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Wikipedia

Federal Emergency Management Agency

Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is an agency of the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS), initially created under President Jimmy Carter by Presidential Reorganization Plan No. 3 of 1978 and implemented by two Executive Orders on April 1, 1979.[1] The agency's primary purpose is to coordinate the response to a disaster that has occurred in the United States and that overwhelms the resources of local and state authorities. The governor of the state in which the disaster occurs must declare a state of emergency and formally request from the President that FEMA and the federal government respond to the disaster. The only exception to the state's gubernatorial declaration requirement occurs when an emergency or disaster takes place on federal property or to a federal asset—for example, the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, or the Space Shuttle Columbia in the 2003 return-flight disaster.

Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
Agency overview
FormedApril 1, 1979; 44 years ago (1979-04-01)[1]
JurisdictionUnited States Department of Homeland Security
HeadquartersWashington, D.C., U.S.
MottoHelping people before, during and after disasters[2]
Employees22,991 (Sep 2023)[3]
Annual budget$29.5 billion (FY 2023)[4]
Agency executive
Parent departmentU.S. Department of Homeland Security
Websitewww.fema.gov

While on-the-ground support of disaster recovery efforts is a major part of FEMA's charter, the agency provides state and local governments with experts in specialized fields, funding for rebuilding efforts, and relief funds for infrastructure development by directing individuals to access low-interest loans, in conjunction with the Small Business Administration. In addition to this, FEMA provides funds for response personnel training throughout the United States as part of the agency's preparedness effort.

History edit

Federal emergency management in the U.S. has existed in one form or another for over 200 years.[5]

Prior to 1930s edit

A series of devastating fires struck the port city of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, early in the 19th century. The 7th U.S. Congress passed a measure in 1803 that provided relief for Portsmouth merchants by extending the time they had for remitting tariffs on imported goods. This is widely considered the first piece of legislation passed by the federal government that provided relief after a disaster.[6]

Between 1803 and 1930, ad hoc legislation was passed more than 100 times for relief or compensation after a disaster. Examples include the waiving of duties and tariffs to the merchants of New York City after the Great Fire of New York (1835). After the collapse of the John T. Ford's Theater in June 1893, the 54th Congress passed legislation compensating those who were injured in the building.[7]

Piecemeal approach (1930s–1960s) edit

After the start of the Great Depression in 1929, President Herbert Hoover had commissioned the Reconstruction Finance Corporation in 1932.[8] The purpose of the RFC was to lend money to banks and institutions to stimulate economic activity. RFC was also responsible for dispensing federal dollars in the wake of a disaster. RFC can be considered the first organized federal disaster response agency.

The Bureau of Public Roads in 1934 was given authority to finance the reconstruction of highways and roads after a disaster. The Flood Control Act of 1944 also gave the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers authority over flood control and irrigation projects and thus played a major role in disaster recovery from flooding.[9]

Department of Housing and Urban Development (1973–1979) edit

Federal disaster relief and recovery was brought under the umbrella of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), in 1973 by Presidential Reorganization Plan No. 2 of 1973,[10] and the Federal Disaster Assistance Administration was created as an organizational unit within the department. This agency would oversee disasters until its incorporation into FEMA in 1978.[10]

Prior to implementation of Reorganization Plan No. 3 of 1978 by E.O. 12127 and E.O. 12148, many government agencies were still involved in disaster relief; in some cases, more than 100 separate agencies might be jockeying for control and jurisdiction of a disaster.[11]

Over the years, Congress increasingly extended the range of covered categories for assistance, and several presidential executive orders did the same. By enacting these various forms of legislative direction, Congress established a category for annual budgetary amounts of assistance to victims of various types of hazards or disasters, it specified the qualifications, and then it established or delegated the responsibilities to various federal and non-federal agencies.[12]

In time, this expanded array of agencies themselves underwent reorganization. One of the first such federal agencies was the Federal Civil Defense Administration, which operated within the Executive Office of the President. Functions to administer disaster relief were then given to the President himself, who delegated to the Housing and Home Finance Administration. Subsequently, a new office of the Office of Defense Mobilization was created. Then, the new Office of Defense and Civilian Mobilization, managed by the EOP; after that, the Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization, which renamed the former agency; then, the Office of Civil Defense, under the Department of Defense (DoD); the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW); the Department of Agriculture; the Office of Emergency Planning (OEmP); the Defense Civil Preparedness Agency (replacing the OCD in the DoD); the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the General Services Administration (GSA) (upon termination of the OEmP).[12]

These actions demonstrated that, during those years, the nation's domestic preparedness was addressed by several disparate legislative actions, motivated by policy and budgetary earmarking, and not by a single, unifying, comprehensive strategy to meet the nation's needs over time.[13] Then, in 1978 an effort was made to consolidate the several singular functions; FEMA was created to house civil defense and disaster preparedness under one roof. This was a very controversial decision.[12]

FEMA as an independent agency (1979–2003) edit

 
The FEMA seal from 1981 to 2003
 
The FEMA flag from 1981 to 2003 and 2022-present

FEMA was established under the 1978 Reorganization Plan No. 3 and was activated by President Jimmy Carter in an Executive Order on April 1, 1979.

In July, Carter signed Executive Order 12148 shifting disaster relief efforts to the new federal-level agency. FEMA absorbed the Federal Insurance Administration, the National Fire Prevention and Control Administration, the National Weather Service Community Preparedness Program, the Federal Preparedness Agency of the General Services Administration and the Federal Disaster Assistance Administration activities from HUD. FEMA was also given the responsibility for overseeing the nation's Civil Defense, a function which had previously been performed by the Department of Defense's Defense Civil Preparedness Agency.

One of the disasters FEMA responded to was the dumping of toxic waste into Love Canal in Niagara Falls, New York, in the late 1970s. FEMA also responded to the Three Mile Island nuclear accident where the nuclear-generating station suffered a partial core meltdown. These disasters, while showing the agency could function properly, also uncovered some inefficiencies.[citation needed]

In 1993, President Bill Clinton appointed James Lee Witt as FEMA Director. In 1996, the agency was elevated to cabinet rank;[14] this was not continued by President George W. Bush.[15] Witt initiated reforms that would help to streamline the disaster recovery and mitigation process. The end of the Cold War also allowed the agency's resources to be turned away from civil defense to natural disaster preparedness.[11]

After FEMA's creation through reorganization and executive orders, Congress continued to expand FEMA's authority by assigning responsibilities to it. Those responsibilities include dam safety under the National Dam Safety Program Act; disaster assistance under the Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act; earthquake hazards reduction under the Earthquake Hazards Reduction Act of 1977 and further expanded by Executive Order 12699, regarding safety requirements for federal buildings and Executive Order 12941, concerning the need for cost estimates to seismically retrofit federal buildings; emergency food and shelter under the Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act of 1987; hazardous materials, under the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act.

In addition, FEMA received authority for counterterrorism through the Nunn-Lugar-Domenici amendment under the Weapons of Mass Destruction Act of 1996, which was a response to the recognized vulnerabilities of the U.S. after the sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway in 1995.[13]

Congress funded FEMA through a combination of regular appropriations and emergency funding in response to events.[16]

FEMA under Department of Homeland Security (2003–present) edit

 
President George W. Bush signs the Homeland Security Appropriations Act of 2004.

Following the attacks of September 11, 2001, Congress passed the Homeland Security Act of 2002, which created the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to better coordinate among the different federal agencies that deal with law enforcement, disaster preparedness and recovery, border protection and civil defense. FEMA was absorbed into DHS effective March 1, 2003.[17] As a result, FEMA became part of the Emergency Preparedness and Response Directorate of Department of Homeland Security, employing more than 2,600 full-time employees. It became Federal Emergency Management Agency again on March 31, 2007, but remained in DHS.[18]

President Bush appointed Michael D. Brown as FEMA's director in January 2003. Brown warned in September 2003 that FEMA's absorption into DHS would make a mockery of FEMA's new motto, "A Nation Prepared", and would "fundamentally sever FEMA from its core functions", "shatter agency morale" and "break longstanding, effective and tested relationships with states and first responder stakeholders". The inevitable result of the reorganization of 2003, warned Brown, would be "an ineffective and uncoordinated response" to a terrorist attack or a natural disaster.[19]

Hurricane Katrina in 2005 demonstrated that the vision of further unification of functions and another reorganization could not address the problems FEMA had previously faced. The "Final Report of the Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina", released February 15, 2006, by the U.S. Government Printing Office, revealed that federal funding to states for "all hazards" disaster preparedness needs was not awarded unless the local agencies made the purposes for the funding a "just terrorism" function.[20] Emergency management professionals testified that funds for preparedness for natural hazards were given less priority than preparations for counter-terrorism measures. Testimony also expressed the opinion that the mission to mitigate vulnerability and prepare for natural hazard disasters before they occurred had been separated from disaster preparedness functions, making the nation more vulnerable to known hazards, like hurricanes.[21]

After allegations of mismanagement during Hurricane Katrina, the National Disaster Medical System (NDMS) was transferred from the Department of Homeland Security to the Department of Health and Human Services by the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act, signed by President George W. Bush on December 18, 2006.

In fall 2008, FEMA took over coordination of the Ready Campaign, the national public service advertising campaign in collaboration with the Ad Council, to educate and empower Americans to prepare for and respond to emergencies including natural and man-made disasters. The Ready Campaign and its Spanish-language version Listo asks individuals to do three things: build an emergency supply kit,[22] make a family emergency plan[23] and be informed about the different types of emergencies that can occur and how to respond.[24] The campaign messages have been promoted through television, radio, print, outdoor and web PSAs,[25] as well as brochures, toll-free phone lines and the English and Spanish language websites.

The Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act of 2006 added a Surge Capacity Force, which allows the Department of Homeland Security to supplement FEMA employees with additional personnel from various federal departments in the event the agency is overwhelmed. The Force has been activated for Hurricane Sandy, Hurricane Harvey, Hurricane Irma, Hurricane Maria, and the 2017 California wildfires.[26]

The Stafford Act was amended by the Pets Evacuation and Transportation Standards Act (PETS Act) in 2006, and the Disaster Recovery Reform Act (DRRA) in 2018.

FEMA was put in charge of procuring medical supplies during the COVID-19 pandemic.[27]

According to a tweet posted on April 12, 2022, by Deanne Criswell, the FEMA flag, used between 1981 and 2003, was reintroduced.

Organization edit

During the debate of the Homeland Security Act of 2002, some called for FEMA to remain as an independent agency. Following the failed response to Hurricane Katrina, critics called for FEMA to be removed from the Department of Homeland Security.[28] Today FEMA exists as a major agency of the Department of Homeland Security. The Administrator for Federal Emergency Management reports directly to the Secretary of Homeland Security. In March 2003, FEMA joined 22 other federal agencies, programs and offices in becoming the Department of Homeland Security. The new department, headed by Secretary Tom Ridge, brought a coordinated approach to national security from emergencies and disasters – both natural and man-made.

FEMA manages the National Flood Insurance Program. Other programs FEMA previously administered have since been internalized or shifted under direct DHS control.

FEMA is also home to the National Continuity Programs Directorate (formerly the Office of National Security Coordination). ONSC was responsible for developing, exercising, and validating agency-wide continuity of government plans as well as overseeing and maintaining continuity readiness including the Mount Weather Emergency Operations Center. ONSC also coordinated the continuing efforts of other Federal Executive Agencies.

FEMA began administering the Center for Domestic Preparedness in 2007.

