it become a forgotten casualty of budget cuts and corporate takeovers?
The choice is theirs.
If you’re ready to take action, learn how surveyors can push back against geospatial privatization.
Saving NOAA isn’t just the responsibility of professional organizations or lobbying groups—it’s on every single surveyor who wants to preserve their profession’s accuracy, credibility, and independence. If surveyors don’t actively defend NOAA, no one else will.
Here’s exactly what surveyors need to do starting today:
The National Society of Professional Surveyors (NSPS), state surveying organizations, and geospatial coalitions already have advocacy channels in place. If you’re not connected to them, you’re fighting this battle alone—and that’s a losing strategy.
If surveyors stay fragmented, NOAA is an easy target. If they unite, they become a political force.
Your clients don’t realize NOAA keeps their property boundaries accurate, their flood maps reliable, and their development projects legally compliant. Make it your mission to change that.
The more people who understand what’s at stake, the harder it is for lawmakers to justify cutting NOAA’s funding.
If surveyors don’t regularly contact their representatives, lawmakers assume NOAA isn’t a priority. That has to change.
One email won’t do it. Consistency is key. Legislators remember the voices they hear from regularly.
Surveyors are the experts on NOAA’s importance, yet their voices are barely heard in public discussions. That has to change.
Silence equals complicity. If surveyors don’t tell the world why NOAA matters, private companies will rewrite the story to serve their interests. (See how surveying data is already being taken out of professional hands.)
Surveyors, understand this: Defending NOAA isn’t just about preserving a government agency—it’s about safeguarding your profession, your community, and your own livelihood.
You can stay silent and watch NOAA funding disappear, or you can mobilize, educate, and advocate to keep geospatial integrity in professional hands.
If you don’t fight for NOAA, who will?
The choice is clear: Take action now, before it's too late.
If you’re ready to step up, start here.