Who pays
Of course Accuweather doesn't charge now. It is trying to compete with the NWS. When it gets the NWS out of the picture, how much will it charge then? Maybe it will only charge if the weather's going to be bad. Maybe it will charge by making you wait through five minutes of pop-ups before providing the report you want. Maybe you'll have to provide your email address so they can send you "additional information later" -- you ASKED for it! Like the timber industry situation outlined below, the government has the stuff we want, and is currently making it available to anyone with a computer, for free. (We, the taxpayers, paid for it once already.) By restricting the NWS, this bill allows only commercial interests to benefit from the NWS information, and allows them to mark it up when they provide it to the rest of us. (Is there some commission or law, by the way, that limits what Accuweather or other firms charge? Of course they wouldn't collude with other weather firms, like ENRON did with electricity prices to boost prices. THAT would be unfair!!!!) This bill also requires the NWS to document how they are complying with the it -- adding to federal bureaucracy, paperwork, and costs. It does not sound like a good idea.