The following stations have been or are about to be discontinued due to the lack of funding. If you have questions about specific stations,
please contact the individual identified for each State. If you have questions about the US Geological Survey National Streamflow
Information Program in general please contact Mike Norris (603-226-7847; mnorris@usgs.gov) or Robert
Mason (703-648-5305; rrmason@usgs.gov).
21 Threatened stations operated by the USGS
for which the USGS does not believe full funding will be forth coming. Or a gage for which reduced funding may result in converting to stage-only.
170 Endangered stations operated by the USGS
for which the USGS has received formal communications that full funding will not be provided by
current funding agency or for which the current funding agreement has expired without an indication that a new agreement
is the works or highly likely. Or a gage for which reduced funding may result in converting to stage-only
180 Recently-discontinued stations operated by the USGS
for real-time data are no longer being made public. Or a gage for which reduced funding resulted in converting to stage-only.
371 Total Stations with Funding Issues
The primary reason for these actions is the lack of funding to support
the continued operation of the stations. Funds for these stations are from the U.S. Geological Survey and other
Federal, State, Tribal, and local agencies. For those stations that have already been discontinued, extensive efforts
were made to find another funding source; however, when no funding was made available the stations had to be
discontinued. For those stations at risk for discontinuation, the current funding source has indicated that it can no
longer fund the station. Efforts are currently underway to identify another funding source for the operation of these
stations; however, if no funding is identified, then these stations will have to be discontinued also.