Budget edit

In 2018, FEMA had an annual budget of $18 billion[29] that is used and distributed in different states according to the emergencies that occur in each one. An annual list of the use of these funds is disclosed at the end of the year on FEMA's website.[30][31][32][33]

Regions edit

 
FEMA Regions map grouped by states and number
  • Regional map[34]
    • Region 1, Boston, MA – Serving CT, MA, ME, NH, RI, VT
    • Region 2, New York, NY Serving NJ, NY, PR, USVI
    • Region 3, Philadelphia, PA Serving DC, DE, MD, PA, VA, WV
    • Region 4, Atlanta, GA Serving AL, FL, GA, KY, MS, NC, SC, TN
    • Region 5, Chicago, IL Serving IL, IN, MI, MN, OH, WI
    • Region 6, Denton, TX Serving AR, LA, NM, OK, TX
    • Region 7, Kansas City, MO Serving IA, KS, MO, NE
    • Region 8, Denver, CO Serving CO, MT, ND, SD, UT, WY
    • Region 9, Oakland, CA Serving AZ, CA, HI, NV, GU, AS, CNMI, RMI, FM
    • Region 10, Bothell, WA Serving AK, ID, OR, WA

Pre-disaster mitigation programs edit

FEMA's Mitigation Directorate[35] is responsible for programs that take action before a disaster, in order to identify risks and reduce injuries, loss of property, and recovery time.[36] The agency has major analysis programs for floods, hurricanes and tropical storms, dams, and earthquakes.[36][37]

FEMA works to ensure affordable flood insurance is available to homeowners in flood plains, through the National Flood Insurance Program, and also works to enforce no-build zones in known flood plains and relocate or elevate some at-risk structures.[38]

Pre-Disaster Mitigation grants are available to acquire property for conversion to open space, retrofit existing buildings, construct tornado and storm shelters, manage vegetation for erosion and fire control, and small flood control projects.[39] Critics say this program is underperforming because it is starved for funding compared to disaster response and recovery, the process of applying for a buyout is unreasonably slow, and is wasting taxpayer dollars because the National Flood Insurance Program has paid to reconstruct some properties up to 18 times.[40] 1% of NFIP-insured properties are responsible for more than one quarter of the money the program has paid out.[41]

The Hazard Mitigation Grant Program funds rebuilding after a current disaster in a way that reduces the impact of a similar future disaster.[42]

Response capabilities edit

FEMA's emergency response is based on small, decentralized teams trained in such areas as the National Disaster Medical System (NDMS), Urban Search and Rescue (USAR), Disaster Mortuary Operations Response Team (DMORT), Disaster Medical Assistance Team (DMAT), and Mobile Emergency Response Support (MERS).

National Response Coordination Center (NRCC) edit

FEMA's National Response Coordination Center (NRCC) is a multiagency center located at FEMA HQ that coordinates the overall Federal support for major disasters and emergencies, including catastrophic incidents in support of operations at the regional level. The FEMA Administrator,[43] or his or her delegate, activates the NRCC in anticipation of, or in response to, an incident by activating the NRCC staff, which includes FEMA personnel, the appropriate Emergency Support Functions, and other appropriate personnel (including nongovernmental organization and private sector representatives). During the initial stages of a response, FEMA will, as part of the whole community, focus on projected, potential, or escalating critical incident activities. The NRCC coordinates with the affected region(s) and provides needed resources and policy guidance in support of incident-level operations. The NRCC staff specifically provides emergency management coordination, planning, resource deployment, and collects and disseminates incident information as it builds and maintains situational awareness—all at the national-level.[44] FEMA maintains the NRCC as a functional component of the NOC for incident support operations.[45][46]

An example of NRCC activity is the coordination of emergency management activities that took place in connection with the 2013 Colorado floods.[47]

Disaster Medical Assistance Teams edit

 
DMAT team deployed for Hurricane Ike in Texas

Disaster Medical Assistance Teams (DMAT) provide medical care at disasters and are typically made up of doctors and paramedics. There are also National Nursing Response Teams (NNRT), National Pharmacy Response Teams (NPRT) and Veterinary Medical Assistance Teams (VMAT). Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Teams (DMORT) provide mortuary and forensic services. National Medical Response Teams (NMRT) are equipped to decontaminate victims of chemical and biological agents.

Urban Search and Rescue (US&R) edit

The Urban Search and Rescue Task Forces perform rescue of victims from structural collapses, confined spaces, and other disasters, for example, mine collapses and earthquakes.

Mobile Emergency Response Support (MERS) edit

 
Presidential mobile phone alert for national emergencies
 
FEMA vehicle provides communications support after a major hurricane.

These teams provide communications support to local public safety. For instance, they may operate a truck with satellite uplink, computers, telephone, and power generation at a staging area near a disaster so that the responders can communicate with the outside world. There are also Mobile Air Transportable Telecommunications System (MATTS) assets which can be airlifted in. Also, portable cell phone towers can be erected to allow local responders to access telephone systems.

The first test of the national wireless emergency system by FEMA was broadcast to an estimated 225 million electronic devices at 14:18 EDT on October 3, 2018. The text message was accompanied by a flashing warning sign and warning tone. The president may direct FEMA to broadcast such alerts only for national emergencies or if the public is in danger. The facility may not be used for personal messages from the president. Mobile phone owners can not opt out of these warnings.[48][49]

Preparedness for nuclear incidents edit

On August 1, 2008, FEMA released "Planning Guidance for Protection and Recovery Following Radiological Dispersal Device (RDD) and Improvised Nuclear Device (IND) incidents",[50] which provide an action guide in the case of radioactive contamination. This guidance is specified as action guide for Radiological Dispersal Devices (RDD) and Improvised Nuclear Devices (IND) involving high levels of radiation. According to the Federation of American Scientists, during the Cold War FEMA prepared assessments of the likely consequences of a full-scale Soviet nuclear attack on the United States for use in planning mitigation and recovery efforts.[51] FEMA also prepared plans for evacuating major U.S. cities in response to a nuclear war, dubbed CRP-2B.[52]

Training edit

FEMA offers a large number of training classes, either at its own centers, through programs at the state level, in cooperation with colleges and universities, or online. The latter are free classes available to anyone, although only those with U.S. residency or work eligibility can take the final examinations. More information is available on the FEMA website under the "Emergency Personnel" and "Training" subheadings. Other emergency response information for citizens is also available at its website.

FEMA runs the Incident Workforce Academy, a two-week emergency preparedness training program for FEMA employees. The first class of the academy graduated in early 2014.[53]

The Training and Education Division within FEMA's National Integration Center directly funds training for responders and provides guidance on training-related expenditures under FEMA's grant programs. Information on designing effective training for first responders is available from the Training and Education Division. Emergency managers and other interested members of the public can take independent study courses for certification at FEMA's online Emergency Management Institute.

Emergency Management Institute training and certifications edit

EMI offers credentials and training opportunities for United States Citizens. Note that students do not have to be employed by FEMA or be a federal employee for some of the programs. However, they do need to create a FEMA SID to take the final exams[54]

EMI maintains a strategic partnership with Frederick Community College. FCC has contracted with the Emergency Management Institute to provide college credit for the Independent Study Program (ISP). FCC offers eight specialized Letters of Recognition, an Undergraduate Certificate, and an Associate of Applied Science degree in Emergency Management.[55]

FEMA Corps edit

FEMA Corps, who range in age from 18 to 26 years old, is a cadre dedicated to disaster response and recovery. It is a new partnership between The Corporation for National and Community Service's AmeriCorps NCCC (National Civilian Community Corps) and FEMA.[56] The Corps, described as a "dedicated, trained, and reliable disaster workforce", works full-time for 10 months on federal disaster response, recovery, mitigation, and preparedness efforts across numerous sections. Over 150 members of the inaugural FEMA Corps class graduated in June 2013, at the Southern Region AmeriCorps NCCC campus in Vicksburg, Mississippi. The Pacific Region campus in Sacramento, California and the Southern Region campus both support a FEMA Corps class annually.[57] The Corps work on teams of 6 to 10 people and follow the traditional NCCC model of living together and traveling together. In addition to working with FEMA, Corps members must perform AmeriCorps responsibilities such as Physical Training three times a week, National Days of Service, and Individual Service Projects in communities throughout the United States. Members receive $6.10 a day for food ($15 a day when deployed to on disaster project) and a living stipend of approximately $3,500 over 10 months (Approximately $175 every two weeks). Team leaders receive a larger stipend of approximately $10,000 over the course of 10 months (Approximately $500 every two weeks). The Segal AmeriCorps education award is distributed to Corps members who successfully finish their term of service, completing 1,700 or more total hours. The amount of a full-time Segal AmeriCorps Education Award is equivalent to the maximum value of the Pell Grant for the fiscal year in which the term of national service is approved, and can therefore change between different classes.[58][59]

 
FEMA Corps Pacific Region Blue Unit

Donations management edit

FEMA has led a Public-Private Partnership in creating a National Donations Management Program making it easier for corporations or individuals not previously engaged to make offers of free assistance to States and the Federal Government in times of disaster. The program is a partnership among FEMA, relief agencies, corporations/corporate associations and participating state governments.[citation needed]

Criticisms edit

Hurricane Andrew edit

In August 1992, Hurricane Andrew struck the Florida and Louisiana coasts with 165 mph (265 km/h) sustained winds. FEMA was widely criticized for its response to Andrew, summed up by the famous exclamation, "Where in the hell is the cavalry on this one?" by Kate Hale, emergency management director for Miami-Dade County, Florida. FEMA and the federal government at large were accused of not responding fast enough to house, feed and sustain the approximately 250,000 people left homeless in the affected areas. Within five days the federal government and neighboring states had dispatched 20,000 National Guard and active duty troops to South Dade County to set up temporary housing. This event and FEMA's performance was reviewed by the National Academy of Public Administration in its February 1993 report "Coping With Catastrophe" which identified several basic paradigms in Emergency Management and FEMA administration that were causes of the failed response.

FEMA had previously been criticized for its response to Hurricane Hugo, which hit South Carolina in September 1989, and many of the same issues that plagued the agency during Hurricane Andrew were also evident during the response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Additionally, upon incorporation into DHS, FEMA was legally dissolved and a new Emergency Preparedness and Response Directorate was established in DHS to replace it. Following enactment of the Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act of 2006 FEMA was reestablished as an entity within DHS, on March 31, 2007.

Southern Florida hurricanes edit

South Florida newspaper Sun-Sentinel has an extensive list of documented criticisms of FEMA during the four hurricanes that hit the region in 2004.[60] Some of the criticisms include:

  • When Hurricane Frances hit South Florida on Labor Day weekend (over 100 miles north of Miami-Dade County), 9,800 Miami-Dade applicants were approved by FEMA for $21 million in storm claims for new furniture; clothes; thousands of new televisions, microwaves and refrigerators; cars; dental bills; and a funeral even though the Medical Examiner recorded no deaths from Frances. A U.S. Senate committee and the inspector general of the Department of Homeland Security found that FEMA inappropriately declared Miami-Dade county a disaster area and then awarded millions, often without verifying storm damage or a need for assistance.[61][62]
  • FEMA used hurricane aid money to pay funeral expenses for at least 203 Floridians whose deaths were not caused by the 2004 hurricanes, the state's coroners have concluded. Ten of the people whose funerals were paid for were not in Florida at the time of their deaths.[63]

The rising sea levels, global temperatures, and increase of flooding and severe storms has called for a change within the procedure of flood insurance. The communities that are directly impacted by these changes include coastal communities and waterfront homes. The procedural design of flood insurance is done through FEMA’s (Federal Emergency Management Agency) National Flood Insurance Program. Previously the Insurance Program created in 1968 was constructed around the "100-year floodplain" which is the "area that would be inundated by the 100-year flood, better thought of as an area that has a one percent or greater chance of experiencing a flood in any single year",[64] and large subsidies for coastal homes, especially in Florida. However, in 2019, major changes were made, and the new program called Risk Rating 2.0 was introduced, which prices a house on its individual flood risk.[65] It will account for the distance one's house is from a flood source, the types and frequency of flooding, and characteristics of the cost to rebuild. This new program will greatly impact states like Florida that have intense risk of hurricanes and sea level rise. Through the initial program, the homes on the coast were mostly being subsidized at the cost of the homeowners more inland, and more likely lower-income and people of color.[citation needed] However, as previously stated, with Risk Rating 2.0, homeowners in higher risk areas of greater flooding will be paying for that risk through insurance, and with that may come with re-evaluating the longevity of one's place on the coasts of Florida. On the other hand, with FEMA's program as a national program, we[who?] see different impacts in places like New England.[66] It has been indicated that states like Maine will be greatly impacted positively by the new program. The bays, inlets, and coves are proved to be good protective measures for most waterfront properties. In addition to Maine, states like Iowa and Nebraska will see impacts to their flood insurance policies. It is stated that almost 50% of Nebraskans and 40% of Iowans will see a decrease in their policies.[67] Overall we[who?] see many different types of complications to this new set-up, such as retirees on fixed incomes, long-term mortgages, and depreciation of household value. As this program is relatively new, impacts of the program will continue to be seen in the following years.

