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A bipartisan Senate bill has been introduced to codify NOAA's Hurricane Hunters program and authorize $2.5 billion for aircraft procurement plus $45 million annually for operations and maintenance.…

Breaking analysis of what happened and who is affected.
A bipartisan Senate bill has been introduced to codify NOAA's Hurricane Hunters program and authorize $2.5 billion for aircraft procurement plus $45 million annually for operations and maintenance.…
Read full report →Segment ImpactDeep dive into how this impacts each market segment.
The bipartisan Senate bill to codify NOAA's Hurricane Hunters program represents a significant, multi-year procurement and sustainment opportunity across seven distinct market segments.…
Read full report →Action KitActionable checklists and implementation guidance.
A bipartisan Senate bill has been introduced to formally codify NOAA's Hurricane Hunters program and authorize significant investment in aircraft procurement and operations. The legislation authorizes $2.5 billion for aircraft procurement and $45 million annually for operations and maintenance,…
Read full report →A bipartisan Senate bill has been introduced to codify NOAA's Hurricane Hunters program and authorize $2.5 billion for aircraft procurement plus $45 million annually for operations and maintenance. The legislation would expand the authorized C-130J fleet from six to nine aircraft and require multi-year contracting authority, creating potential contracting opportunities for aerospace manufacturers, maintenance providers, and technology suppliers supporting NOAA's hurricane reconnaissance mission through 2030 and beyond. This represents a significant expansion of NOAA's weather reconnaissance capabilities and signals sustained federal investment in specialized aviation and meteorological systems. Contractors in aerospace manufacturing, aircraft modification, scientific instrumentation, and aviation support services should monitor this legislation closely as it moves through the Senate. The multi-year contracting authority provision could enable larger, more stable contract awards compared to annual appropriations cycles. Companies with existing NOAA relationships or capabilities in military-to-civilian aircraft conversion, sensor integration, or weather data systems should begin positioning now for the procurement phase that will follow if the bill becomes law.
Market Segments: Aerospace Manufacturing, Aircraft Maintenance and Modification, Weather and Environmental Services, Scientific Research and Development, Aviation Support Services, Meteorological Equipment, Sensor and Instrumentation Systems.
Specific NAICS Codes: 336411 (Aircraft Manufacturing), 336413 (Other Aircraft Parts and Auxiliary Equipment Manufacturing), 488190 (Other Support Activities for Air Transportation), 541330 (Engineering Services), 541712 (Research and Development in the Physical, Engineering, and Life Sciences [except Nanotechnology and Biotechnology]), 541990 (All Other Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services), 811310 (Commercial and Industrial Machinery and Equipment [except Automotive and Electronic] Repair and Maintenance), 334511 (Search, Detection, Navigation, Guidance, Aeronautical, and Nautical System and Instrument Manufacturing), 334220 (Radio and Television Broadcasting and Wireless Communications Equipment Manufacturing), 541370 (Surveying and Mapping [except Geophysical] Services).
Agencies: Department of Commerce (DOC), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
Contract Vehicles: OASIS+, GSA Multiple Award Schedule (MAS), SeaPort-NxG.
Compliance Surfaces: Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR), International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR), Export Administration Regulations (EAR), NIST 800-171, FAA Regulations. Contractors should reference the CMMC (Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification) Compliance Guide (/insights/cmmc-compliance-guide) and CUI (Controlled Unclassified Information)-Safe CRM Guide (/insights/cui-safe-crm-guide) for controlled unclassified information handling requirements that may apply to NOAA weather reconnaissance data systems.
The bill authorizes $2.5 billion for aircraft procurement and expands the authorized fleet from six to nine aircraft, but authorization does not equal appropriation. Congress must still appropriate the funds through annual or multi-year appropriations bills. The legislation's requirement for multi-year contracting authority suggests intent to enable sustained procurement, but specific solicitation timing, structure, and funding availability are pending source review as the bill moves through the legislative process and subsequent appropriations cycles.
The $2.5 billion aircraft procurement authorization and $45 million annual operations and maintenance funding suggest a mix of major aircraft acquisition contracts (potentially direct procurement or modification of C-130J platforms), ongoing maintenance and logistics support contracts, sensor and instrumentation integration contracts, and scientific research and development agreements for weather reconnaissance technology. The multi-year contracting authority provision indicates NOAA may structure larger, multi-year awards rather than annual task orders. Specific contract structures, set-aside determinations, and procurement strategies are pending source review and will depend on NOAA's acquisition planning following any enactment.
Small businesses should focus on subcontracting opportunities with prime aerospace manufacturers and systems integrators, as the aircraft procurement scale likely favors large primes. Niche capabilities in meteorological sensor integration, data systems, scientific research support, aviation maintenance services, and specialized engineering may offer direct contract or subcontract pathways. Monitor OASIS+, GSA MAS, and SeaPort-NxG for task order opportunities as NOAA structures its acquisition approach. Teaming agreements with established NOAA contractors should be explored now, before solicitation release. Specific small business set-aside determinations and subcontracting plan requirements are pending source review of actual solicitation documents.
Cabrillo Signals War Room has already detected this legislative event and delivered this briefing, demonstrating the platform's continuous monitoring of regulatory changes, policy shifts, and appropriations developments affecting federal contracting landscapes. For legislation like this NOAA Hurricane Hunters bill, the War Room tracks bill introduction, committee assignments, hearing schedules, markup sessions, floor votes, and presidential action to provide contractors with early warning of emerging opportunities months or years before solicitations appear on SAM.gov (System for Award Management).
Immediate Platform Configuration: Deploy Cabrillo Signals Intelligence Hub to establish saved searches monitoring NOAA solicitations under the ten affected NAICS codes (336411, 336413, 488190, 541330, 541712, 541990, 811310, 334511, 334220, 541370), with alert triggers for keywords "Hurricane Hunters," "C-130J," "weather reconnaissance," "meteorological aircraft," and "hurricane research." Configure the Match Engine to automatically rescore your opportunity pipeline when NOAA releases presolicitation notices or RFIs related to aircraft procurement, maintenance services, or sensor systems—this legislation fundamentally shifts NOAA's procurement landscape and existing opportunity scores may no longer reflect true win probability. Use Proposal Studio's compliance matrix templates to begin mapping FAR, ITAR, EAR, NIST 800-171, and FAA regulatory requirements that will govern these contracts, building reusable compliance content libraries now rather than during compressed proposal timelines.
Notification Chain:
First 48-Hour Playbook:
The Match Engine will continuously rescore NOAA opportunities as the legislation progresses through the Senate, committee markups occur, appropriations language emerges, and NOAA releases acquisition planning documents—ensuring your pipeline reflects real-time win probability rather than static assessments that miss legislative momentum shifts.