Hurricane Katrina edit

 
Evacuees taking shelter at the Astrodome in Houston, Texas

FEMA received intense criticism for its response to the Hurricane Katrina disaster in August 2005. FEMA had pre-positioned response personnel in the Gulf Coast region. However, many could not render direct assistance and were able to report only on the dire situation along the Gulf Coast, especially from New Orleans. Within three days, a large contingent of National Guard and active duty troops were deployed to the region.

The enormous number of evacuees simply overwhelmed rescue personnel. The situation was compounded by flood waters in the city that hampered transportation and poor communication among the federal government, state, and local entities. FEMA was widely criticized for what is seen as a slow initial response to the disaster and an inability to effectively manage, care for, and move those who were trying to leave the city.

Then-FEMA Director Michael D. Brown was criticized personally for a slow response and an apparent disconnection with the situation. Brown would eventually be relieved of command of the Katrina disaster and soon thereafter resigned.

According to the U.S. House of Representatives Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina:[68]

  • "The Secretary Department of Homeland Security should have designated the Principal Federal Official on Saturday, two days prior to landfall, from the roster of PFOs who had successfully completed the required training, unlike then FEMA Director Michael Brown. Considerable confusion was caused by the Secretary's PFO decisions."
  • "DHS and FEMA lacked adequate trained and experienced staff for the Katrina response."
  • "The readiness of FEMA's national emergency response teams was inadequate and reduced the effectiveness of the federal response."
  • "Long-standing weaknesses and the magnitude of the disaster overwhelmed FEMA's ability to provide emergency shelter and temporary housing."
  • "FEMA logistics and contracting systems did not support a targeted, massive, and sustained provision of commodities."
  • "Before Katrina, FEMA suffered from a lack of sufficiently trained procurement professionals."
 
A DMAT member assures a rescued man that the trip to the airport will be safe.

Other failings were also noted. The Committee devoted an entire section of the report to listing the actions of FEMA.[69] Their conclusion was:

For years emergency management professionals have been warning that FEMA's preparedness has eroded. Many believe this erosion is a result of the separation of the preparedness function from FEMA, the drain of long-term professional staff along with their institutional knowledge and expertise, and the inadequate readiness of FEMA's national emergency response teams. The combination of these staffing, training, and organizational structures made FEMA's inadequate performance in the face of a disaster the size of Katrina all but inevitable.[69]

Pursuant to a temporary restraining order issued by Hon. Stanwood R. Duval, United States District Court Judge, Eastern District of Louisiana as a result of the McWaters v. FEMA class-action, February 7, 2006, was set as the deadline for the official end of any further coverage of temporary housing costs for Katrina victims.[70][71]

After the February 7 deadline, Katrina victims were left to their own devices either to find permanent housing for the long term or to continue in social welfare programs set up by other organizations. There were many Katrina evacuees living in temporary shelters or trailer parks set up by FEMA and other relief organizations in the first months after the disaster hit, but much more were still unable to find housing.

In July 2007, ice that had been ordered for Katrina victims but had never been used and kept in storage facilities, at a cost of $12.5 million, was melted down.[72]

In June 2008, a CNN investigation found that FEMA gave away about $85 million in household goods meant for Hurricane Katrina victims to 16 other states.[73]

Buffalo snowstorm edit

FEMA came under attack for their response to the October Surprise Storm in Buffalo, New York, on October 13, 2006. As FEMA legally cannot interfere with state business unless asked, FEMA responded that as per procedure, the governor of the state of New York, George Pataki, had not asked for FEMA's assistance. FEMA Headquarters had been in constant contact with State congressional offices providing them with the latest information available. Claims state that FEMA officials did not arrive until October 16, three days after the storm hit. The snowstorm damage by this time included downed power wires, downed trees, and caused structural damage to homes and businesses.[74]

Dumas, Arkansas, tornadoes edit

Many people of Dumas, Arkansas, especially victims of tornadoes on February 24, 2007, criticized FEMA's response in not supplying the number of new trailers they needed, and sending only a set of used trailers, lower than the needed quantity. Following the storm, U.S Senator Mark Pryor had criticized FEMA's response to the recovery and cleanup efforts.[75]

California wildfires edit

FEMA came under intense criticism when it was revealed that a press conference on the October 2007 California wildfires was staged. Deputy Administrator Harvey E. Johnson was answering questions from FEMA employees who were posing as reporters. Many of these questions were "softball" questions (i.e., "Are you happy with FEMA's response so far?"), intentionally asked in a way that would evoke a positive response giving the impression that FEMA was doing everything right. In this way, any scrutiny from real reporters (many of whom were given only a 15-minute notice) would have been avoided. Fox News, MSNBC, and other media outlets aired the staged press briefing live.[76] Real reporters were notified only 15 minutes in advance and were able to call into only a conference line, which was set to "listen-only" mode. The only people there were primarily FEMA public affairs employees.[77]

Hurricane Maria edit

In September 2017, Hurricane Maria struck Dominica and Puerto Rico with 175 mph (280 km/h) sustained winds. Maria was the fifth-strongest storm to ever strike the United States with stronger winds than those brought by Irma and similar rain brought to Houston by Hurricane Harvey.[78] Despite FEMA's preemptive efforts in Puerto Rico, the island was still devastated beyond expectation. The agency had prepared some provisions for displaced residents before the storm struck, including: roughly 124 FEMA staff members being positioned on the island, food, water, and bedding.[78] However, people reported the FEMA food packages were unhealthy snacks such as the confectionery Skittles.[79] FEMA was widely criticized for its response to Maria, as the island quickly fell into a humanitarian crisis.[80][81]

The island also experienced a massive loss of power as a result of flood and wind damage sustained during Maria. In the beginning of October 2017, Lieutenant General Todd Semonite, chief and commanding general of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, explained the extent of and necessity of aid for this power crisis. Semonite described some specifics of the outage to reporters, explaining that the island requires "2,700 megawatts of electricity to operate and at last count had 376 megawatts available." This translates to about 14 percent of the grid being functional.[82]

FEMA Administrator William "Brock" Long told reporters in a briefing following the storm that Puerto Rico politics had hindered the ability of the federal government to send aid. He explained that political divisions had prevented unity for leaders in this time of crisis, describing that their issue was "even worse" than the mainland United States' issue between Democrats and Republicans. Residents, in some cases, were required to fill out paperwork in English rather than Spanish with little to no hope of receiving the aid they had requested.[82]

Brigadier General Jose Reyes of the Puerto Rico National Guard discussed a strategy to quicken the arrival of resources via the Port of Ponce, located on the southern coast of Puerto Rico.[83] Reyes also attributed the delay in these services to the unprecedented series of storms that demanded attention from the agency within a short period of time. Regarding this, General Reyes told reporters " We were not even getting back on our feet after Irma, then suddenly we got hit by Maria." He also addressed the disparities between aid sent to mainland disaster-stricken areas and Puerto Rico, explaining that in areas such as Florida and Texas, who had recently struck with similar damages, transportation of resources is relatively simpler. This is because they are able to utilize infrastructure to transport aid. Transporting similar resources to Puerto Rico has proved to be more difficult, as they must travel across the ocean, either in aircraft or in ships.[82] Long also mentioned that Puerto Rico's international airport was not able to operate at full capacity, which posed an additional obstacle for federal aid imports.

Long resigned on March 8, 2019, following criticism of his handling of Hurricane Maria and an ethical complaint over misuse of official vehicles, costing $151,000.[84] Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said that Long would have to reimburse the government for the cost of the vehicles and staff involved in the trips, many of which were between Washington and his home in North Carolina. Nielsen submitted her own resignation as Secretary of Homeland Security less than a month later on April 7, 2019.[85]

Hurricane Harvey edit

Hurricane Harvey made landfall in late August 2017 as a Category 4 Hurricane with 130 mph (215 km/h) sustained winds. The Hurricane predominantly affected southeast Texas; however, its effects were felt as far as Arkansas, Kentucky, and Tennessee in the form of flash flooding.[86] Harvey slowly progressed around southeast Texas, where it produced heavy precipitation over the region. This caused heavy flooding in residential areas such as Colorado City, Liberty, and Montgomery, Texas.[86][87]

Harvey was the first of a series of hurricanes and tropical storms to affect the United States between August and September 2017. The effects of these storms included extreme flooding, damage from high speed winds, structural damage, and humanitarian concerns regarding the availability of basic necessities such as food, water, and shelter.[88][89]

Some recipients were forced to wait up to two months before receiving aid from FEMA, as technical complications held up both their application for it and the processing of said applications. Some residents were denied Federal Aid and have to dispute their denial in efforts to rebuild and repair properties without taking a considerably large financial loss.

Coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) edit

In early April 2020, the Los Angeles Times reported that the Trump administration was "quietly" seizing medical supplies from states and hospitals, citing hospital and clinic officials catering to seven states. These officials stated that the administration has not informed them how they can otherwise get access to their ordered supplies. A FEMA representative said the agency, working with the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Defense, has developed a system for identifying needed supplies from vendors and distributing them equitably. The federal government also seized an order for thermometers meant for Florida, an order for masks from the Texas Association of Community Health Centers, and an order for testing supplies meant for the PeaceHealth hospital system in Washington, Oregon and Alaska.[90]

On April 24, San Francisco Mayor London Breed said "We've had situations when things we've ordered that have gone through Customs were confiscated by FEMA to be diverted to other locations. We know everyone is dealing with a serious challenge. Through Customs, we've had situations where those items have been taken and put out on the market for the highest bidder, putting cities against cities and states against states."[91]

Massachusetts Secretary of Health and Human Services Marylou Sudders cited a shipment of 3 million masks that the state had negotiated to buy from BJ's Wholesale Club, until the federal government impounded them from the Port of New York and New Jersey on March 18. A further order from MSC Industrial Supply for 400 masks to be delivered on March 20 was also claimed by the federal government using force majeure.[92] Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker reached out to the New England Patriots professional American football team, who used the team plane "AirKraft" to bring approximately 1.2 million N95 masks from China to Boston.[93]

In late April, reports of the actions taken by FEMA in Massachusetts prompted Maryland Governor Larry Hogan to deploy the Maryland National Guard and task them with guarding a shipment of 500,000 COVID-19 testing kits purchased from South Korean company LabGenomics by the Government of Maryland.[94][95][96] The tests were subsequently held in an "undisclosed location," under the continued supervision of the Maryland National Guard.

The state of Colorado was set to purchase 500 ventilators before Federal Emergency Management Agency swooped in and bought them first. President Trump announced on Twitter that the federal government would be sending 100 ventilators to Colorado at the request of Senator Cory Gardner.[97] The incident caused Colorado Governor Polis to make future supply purchases in secret.[98]

In late April, 5,000,000 masks meant for hospitals of the Veterans Health Administration were seized by FEMA and redirected to the Strategic National Stockpile, stated Richard Stone, Executive in Charge, Veterans Health Administration.[99] After an appeal from Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie to FEMA, the agency provided the VA with 500,000 masks.[99]

Federalism and FEMA edit

The costs of a disaster to states and localities can escalate quickly. Federal assistance becomes fully available with the approval of the President and at the request of the governor. Public help for governments to repair facilities is 75% federally funded with local governments responsible for covering the rest (unless the state grants aid or loans). FEMA does not compensate for buildings that have been improperly maintained by the state or local government nor does it pay to upgrade or improve facilities. FEMA coordinates but does not fund disaster assistance provided by the Small Business Administration or the Farmers Home Administration. FEMA grant-in aid funds come from revenue sharing, the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Department of Transportation. Grants for disaster preparedness can be used by flood control districts.[100]

Many states have disaster relief agencies of their own. In the event of a disaster outside of a state's operating capacity, the director of said agency will advise the Governor whether or not to proclaim a state of emergency. Declaring a state of emergency, upon Presidential approval, entitles a state to federal assistance. It is important to note that proclaiming a state of emergency does not guarantee federal assistance. States also rely on mutual aid agreements, such as the Civil Defense and Disaster Compact. A mutual aid agreement can be between neighboring states, cities, counties and cities, states and cities or an entire region. These agreements allow agencies to share resources so they are better prepared for emergencies.[101]

Local governments have the most immediate responsibility. Four factors shape local disaster response:

  1. The extent of tax base depletion
  2. The scope of lost sales tax revenue
  3. Access to other forms of revenue
  4. Amount of city debt

Having a mostly intact tax base allows local governments to maintain steady revenue stream. Business unharmed by a disaster will be able to continue to generate sales tax revenue. Cities with access to large revenue reserves and strong mutual aid agreements will have greater response capacity. While cities with large municipal debt that would be unable to pay back state or federal loans would be in a difficult situation.[102]

U.S. v. Parish of Jefferson et al edit

This case gave FEMA the right to sue in like order to recover funds paid out in flood insurance claims for flood damage as a result of poor decisions by local officials and developers. The case also gave FEMA the power to sue localities who fail to meet flood plain management requirements.[102]

List of FEMA heads edit

Name Start End President
James Hafer May 1975 April 1, 1979 Gerald Ford
Gordon Vickery
Acting
April 1, 1979 July 1979 Jimmy Carter
Thomas Casey
Acting
July 1979 August 1979
John Macy August 1979 January 20, 1981
Bernard Gallagher
Acting
January 20, 1981 April 1981 Ronald Reagan
John McConnell
Acting
April 1981 May 1981
Jeff Giuffrida May 1981 September 1, 1985
Robert Morris
Acting
September 1, 1985 November 1985
Julius Becton November 1985 June 1989
Robert Morris
Acting
June 1989 May 1990 George H. W. Bush
Jerry Jennings
Acting
May 1990 August 1990
Wallace Stickney August 1990 January 20, 1993
William Tidball
Acting
January 20, 1993 April 5, 1993 Bill Clinton
James Witt April 5, 1993 January 20, 2001
John Magaw
Acting
January 20, 2001 February 15, 2001 George W. Bush
Joe Allbaugh February 15, 2001 April 15, 2003
Michael Brown April 15, 2003 September 12, 2005
David Paulison September 12, 2005
Acting: September 12, 2005 – June 8, 2006
January 21, 2009
Nancy Ward
Acting
January 21, 2009 May 19, 2009 Barack Obama
Craig Fugate May 19, 2009 January 20, 2017
Bob Fenton
Acting
January 20, 2017 June 23, 2017 Donald Trump
Brock Long June 23, 2017 March 8, 2019
Pete Gaynor March 8, 2019
Acting: March 8, 2019 – January 14, 2020
January 12, 2021
Bob Fenton
Acting
January 12, 2021 April 26, 2021 Joe Biden
Deanne Criswell April 26, 2021 present

Titles edit

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Garrett, Thomas A., and Russell S. Sobel. "The political economy of FEMA disaster payments." Economic inquiry 41.3 (2003): 496–509.
    • Sobel, Russell S., Christopher J. Coyne, and Peter T. Leeson. "The political economy of FEMA: did reorganization matter?." Journal of Public Finance and Public Choice 25.2-3 (2007): 151-167 online October 7, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
  • Kneeland, Timothy W. Playing Politics with Natural Disaster: Hurricane Agnes, the 1972 Election, and the Origins of FEMA (Cornell University Press, 2020) online
  • Kousky, Carolyn. "Facts about FEMA household disaster aid: examining the 2008 floods and tornadoes in Missouri." Weather, Climate, and Society 5.4 (2013): 332–344. online
  • Lindsay, Bruce R. FEMA Disaster Housing: The Individuals and Households Program--Implementation and Potential Issues for Congress (Congressional Research Service, 2017) online.
  • Murphree, Vanessa, Bryan H. Reber, and Frederick Blevens. "Superhero, instructor, optimist: FEMA and the frames of disaster in Hurricanes Katrina and Rita." Journal of Public Relations Research 21.3 (2009): 273–294.
  • Sadiq, Abdul-Akeem, Kevin Tharp, and John D. Graham. "FEMA versus local governments: Influence and reliance in disaster preparedness." Natural hazards 82.1 (2016): 123–138. online
  • Schneider, Saundra K. "FEMA, federalism, Hugo, and'Frisco." Publius: The Journal of Federalism 20.3 (1990): 97–116.
  • MSNBC Article Senate panel recommends abolishing FEMA
  • from the Congressional Research Service

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Federal Emergency Management Agency in the Federal Register
  • Works by or about Federal Emergency Management Agency at Internet Archive
  • "FEMA Taking Shelter From the Storm". Fema.gov. Retrieved March 6, 2019.safe room construction plans

federal, emergency, management, agency, fema, redirects, here, other, uses, fema, disambiguation, fema, agency, united, states, department, homeland, security, initially, created, under, president, jimmy, carter, presidential, reorganization, plan, 1978, imple. FEMA redirects here For other uses see FEMA disambiguation Federal Emergency Management Agency FEMA is an agency of the United States Department of Homeland Security DHS initially created under President Jimmy Carter by Presidential Reorganization Plan No 3 of 1978 and implemented by two Executive Orders on April 1 1979 1 The agency s primary purpose is to coordinate the response to a disaster that has occurred in the United States and that overwhelms the resources of local and state authorities The governor of the state in which the disaster occurs must declare a state of emergency and formally request from the President that FEMA and the federal government respond to the disaster The only exception to the state s gubernatorial declaration requirement occurs when an emergency or disaster takes place on federal property or to a federal asset for example the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City Oklahoma or the Space Shuttle Columbia in the 2003 return flight disaster Federal Emergency Management Agency FEMA Agency overviewFormedApril 1 1979 44 years ago 1979 04 01 1 JurisdictionUnited States Department of Homeland SecurityHeadquartersWashington D C U S MottoHelping people before during and after disasters 2 Employees22 991 Sep 2023 3 Annual budget 29 5 billion FY 2023 4 Agency executiveDeanne Criswell AdministratorParent departmentU S Department of Homeland SecurityWebsitewww wbr fema wbr govWhile on the ground support of disaster recovery efforts is a major part of FEMA s charter the agency provides state and local governments with experts in specialized fields funding for rebuilding efforts and relief funds for infrastructure development by directing individuals to access low interest loans in conjunction with the Small Business Administration In addition to this FEMA provides funds for response personnel training throughout the United States as part of the agency s preparedness effort Contents 1 History 1 1 Prior to 1930s 1 2 Piecemeal approach 1930s 1960s 1 3 Department of Housing and Urban Development 1973 1979 1 4 FEMA as an independent agency 1979 2003 1 5 FEMA under Department of Homeland Security 2003 present 2 Organization 2 1 Budget 2 2 Regions 3 Pre disaster mitigation programs 4 Response capabilities 4 1 National Response Coordination Center NRCC 4 2 Disaster Medical Assistance Teams 4 3 Urban Search and Rescue US amp R 4 4 Mobile Emergency Response Support MERS 4 5 Preparedness for nuclear incidents 4 6 Training 4 6 1 Emergency Management Institute training and certifications 5 FEMA Corps 5 1 Donations management 6 Criticisms 6 1 Hurricane Andrew 6 2 Southern Florida hurricanes 6 3 Hurricane Katrina 6 4 Buffalo snowstorm 6 5 Dumas Arkansas tornadoes 6 6 California wildfires 6 7 Hurricane Maria 6 8 Hurricane Harvey 6 9 Coronavirus pandemic COVID 19 7 Federalism and FEMA 7 1 U S v Parish of Jefferson et al 8 List of FEMA heads 8 1 Titles 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory editFederal emergency management in the U S has existed in one form or another for over 200 years 5 Prior to 1930s edit A series of devastating fires struck the port city of Portsmouth New Hampshire early in the 19th century The 7th U S Congress passed a measure in 1803 that provided relief for Portsmouth merchants by extending the time they had for remitting tariffs on imported goods This is widely considered the first piece of legislation passed by the federal government that provided relief after a disaster 6 Between 1803 and 1930 ad hoc legislation was passed more than 100 times for relief or compensation after a disaster Examples include the waiving of duties and tariffs to the merchants of New York City after the Great Fire of New York 1835 After the collapse of the John T Ford s Theater in June 1893 the 54th Congress passed legislation compensating those who were injured in the building 7 Piecemeal approach 1930s 1960s edit After the start of the Great Depression in 1929 President Herbert Hoover had commissioned the Reconstruction Finance Corporation in 1932 8 The purpose of the RFC was to lend money to banks and institutions to stimulate economic activity RFC was also responsible for dispensing federal dollars in the wake of a disaster RFC can be considered the first organized federal disaster response agency The Bureau of Public Roads in 1934 was given authority to finance the reconstruction of highways and roads after a disaster The Flood Control Act of 1944 also gave the U S Army Corps of Engineers authority over flood control and irrigation projects and thus played a major role in disaster recovery from flooding 9 Department of Housing and Urban Development 1973 1979 edit Federal disaster relief and recovery was brought under the umbrella of the Department of Housing and Urban Development HUD in 1973 by Presidential Reorganization Plan No 2 of 1973 10 and the Federal Disaster Assistance Administration was created as an organizational unit within the department This agency would oversee disasters until its incorporation into FEMA in 1978 10 Prior to implementation of Reorganization Plan No 3 of 1978 by E O 12127 and E O 12148 many government agencies were still involved in disaster relief in some cases more than 100 separate agencies might be jockeying for control and jurisdiction of a disaster 11 Over the years Congress increasingly extended the range of covered categories for assistance and several presidential executive orders did the same By enacting these various forms of legislative direction Congress established a category for annual budgetary amounts of assistance to victims of various types of hazards or disasters it specified the qualifications and then it established or delegated the responsibilities to various federal and non federal agencies 12 In time this expanded array of agencies themselves underwent reorganization One of the first such federal agencies was the Federal Civil Defense Administration which operated within the Executive Office of the President Functions to administer disaster relief were then given to the President himself who delegated to the Housing and Home Finance Administration Subsequently a new office of the Office of Defense Mobilization was created Then the new Office of Defense and Civilian Mobilization managed by the EOP after that the Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization which renamed the former agency then the Office of Civil Defense under the Department of Defense DoD the Department of Health Education and Welfare HEW the Department of Agriculture the Office of Emergency Planning OEmP the Defense Civil Preparedness Agency replacing the OCD in the DoD the Department of Housing and Urban Development HUD and the General Services Administration GSA upon termination of the OEmP 12 These actions demonstrated that during those years the nation s domestic preparedness was addressed by several disparate legislative actions motivated by policy and budgetary earmarking and not by a single unifying comprehensive strategy to meet the nation s needs over time 13 Then in 1978 an effort was made to consolidate the several singular functions FEMA was created to house civil defense and disaster preparedness under one roof This was a very controversial decision 12 FEMA as an independent agency 1979 2003 edit National Fire Prevention and Control Administration redirects here nbsp The FEMA seal from 1981 to 2003 nbsp The FEMA flag from 1981 to 2003 and 2022 presentFEMA was established under the 1978 Reorganization Plan No 3 and was activated by President Jimmy Carter in an Executive Order on April 1 1979 In July Carter signed Executive Order 12148 shifting disaster relief efforts to the new federal level agency FEMA absorbed the Federal Insurance Administration the National Fire Prevention and Control Administration the National Weather Service Community Preparedness Program the Federal Preparedness Agency of the General Services Administration and the Federal Disaster Assistance Administration activities from HUD FEMA was also given the responsibility for overseeing the nation s Civil Defense a function which had previously been performed by the Department of Defense s Defense Civil Preparedness Agency One of the disasters FEMA responded to was the dumping of toxic waste into Love Canal in Niagara Falls New York in the late 1970s FEMA also responded to the Three Mile Island nuclear accident where the nuclear generating station suffered a partial core meltdown These disasters while showing the agency could function properly also uncovered some inefficiencies citation needed In 1993 President Bill Clinton appointed James Lee Witt as FEMA Director In 1996 the agency was elevated to cabinet rank 14 this was not continued by President George W Bush 15 Witt initiated reforms that would help to streamline the disaster recovery and mitigation process The end of the Cold War also allowed the agency s resources to be turned away from civil defense to natural disaster preparedness 11 After FEMA s creation through reorganization and executive orders Congress continued to expand FEMA s authority by assigning responsibilities to it Those responsibilities include dam safety under the National Dam Safety Program Act disaster assistance under the Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act earthquake hazards reduction under the Earthquake Hazards Reduction Act of 1977 and further expanded by Executive Order 12699 regarding safety requirements for federal buildings and Executive Order 12941 concerning the need for cost estimates to seismically retrofit federal buildings emergency food and shelter under the Stewart B McKinney Homeless Assistance Act of 1987 hazardous materials under the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act In addition FEMA received authority for counterterrorism through the Nunn Lugar Domenici amendment under the Weapons of Mass Destruction Act of 1996 which was a response to the recognized vulnerabilities of the U S after the sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway in 1995 13 Congress funded FEMA through a combination of regular appropriations and emergency funding in response to events 16 FEMA under Department of Homeland Security 2003 present edit nbsp President George W Bush signs the Homeland Security Appropriations Act of 2004 Following the attacks of September 11 2001 Congress passed the Homeland Security Act of 2002 which created the Department of Homeland Security DHS to better coordinate among the different federal agencies that deal with law enforcement disaster preparedness and recovery border protection and civil defense FEMA was absorbed into DHS effective March 1 2003 17 As a result FEMA became part of the Emergency Preparedness and Response Directorate of Department of Homeland Security employing more than 2 600 full time employees It became Federal Emergency Management Agency again on March 31 2007 but remained in DHS 18 President Bush appointed Michael D Brown as FEMA s director in January 2003 Brown warned in September 2003 that FEMA s absorption into DHS would make a mockery of FEMA s new motto A Nation Prepared and would fundamentally sever FEMA from its core functions shatter agency morale and break longstanding effective and tested relationships with states and first responder stakeholders The inevitable result of the reorganization of 2003 warned Brown would be an ineffective and uncoordinated response to a terrorist attack or a natural disaster 19 Hurricane Katrina in 2005 demonstrated that the vision of further unification of functions and another reorganization could not address the problems FEMA had previously faced The Final Report of the Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina released February 15 2006 by the U S Government Printing Office revealed that federal funding to states for all hazards disaster preparedness needs was not awarded unless the local agencies made the purposes for the funding a just terrorism function 20 Emergency management professionals testified that funds for preparedness for natural hazards were given less priority than preparations for counter terrorism measures Testimony also expressed the opinion that the mission to mitigate vulnerability and prepare for natural hazard disasters before they occurred had been separated from disaster preparedness functions making the nation more vulnerable to known hazards like hurricanes 21 After allegations of mismanagement during Hurricane Katrina the National Disaster Medical System NDMS was transferred from the Department of Homeland Security to the Department of Health and Human Services by the Pandemic and All Hazards Preparedness Act signed by President George W Bush on December 18 2006 In fall 2008 FEMA took over coordination of the Ready Campaign the national public service advertising campaign in collaboration with the Ad Council to educate and empower Americans to prepare for and respond to emergencies including natural and man made disasters The Ready Campaign and its Spanish language version Listo asks individuals to do three things build an emergency supply kit 22 make a family emergency plan 23 and be informed about the different types of emergencies that can occur and how to respond 24 The campaign messages have been promoted through television radio print outdoor and web PSAs 25 as well as brochures toll free phone lines and the English and Spanish language websites The Post Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act of 2006 added a Surge Capacity Force which allows the Department of Homeland Security to supplement FEMA employees with additional personnel from various federal departments in the event the agency is overwhelmed The Force has been activated for Hurricane Sandy Hurricane Harvey Hurricane Irma Hurricane Maria and the 2017 California wildfires 26 The Stafford Act was amended by the Pets Evacuation and Transportation Standards Act PETS Act in 2006 and the Disaster Recovery Reform Act DRRA in 2018 FEMA was put in charge of procuring medical supplies during the COVID 19 pandemic 27 According to a tweet posted on April 12 2022 by Deanne Criswell the FEMA flag used between 1981 and 2003 was reintroduced Organization editDuring the debate of the Homeland Security Act of 2002 some called for FEMA to remain as an independent agency Following the failed response to Hurricane Katrina critics called for FEMA to be removed from the Department of Homeland Security 28 Today FEMA exists as a major agency of the Department of Homeland Security The Administrator for Federal Emergency Management reports directly to the Secretary of Homeland Security In March 2003 FEMA joined 22 other federal agencies programs and offices in becoming the Department of Homeland Security The new department headed by Secretary Tom Ridge brought a coordinated approach to national security from emergencies and disasters both natural and man made FEMA manages the National Flood Insurance Program Other programs FEMA previously administered have since been internalized or shifted under direct DHS control FEMA is also home to the National Continuity Programs Directorate formerly the Office of National Security Coordination ONSC was responsible for developing exercising and validating agency wide continuity of government plans as well as overseeing and maintaining continuity readiness including the Mount Weather Emergency Operations Center ONSC also coordinated the continuing efforts of other Federal Executive Agencies FEMA began administering the Center for Domestic Preparedness in 2007 Budget edit In 2018 FEMA had an annual budget of 18 billion 29 that is used and distributed in different states according to the emergencies that occur in each one An annual list of the use of these funds is disclosed at the end of the year on FEMA s website 30 31 32 33 Regions edit nbsp FEMA Regions map grouped by states and numberRegional map 34 Region 1 Boston MA Serving CT MA ME NH RI VT Region 2 New York NY Serving NJ NY PR USVI Region 3 Philadelphia PA Serving DC DE MD PA VA WV Region 4 Atlanta GA Serving AL FL GA KY MS NC SC TN Region 5 Chicago IL Serving IL IN MI MN OH WI Region 6 Denton TX Serving AR LA NM OK TX Region 7 Kansas City MO Serving IA KS MO NE Region 8 Denver CO Serving CO MT ND SD UT WY Region 9 Oakland CA Serving AZ CA HI NV GU AS CNMI RMI FM Region 10 Bothell WA Serving AK ID OR WAPre disaster mitigation programs editFEMA s Mitigation Directorate 35 is responsible for programs that take action before a disaster in order to identify risks and reduce injuries loss of property and recovery time 36 The agency has major analysis programs for floods hurricanes and tropical storms dams and earthquakes 36 37 FEMA works to ensure affordable flood insurance is available to homeowners in flood plains through the National Flood Insurance Program and also works to enforce no build zones in known flood plains and relocate or elevate some at risk structures 38 Pre Disaster Mitigation grants are available to acquire property for conversion to open space retrofit existing buildings construct tornado and storm shelters manage vegetation for erosion and fire control and small flood control projects 39 Critics say this program is underperforming because it is starved for funding compared to disaster response and recovery the process of applying for a buyout is unreasonably slow and is wasting taxpayer dollars because the National Flood Insurance Program has paid to reconstruct some properties up to 18 times 40 1 of NFIP insured properties are responsible for more than one quarter of the money the program has paid out 41 The Hazard Mitigation Grant Program funds rebuilding after a current disaster in a way that reduces the impact of a similar future disaster 42 Response capabilities editFEMA s emergency response is based on small decentralized teams trained in such areas as the National Disaster Medical System NDMS Urban Search and Rescue USAR Disaster Mortuary Operations Response Team DMORT Disaster Medical Assistance Team DMAT and Mobile Emergency Response Support MERS National Response Coordination Center NRCC edit FEMA s National Response Coordination Center NRCC is a multiagency center located at FEMA HQ that coordinates the overall Federal support for major disasters and emergencies including catastrophic incidents in support of operations at the regional level The FEMA Administrator 43 or his or her delegate activates the NRCC in anticipation of or in response to an incident by activating the NRCC staff which includes FEMA personnel the appropriate Emergency Support Functions and other appropriate personnel including nongovernmental organization and private sector representatives During the initial stages of a response FEMA will as part of the whole community focus on projected potential or escalating critical incident activities The NRCC coordinates with the affected region s and provides needed resources and policy guidance in support of incident level operations The NRCC staff specifically provides emergency management coordination planning resource deployment and collects and disseminates incident information as it builds and maintains situational awareness all at the national level 44 FEMA maintains the NRCC as a functional component of the NOC for incident support operations 45 46 An example of NRCC activity is the coordination of emergency management activities that took place in connection with the 2013 Colorado floods 47 Disaster Medical Assistance Teams edit nbsp DMAT team deployed for Hurricane Ike in TexasDisaster Medical Assistance Teams DMAT provide medical care at disasters and are typically made up of doctors and paramedics There are also National Nursing Response Teams NNRT National Pharmacy Response Teams NPRT and Veterinary Medical Assistance Teams VMAT Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Teams DMORT provide mortuary and forensic services National Medical Response Teams NMRT are equipped to decontaminate victims of chemical and biological agents Urban Search and Rescue US amp R edit The Urban Search and Rescue Task Forces perform rescue of victims from structural collapses confined spaces and other disasters for example mine collapses and earthquakes Mobile Emergency Response Support MERS edit nbsp Presidential mobile phone alert for national emergencies nbsp FEMA vehicle provides communications support after a major hurricane These teams provide communications support to local public safety For instance they may operate a truck with satellite uplink computers telephone and power generation at a staging area near a disaster so that the responders can communicate with the outside world There are also Mobile Air Transportable Telecommunications System MATTS assets which can be airlifted in Also portable cell phone towers can be erected to allow local responders to access telephone systems The first test of the national wireless emergency system by FEMA was broadcast to an estimated 225 million electronic devices at 14 18 EDT on October 3 2018 The text message was accompanied by a flashing warning sign and warning tone The president may direct FEMA to broadcast such alerts only for national emergencies or if the public is in danger The facility may not be used for personal messages from the president Mobile phone owners can not opt out of these warnings 48 49 Preparedness for nuclear incidents edit On August 1 2008 FEMA released Planning Guidance for Protection and Recovery Following Radiological Dispersal Device RDD and Improvised Nuclear Device IND incidents 50 which provide an action guide in the case of radioactive contamination This guidance is specified as action guide for Radiological Dispersal Devices RDD and Improvised Nuclear Devices IND involving high levels of radiation According to the Federation of American Scientists during the Cold War FEMA prepared assessments of the likely consequences of a full scale Soviet nuclear attack on the United States for use in planning mitigation and recovery efforts 51 FEMA also prepared plans for evacuating major U S cities in response to a nuclear war dubbed CRP 2B 52 Training edit FEMA offers a large number of training classes either at its own centers through programs at the state level in cooperation with colleges and universities or online The latter are free classes available to anyone although only those with U S residency or work eligibility can take the final examinations More information is available on the FEMA website under the Emergency Personnel and Training subheadings Other emergency response information for citizens is also available at its website FEMA runs the Incident Workforce Academy a two week emergency preparedness training program for FEMA employees The first class of the academy graduated in early 2014 53 The Training and Education Division within FEMA s National Integration Center directly funds training for responders and provides guidance on training related expenditures under FEMA s grant programs Information on designing effective training for first responders is available from the Training and Education Division Emergency managers and other interested members of the public can take independent study courses for certification at FEMA s online Emergency Management Institute Emergency Management Institute training and certifications edit See also Emergency Management Institute EMI offers credentials and training opportunities for United States Citizens Note that students do not have to be employed by FEMA or be a federal employee for some of the programs However they do need to create a FEMA SID to take the final exams 54 EMI maintains a strategic partnership with Frederick Community College FCC has contracted with the Emergency Management Institute to provide college credit for the Independent Study Program ISP FCC offers eight specialized Letters of Recognition an Undergraduate Certificate and an Associate of Applied Science degree in Emergency Management 55 FEMA Corps editFEMA Corps who range in age from 18 to 26 years old is a cadre dedicated to disaster response and recovery It is a new partnership between The Corporation for National and Community Service s AmeriCorps NCCC National Civilian Community Corps and FEMA 56 The Corps described as a dedicated trained and reliable disaster workforce works full time for 10 months on federal disaster response recovery mitigation and preparedness efforts across numerous sections Over 150 members of the inaugural FEMA Corps class graduated in June 2013 at the Southern Region AmeriCorps NCCC campus in Vicksburg Mississippi The Pacific Region campus in Sacramento California and the Southern Region campus both support a FEMA Corps class annually 57 The Corps work on teams of 6 to 10 people and follow the traditional NCCC model of living together and traveling together In addition to working with FEMA Corps members must perform AmeriCorps responsibilities such as Physical Training three times a week National Days of Service and Individual Service Projects in communities throughout the United States Members receive 6 10 a day for food 15 a day when deployed to on disaster project and a living stipend of approximately 3 500 over 10 months Approximately 175 every two weeks Team leaders receive a larger stipend of approximately 10 000 over the course of 10 months Approximately 500 every two weeks The Segal AmeriCorps education award is distributed to Corps members who successfully finish their term of service completing 1 700 or more total hours The amount of a full time Segal AmeriCorps Education Award is equivalent to the maximum value of the Pell Grant for the fiscal year in which the term of national service is approved and can therefore change between different classes 58 59 nbsp FEMA Corps Pacific Region Blue UnitDonations management edit FEMA has led a Public Private Partnership in creating a National Donations Management Program making it easier for corporations or individuals not previously engaged to make offers of free assistance to States and the Federal Government in times of disaster The program is a partnership among FEMA relief agencies corporations corporate associations and participating state governments citation needed Criticisms editSee also Criticism of the United States government Criticism of agencies Hurricane Andrew edit See also Hurricane Andrew In August 1992 Hurricane Andrew struck the Florida and Louisiana coasts with 165 mph 265 km h sustained winds FEMA was widely criticized for its response to Andrew summed up by the famous exclamation Where in the hell is the cavalry on this one by Kate Hale emergency management director for Miami Dade County Florida FEMA and the federal government at large were accused of not responding fast enough to house feed and sustain the approximately 250 000 people left homeless in the affected areas Within five days the federal government and neighboring states had dispatched 20 000 National Guard and active duty troops to South Dade County to set up temporary housing This event and FEMA s performance was reviewed by the National Academy of Public Administration in its February 1993 report Coping With Catastrophe which identified several basic paradigms in Emergency Management and FEMA administration that were causes of the failed response FEMA had previously been criticized for its response to Hurricane Hugo which hit South Carolina in September 1989 and many of the same issues that plagued the agency during Hurricane Andrew were also evident during the response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005 Additionally upon incorporation into DHS FEMA was legally dissolved and a new Emergency Preparedness and Response Directorate was established in DHS to replace it Following enactment of the Post Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act of 2006 FEMA was reestablished as an entity within DHS on March 31 2007 Southern Florida hurricanes edit South Florida newspaper Sun Sentinel has an extensive list of documented criticisms of FEMA during the four hurricanes that hit the region in 2004 60 Some of the criticisms include When Hurricane Frances hit South Florida on Labor Day weekend over 100 miles north of Miami Dade County 9 800 Miami Dade applicants were approved by FEMA for 21 million in storm claims for new furniture clothes thousands of new televisions microwaves and refrigerators cars dental bills and a funeral even though the Medical Examiner recorded no deaths from Frances A U S Senate committee and the inspector general of the Department of Homeland Security found that FEMA inappropriately declared Miami Dade county a disaster area and then awarded millions often without verifying storm damage or a need for assistance 61 62 FEMA used hurricane aid money to pay funeral expenses for at least 203 Floridians whose deaths were not caused by the 2004 hurricanes the state s coroners have concluded Ten of the people whose funerals were paid for were not in Florida at the time of their deaths 63 The rising sea levels global temperatures and increase of flooding and severe storms has called for a change within the procedure of flood insurance The communities that are directly impacted by these changes include coastal communities and waterfront homes The procedural design of flood insurance is done through FEMA s Federal Emergency Management Agency National Flood Insurance Program Previously the Insurance Program created in 1968 was constructed around the 100 year floodplain which is the area that would be inundated by the 100 year flood better thought of as an area that has a one percent or greater chance of experiencing a flood in any single year 64 and large subsidies for coastal homes especially in Florida However in 2019 major changes were made and the new program called Risk Rating 2 0 was introduced which prices a house on its individual flood risk 65 It will account for the distance one s house is from a flood source the types and frequency of flooding and characteristics of the cost to rebuild This new program will greatly impact states like Florida that have intense risk of hurricanes and sea level rise Through the initial program the homes on the coast were mostly being subsidized at the cost of the homeowners more inland and more likely lower income and people of color citation needed However as previously stated with Risk Rating 2 0 homeowners in higher risk areas of greater flooding will be paying for that risk through insurance and with that may come with re evaluating the longevity of one s place on the coasts of Florida On the other hand with FEMA s program as a national program we who see different impacts in places like New England 66 It has been indicated that states like Maine will be greatly impacted positively by the new program The bays inlets and coves are proved to be good protective measures for most waterfront properties In addition to Maine states like Iowa and Nebraska will see impacts to their flood insurance policies It is stated that almost 50 of Nebraskans and 40 of Iowans will see a decrease in their policies 67 Overall we who see many different types of complications to this new set up such as retirees on fixed incomes long term mortgages and depreciation of household value As this program is relatively new impacts of the program will continue to be seen in the following years Hurricane Katrina edit nbsp Evacuees taking shelter at the Astrodome in Houston TexasSee also Criticism of the government response to Hurricane Katrina FEMA received intense criticism for its response to the Hurricane Katrina disaster in August 2005 FEMA had pre positioned response personnel in the Gulf Coast region However many could not render direct assistance and were able to report only on the dire situation along the Gulf Coast especially from New Orleans Within three days a large contingent of National Guard and active duty troops were deployed to the region The enormous number of evacuees simply overwhelmed rescue personnel The situation was compounded by flood waters in the city that hampered transportation and poor communication among the federal government state and local entities FEMA was widely criticized for what is seen as a slow initial response to the disaster and an inability to effectively manage care for and move those who were trying to leave the city Then FEMA Director Michael D Brown was criticized personally for a slow response and an apparent disconnection with the situation Brown would eventually be relieved of command of the Katrina disaster and soon thereafter resigned According to the U S House of Representatives Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina 68 The Secretary Department of Homeland Security should have designated the Principal Federal Official on Saturday two days prior to landfall from the roster of PFOs who had successfully completed the required training unlike then FEMA Director Michael Brown Considerable confusion was caused by the Secretary s PFO decisions DHS and FEMA lacked adequate trained and experienced staff for the Katrina response The readiness of FEMA s national emergency response teams was inadequate and reduced the effectiveness of the federal response Long standing weaknesses and the magnitude of the disaster overwhelmed FEMA s ability to provide emergency shelter and temporary housing FEMA logistics and contracting systems did not support a targeted massive and sustained provision of commodities Before Katrina FEMA suffered from a lack of sufficiently trained procurement professionals nbsp A DMAT member assures a rescued man that the trip to the airport will be safe Other failings were also noted The Committee devoted an entire section of the report to listing the actions of FEMA 69 Their conclusion was For years emergency management professionals have been warning that FEMA s preparedness has eroded Many believe this erosion is a result of the separation of the preparedness function from FEMA the drain of long term professional staff along with their institutional knowledge and expertise and the inadequate readiness of FEMA s national emergency response teams The combination of these staffing training and organizational structures made FEMA s inadequate performance in the face of a disaster the size of Katrina all but inevitable 69 Pursuant to a temporary restraining order issued by Hon Stanwood R Duval United States District Court Judge Eastern District of Louisiana as a result of the McWaters v FEMA class action February 7 2006 was set as the deadline for the official end of any further coverage of temporary housing costs for Katrina victims 70 71 After the February 7 deadline Katrina victims were left to their own devices either to find permanent housing for the long term or to continue in social welfare programs set up by other organizations There were many Katrina evacuees living in temporary shelters or trailer parks set up by FEMA and other relief organizations in the first months after the disaster hit but much more were still unable to find housing In July 2007 ice that had been ordered for Katrina victims but had never been used and kept in storage facilities at a cost of 12 5 million was melted down 72 In June 2008 a CNN investigation found that FEMA gave away about 85 million in household goods meant for Hurricane Katrina victims to 16 other states 73 Buffalo snowstorm edit FEMA came under attack for their response to the October Surprise Storm in Buffalo New York on October 13 2006 As FEMA legally cannot interfere with state business unless asked FEMA responded that as per procedure the governor of the state of New York George Pataki had not asked for FEMA s assistance FEMA Headquarters had been in constant contact with State congressional offices providing them with the latest information available Claims state that FEMA officials did not arrive until October 16 three days after the storm hit The snowstorm damage by this time included downed power wires downed trees and caused structural damage to homes and businesses 74 Dumas Arkansas tornadoes edit Many people of Dumas Arkansas especially victims of tornadoes on February 24 2007 criticized FEMA s response in not supplying the number of new trailers they needed and sending only a set of used trailers lower than the needed quantity Following the storm U S Senator Mark Pryor had criticized FEMA s response to the recovery and cleanup efforts 75 California wildfires edit See also 2007 California wildfires FEMA came under intense criticism when it was revealed that a press conference on the October 2007 California wildfires was staged Deputy Administrator Harvey E Johnson was answering questions from FEMA employees who were posing as reporters Many of these questions were softball questions i e Are you happy with FEMA s response so far intentionally asked in a way that would evoke a positive response giving the impression that FEMA was doing everything right In this way any scrutiny from real reporters many of whom were given only a 15 minute notice would have been avoided Fox News MSNBC and other media outlets aired the staged press briefing live 76 Real reporters were notified only 15 minutes in advance and were able to call into only a conference line which was set to listen only mode The only people there were primarily FEMA public affairs employees 77 Hurricane Maria edit See also Hurricane Maria In September 2017 Hurricane Maria struck Dominica and Puerto Rico with 175 mph 280 km h sustained winds Maria was the fifth strongest storm to ever strike the United States with stronger winds than those brought by Irma and similar rain brought to Houston by Hurricane Harvey 78 Despite FEMA s preemptive efforts in Puerto Rico the island was still devastated beyond expectation The agency had prepared some provisions for displaced residents before the storm struck including roughly 124 FEMA staff members being positioned on the island food water and bedding 78 However people reported the FEMA food packages were unhealthy snacks such as the confectionery Skittles 79 FEMA was widely criticized for its response to Maria as the island quickly fell into a humanitarian crisis 80 81 The island also experienced a massive loss of power as a result of flood and wind damage sustained during Maria In the beginning of October 2017 Lieutenant General Todd Semonite chief and commanding general of the United States Army Corps of Engineers explained the extent of and necessity of aid for this power crisis Semonite described some specifics of the outage to reporters explaining that the island requires 2 700 megawatts of electricity to operate and at last count had 376 megawatts available This translates to about 14 percent of the grid being functional 82 FEMA Administrator William Brock Long told reporters in a briefing following the storm that Puerto Rico politics had hindered the ability of the federal government to send aid He explained that political divisions had prevented unity for leaders in this time of crisis describing that their issue was even worse than the mainland United States issue between Democrats and Republicans Residents in some cases were required to fill out paperwork in English rather than Spanish with little to no hope of receiving the aid they had requested 82 Brigadier General Jose Reyes of the Puerto Rico National Guard discussed a strategy to quicken the arrival of resources via the Port of Ponce located on the southern coast of Puerto Rico 83 Reyes also attributed the delay in these services to the unprecedented series of storms that demanded attention from the agency within a short period of time Regarding this General Reyes told reporters We were not even getting back on our feet after Irma then suddenly we got hit by Maria He also addressed the disparities between aid sent to mainland disaster stricken areas and Puerto Rico explaining that in areas such as Florida and Texas who had recently struck with similar damages transportation of resources is relatively simpler This is because they are able to utilize infrastructure to transport aid Transporting similar resources to Puerto Rico has proved to be more difficult as they must travel across the ocean either in aircraft or in ships 82 Long also mentioned that Puerto Rico s international airport was not able to operate at full capacity which posed an additional obstacle for federal aid imports Long resigned on March 8 2019 following criticism of his handling of Hurricane Maria and an ethical complaint over misuse of official vehicles costing 151 000 84 Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said that Long would have to reimburse the government for the cost of the vehicles and staff involved in the trips many of which were between Washington and his home in North Carolina Nielsen submitted her own resignation as Secretary of Homeland Security less than a month later on April 7 2019 85 Hurricane Harvey edit See also Hurricane Harvey Hurricane Harvey made landfall in late August 2017 as a Category 4 Hurricane with 130 mph 215 km h sustained winds The Hurricane predominantly affected southeast Texas however its effects were felt as far as Arkansas Kentucky and Tennessee in the form of flash flooding 86 Harvey slowly progressed around southeast Texas where it produced heavy precipitation over the region This caused heavy flooding in residential areas such as Colorado City Liberty and Montgomery Texas 86 87 Harvey was the first of a series of hurricanes and tropical storms to affect the United States between August and September 2017 The effects of these storms included extreme flooding damage from high speed winds structural damage and humanitarian concerns regarding the availability of basic necessities such as food water and shelter 88 89 Some recipients were forced to wait up to two months before receiving aid from FEMA as technical complications held up both their application for it and the processing of said applications Some residents were denied Federal Aid and have to dispute their denial in efforts to rebuild and repair properties without taking a considerably large financial loss Coronavirus pandemic COVID 19 edit See also COVID 19 pandemic in the United States In early April 2020 the Los Angeles Times reported that the Trump administration was quietly seizing medical supplies from states and hospitals citing hospital and clinic officials catering to seven states These officials stated that the administration has not informed them how they can otherwise get access to their ordered supplies A FEMA representative said the agency working with the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Defense has developed a system for identifying needed supplies from vendors and distributing them equitably The federal government also seized an order for thermometers meant for Florida an order for masks from the Texas Association of Community Health Centers and an order for testing supplies meant for the PeaceHealth hospital system in Washington Oregon and Alaska 90 On April 24 San Francisco Mayor London Breed said We ve had situations when things we ve ordered that have gone through Customs were confiscated by FEMA to be diverted to other locations We know everyone is dealing with a serious challenge Through Customs we ve had situations where those items have been taken and put out on the market for the highest bidder putting cities against cities and states against states 91 Massachusetts Secretary of Health and Human Services Marylou Sudders cited a shipment of 3 million masks that the state had negotiated to buy from BJ s Wholesale Club until the federal government impounded them from the Port of New York and New Jersey on March 18 A further order from MSC Industrial Supply for 400 masks to be delivered on March 20 was also claimed by the federal government using force majeure 92 Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker reached out to the New England Patriots professional American football team who used the team plane AirKraft to bring approximately 1 2 million N95 masks from China to Boston 93 In late April reports of the actions taken by FEMA in Massachusetts prompted Maryland Governor Larry Hogan to deploy the Maryland National Guard and task them with guarding a shipment of 500 000 COVID 19 testing kits purchased from South Korean company LabGenomics by the Government of Maryland 94 95 96 The tests were subsequently held in an undisclosed location under the continued supervision of the Maryland National Guard The state of Colorado was set to purchase 500 ventilators before Federal Emergency Management Agency swooped in and bought them first President Trump announced on Twitter that the federal government would be sending 100 ventilators to Colorado at the request of Senator Cory Gardner 97 The incident caused Colorado Governor Polis to make future supply purchases in secret 98 In late April 5 000 000 masks meant for hospitals of the Veterans Health Administration were seized by FEMA and redirected to the Strategic National Stockpile stated Richard Stone Executive in Charge Veterans Health Administration 99 After an appeal from Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie to FEMA the agency provided the VA with 500 000 masks 99 Federalism and FEMA editThe costs of a disaster to states and localities can escalate quickly Federal assistance becomes fully available with the approval of the President and at the request of the governor Public help for governments to repair facilities is 75 federally funded with local governments responsible for covering the rest unless the state grants aid or loans FEMA does not compensate for buildings that have been improperly maintained by the state or local government nor does it pay to upgrade or improve facilities FEMA coordinates but does not fund disaster assistance provided by the Small Business Administration or the Farmers Home Administration FEMA grant in aid funds come from revenue sharing the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Department of Transportation Grants for disaster preparedness can be used by flood control districts 100 Many states have disaster relief agencies of their own In the event of a disaster outside of a state s operating capacity the director of said agency will advise the Governor whether or not to proclaim a state of emergency Declaring a state of emergency upon Presidential approval entitles a state to federal assistance It is important to note that proclaiming a state of emergency does not guarantee federal assistance States also rely on mutual aid agreements such as the Civil Defense and Disaster Compact A mutual aid agreement can be between neighboring states cities counties and cities states and cities or an entire region These agreements allow agencies to share resources so they are better prepared for emergencies 101 Local governments have the most immediate responsibility Four factors shape local disaster response The extent of tax base depletion The scope of lost sales tax revenue Access to other forms of revenue Amount of city debtHaving a mostly intact tax base allows local governments to maintain steady revenue stream Business unharmed by a disaster will be able to continue to generate sales tax revenue Cities with access to large revenue reserves and strong mutual aid agreements will have greater response capacity While cities with large municipal debt that would be unable to pay back state or federal loans would be in a difficult situation 102 U S v Parish of Jefferson et al edit This case gave FEMA the right to sue in like order to recover funds paid out in flood insurance claims for flood damage as a result of poor decisions by local officials and developers The case also gave FEMA the power to sue localities who fail to meet flood plain management requirements 102 List of FEMA heads editName Start End PresidentJames Hafer May 1975 April 1 1979 Gerald FordGordon Vickery Acting April 1 1979 July 1979 Jimmy CarterThomas Casey Acting July 1979 August 1979John Macy August 1979 January 20 1981Bernard Gallagher Acting January 20 1981 April 1981 Ronald ReaganJohn McConnell Acting April 1981 May 1981Jeff Giuffrida May 1981 September 1 1985Robert Morris Acting September 1 1985 November 1985Julius Becton November 1985 June 1989Robert Morris Acting June 1989 May 1990 George H W BushJerry Jennings Acting May 1990 August 1990Wallace Stickney August 1990 January 20 1993William Tidball Acting January 20 1993 April 5 1993 Bill ClintonJames Witt April 5 1993 January 20 2001John Magaw Acting January 20 2001 February 15 2001 George W BushJoe Allbaugh February 15 2001 April 15 2003Michael Brown April 15 2003 September 12 2005David Paulison September 12 2005 Acting September 12 2005 June 8 2006 January 21 2009Nancy Ward Acting January 21 2009 May 19 2009 Barack ObamaCraig Fugate May 19 2009 January 20 2017Bob Fenton Acting January 20 2017 June 23 2017 Donald TrumpBrock Long June 23 2017 March 8 2019Pete Gaynor March 8 2019 Acting March 8 2019 January 14 2020 January 12 2021Bob Fenton Acting January 12 2021 April 26 2021 Joe BidenDeanne Criswell April 26 2021 presentTitles edit Director of the Office of Emergency Preparedness within the General Services Administration May 1975 April 1 1979 Director of Federal Emergency Management Agency as an independent agency April 1 1979 April 15 2003 Elevated to Cabinet level February 26 1996 January 20 2001 14 15 Director of Federal Emergency Management Agency and Under Secretary of Homeland Security for Emergency Preparedness and Response within the Department of Homeland Security April 15 2003 June 8 2006 Director of Federal Emergency Management Agency and Under Secretary of Homeland Security for Federal Emergency Management within the Department of Homeland Security June 8 2006 March 31 2007 Administrator of Federal Emergency Management Agency within the Department of Homeland Security March 31 2007 present See also editHistory of homeland security in the United States United States civil defense Federal Civil Defense Authority FEMA camps conspiracy theory FEMA photo library National Emergency Technology Guard PDD 62 the National Security Directive defining FEMA s counterterrorism jurisdiction Civil defense by country Civil Contingencies Secretariat British counterpart emergency management agency Emergency Preparedness Canada Canadian counterpart emergency management agency National Disaster Medical System Disaster Medical Assistance Teams Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Teams Integrated Public Alert and Warning SystemReferences edit a b Executive Order 12127 Federal Emergency Management Agency Federation of American Scientists FEMA Publication 1 PDF FEMA Federal Emergency Management Agency Retrieved September 18 2023 Procedures Relating to a Lapse in Appropriations PDF www fema gov Department of Homeland Security September 22 2023 Retrieved September 28 2023 DHS FEMA Budget Overview FY 2023 Congressional Justification PDF FEMA Archived from the original on September 18 2023 Retrieved September 18 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link The Federal Emergency Management Agency PDF Fema gov November 2010 Retrieved February 3 2017 History of Federal Domestic Disaster Aid Before the Civil War Archived December 14 2011 at the Wayback Machine Biot Report 379 July 24 2006 Suburban Emergency Management Project Guide to House Records Chapter 23 Ford s Theater Disaster Archives gov Archived from the original on September 21 2016 Retrieved September 8 2016 Article on the RFC from EH NET s Encyclopedia Archived October 29 2013 at the Wayback Machine US Fish and Wildlife Service Flood Control Act of 1944 Digest of Federal Resource Laws of Interest to the U S Fish and Wildlife Service Archived from the original on December 26 2018 Retrieved August 9 2019 a b Records of the Federal Emergency Management Agency FEMA National Archives U S Government August 15 2016 a b FEMA History Archived May 9 2008 at the Wayback Machine Federal Emergency Management Agency a b c Bea Keith Proposed Transfer of FEMA to the Department of Homeland Security Order Code RL31510 updated July 29 2002 Report for Congress Congressional Research Service Library of Congress a b Falkenrath Richard S Problems of Preparedness U S Readiness for a Domestic Terrorist Attack 2001 International Security Boston a b President Clinton Raises FEMA Director to Cabinet Status Press release Federal Emergency Management Agency February 26 1996 Archived from the original on January 16 1997 Retrieved March 3 2010 a b Fowler Daniel November 19 2008 Emergency Managers Make It Official They Want FEMA Out of DHS CQ Politics Archived from the original on November 29 2008 Retrieved March 3 2010 During the Clinton administration FEMA Administrator James Lee Witt met with the cabinet His successor in the Bush administration Joe M Allbaugh did not Archived by WebCite at Murry Justin updated July 10 2006 Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Legislation for Disaster Assistance Summary Data FY1989 to FY2006 CRS Report for Congress Congressional Research Service The Library of Congress Should FEMA Remain Part Of Homeland Security NPR org Retrieved September 21 2021 History of Emergency Management slcoem org Retrieved September 21 2021 Grunwald Michael Glasser Susan December 23 2005 Brown s Turf Wars Sapped FEMA s Strength The Washington Post p A01 Retrieved April 18 2007 Senate Bipartisan Committee February 15 2006 The Final Report of the Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina U S Government Printing Office Washington D C Senate Bipartisan Committee 2006 p 208 Build A Kit Ready gov Ready gov Archived from the original on November 1 2016 Retrieved October 31 2016 Make A Plan Ready gov Ready gov Retrieved October 31 2016 About the Ready Campaign Ready gov Ready gov Retrieved October 31 2016 Emergency Preparedness AdCouncil Retrieved October 31 2016 Surge Capacity Force January 30 2013 Retrieved June 3 2021 Cole Devan March 22 2020 Illinois governor says it s a wild west for medical supplies because of Trump s response to states requests CNN Retrieved March 23 2020 Serving America s Disaster Victims FEMA Where Does it Fit Archived September 4 2015 at the Wayback Machine Homeland Security Policy Institute January 13 2009 Department of Homeland Security Federal Emergency Management Agency Fiscal Year 2018 Hurricane Sandy Anniversary 2014 Billions Of Dollars In Federal Aid Still Unpaid International Business Times October 29 2014 FY2015 FEMA Budget C span org FEMA Wasted Billions on Administrative Costs Thefiscaltimes com Why New Jersey Got Billions Less Than New York in FEMA Disaster Aid After Sandy NJ Spotlight Njspotlight com July 9 2015 Regional Operations FEMA gov Archived from the original on July 15 2014 Retrieved December 9 2018 Mitigation Federal Emergency Management Agency Archived July 1 2012 at the Wayback Machine a b FEMA s Mitigation Directorate Fact Sheet Federal Emergency Management Agency HAZUS Archived July 4 2012 at the Wayback Machine is a computer model for hurricane earthquake and flood damage estimates FEMA Severe Repetitive Loss Program Archived from the original on July 2 2012 Retrieved February 6 2016 Grant Program Comparison Mitigation Division Grant Programs Archived October 10 2009 at the Wayback Machine Debt Laden FEMA Is Slow To Act On Program That Buys Flooded Houses Planet Money Episode 797 Flood Money Hazard Mitigation Grant Program HMGP National Response Framework Second Edition PDF Fema gov May 2013 Retrieved October 3 2018 FEMA s State of the Art National Response Coordination Center 2002 2009 fpc state gov Archived from the original on March 8 2016 Retrieved April 18 2016 National Response Framework May 2013 p 43 National Response Coordination Center It Takes A Whole Community for Response Fema gov Retrieved December 16 2017 Homeland Security Today FEMA Monitors Colorado Flooding Supports State Local Response HSToday us Archived from the original on September 21 2013 Retrieved December 16 2017 Here s what Vail learned when it tried out the Presidential Alert messaging system FEMA will test Wednesday Denver Post 2018 10 01 Presidential alert sounds off on mobile phones nationwide Denver Post 2018 10 03 FEMA DHS Planning Guidance for Protection and Recovery Following RDD and IND incidents Archived May 18 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved July 6 2011 Nuclear Attack Planning Base 1990 Bumstead Pamela December 6 1985 NUCLEAR WINTER THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF HUMAN SURVIVAL PDF 84th Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association Washington D C American Anthropological Association Limardo Jessica First FEMA Incident Workforce Academy class graduates Archived February 13 2014 at archive today BioPrepWatch February 13 2014 Retrieved February 13 2014 Emergency Management Institute EMI EMI Programs and Activities Training fema gov Archived from the original on April 17 2016 Retrieved April 18 2016 Emergency Management Frederick edu April 4 2014 Archived from the original on February 20 2014 Retrieved April 20 2014 Announcing the Creation of FEMA Corps FEMA gov June 16 2012 Retrieved August 16 2013 Join AmeriCorps NCCC Welcome to the FEMA Corps Inaugural Class Homeland Security Dhs gov September 14 2012 Retrieved August 16 2013 Segal AmeriCorps Education Award Americorps gov Retrieved March 2 2023 Sun Sentinel Investigation FEMA Sun Sentinel Archived from the original on February 20 2007 Retrieved April 18 2007 Kestin Sally O Matz Megan October 10 2004 FEMA Gave 21 Million in Miami Dade Where Storms Were Like a Severe Thunderstorm Sun Sentinel Archived from the original on June 25 2008 Retrieved April 18 2007 Kestin Sally June 8 2005 Homestead Women Sentenced to Probation for Cheating FEMA Sun Sentinel Archived from the original on August 17 2011 Retrieved April 18 2007 Kestin Sally August 10 2005 FEMA Paid for at Least 203 Funerals Not Related to 2004 Hurricanes Sun Sentinel Archived from the original on June 28 2011 Retrieved April 18 2007 Q 16 Short EAF Part 1 100 Year Flood Plain NYS Dept of Environmental Conservation www dec ny gov Retrieved February 17 2023 Flavelle Christopher September 24 2021 The Cost of Insuring Expensive Waterfront Homes Is About to Skyrocket The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 17 2023 FEMA s flood insurance system prices changing newscentermaine com November 10 2021 Retrieved February 17 2023 How FEMA s New Flood Insurance Rules Affect Nebraska Iowa n d Www msn com Accessed November 18 2021 Executive Summary Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina Archived February 11 2012 at the Wayback Machine February 15 2006 U S Government Printing Office Retrieved June 11 2007 a b FEMA Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina Archived March 2 2012 at the Wayback Machine February 15 2006 U S Government Printing Office Retrieved June 11 2007 Duval Stanwood R Jr United States District Court Eastern District of Louisiana December 12 2005 Order of December 12 2005 Rec Doc No 63 PDF USCourts gov Archived from the original PDF on March 7 2007 Retrieved April 18 2007 Beatrice B Mcwaters et al v Federal Emergency Management Section K 3 No 05 5488 Duval Stanwood R Jr United States District Court Eastern District of Louisiana Modified Order of January 12 2006 Ref Doc No 74 PDF USCourts gov Archived from the original PDF on April 15 2007 Retrieved April 18 2007 Beatrice B Mcwaters et al v Federal Emergency Management Section K 3 No 05 5488 FEMA To Melt Ice Stored Since Katrina Archived November 8 2013 at the Wayback Machine CBS News FEMA Gives Away 85 Million of Supplies for Katrina Victims CNN FEMA Replies to Unjustified Claims Regarding FEMA s Response To Early Snowstorm In Western New York Federal Emergency Management Agency Archived January 28 2012 at the Wayback Machine Ark Pols Blast FEMA for Tornado Response USA Today FEMA Stages Press Conference Staff Pose As Journalists And Ask Softball Questions ThinkProgress org Archived from the original on May 22 2011 Retrieved April 18 2016 Ripley Amanda October 28 2007 Why FEMA Fakes It with the Press Time a b 1 dead link Are Hurricane Maria Survivors Getting Skittle Meals From The Government Snopes com October 16 2017 Retrieved October 17 2017 Walsh Deirdre September 26 2017 Ryan says Puerto Rico will get aid calls situation a humanitarian crisis Cnn com Retrieved October 17 2017 Campbell Alexia Fernandez October 16 2017 FEMA has yet to authorize full disaster help for Puerto Rico Vox com Retrieved October 17 2017 a b c Achenbach Joel Hernandez Arelis R October 9 2017 FEMA administrator Puerto Rico s politics lack of unity hindering hurricane response Retrieved December 16 2017 via www WashingtonPost com Port of PONCE PR PSE details Departures Expected Arrivals and Port Calls AIS Marine Traffic MarineTraffic com Retrieved December 16 2017 Jacobs Jennifer Flavelle Christopher February 13 2019 FEMA Chief Brock Long Leaving Agency He Led Through Deadly Storms Bloomberg Archived from the original on October 17 2019 Retrieved May 3 2020 Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said that Long would have to reimburse the government for the cost of the vehicles and staff involved in the trips many of which were between Washington and his home in North Carolina The report puts that cost at 151 000 Reid Paula April 8 2019 DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen speaks for first time since resignation announcement CBS News Archived from the original on April 17 2020 a b Historic Hurricane Harvey s Recap Weather com September 2 2017 Retrieved December 2 2017 Texas Hurricane Harvey DR 4332 FEMA gov Fema gov Retrieved December 16 2017 Willingham AJ October 10 2017 A look at four storms from one brutal hurricane season Cnn com Retrieved December 16 2017 Hurricane Season 2017 OCHA UNOCHA org September 20 2017 Archived from the original on December 15 2017 Retrieved December 16 2017 Levey Noam April 7 2020 Hospitals say feds are seizing masks and other coronavirus supplies without a word Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on May 4 2020 Retrieved April 27 2020 Pereira Alyssa April 24 2020 Breed says SF s PPE orders have been diverted to France and confiscated by FEMA SFGate Archived from the original on April 26 2020 Retrieved April 27 2020 Stout Matt McGrane Victoria March 27 2020 In state s intense chase for protective equipment coronavirus isn t the only rival the feds are too The Boston Globe Archived from the original on April 18 2020 Retrieved April 27 2020 Asiamah Nancy April 3 2020 3 million masks ordered by Massachusetts were seized at Port of NY in March WWLP 22 News Boston Massachusetts Archived from the original on April 12 2020 Retrieved April 27 2020 Shapiro Ariel Maryland Gov Hogan Takes Extraordinary Steps To Keep Feds From Confiscating COVID Tests Forbes Retrieved July 14 2022 Czachor Emily April 30 2020 National Guard protecting Maryland s coronavirus tests in undisclosed location so federal government can t seize them Newsweek Retrieved July 14 2022 Governor Larry Hogan Official Website for the Governor of Maryland Governor of Maryland Retrieved July 14 2022 Wingerter Justin April 8 2020 Feds sending 100 ventilators to Colorado Trump says The Denver Post Archived from the original on April 22 2020 Retrieved May 6 2020 FEMA bought 500 ventilators out from under state governor said last week Morfitt Karen May 1 2020 It s A Global Free For All Gov Polis Says He s Making Coronavirus Supply Purchases In Secret CBS4 Denver Denver Colorado Archived from the original on May 3 2020 Retrieved May 5 2020 Last month the governor made claims that FEMA swooped in to obtain ventilators he thought were coming to Colorado He says now they re careful to keep all purchases under wraps a b Papenfuss Mary April 25 2020 FEMA Reportedly Took The 5 Million Masks Ordered For Veterans To Send To Stockpile Huffington Post Archived from the original on May 5 2020 Retrieved May 5 2020 FEMA instructed vendors with protective equipment ordered by the Veterans Administration to send the shipments instead to the stockpile Settle Allen 1985 Financing Disaster Mitigation Preparedness Response and Recovery Public Administration Review 45 101 106 doi 10 2307 3135004 JSTOR 3135004 permanent dead link Settle Allen 1985 Financing Disaster Mitigation Preparedness Response and Recovery Public Administration Review 45 101 106 doi 10 2307 3135004 JSTOR 3135004 permanent dead link a b Settle Allen K 1985 Financing Disaster Mitigation Preparedness Response and Recovery Public Administration Review 45 101 106 doi 10 2307 3135004 ISSN 0033 3352 JSTOR 3135004 Further reading editGarrett Thomas A and Russell S Sobel The political economy of FEMA disaster payments Economic inquiry 41 3 2003 496 509 Sobel Russell S Christopher J Coyne and Peter T Leeson The political economy of FEMA did reorganization matter Journal of Public Finance and Public Choice 25 2 3 2007 151 167 online Archived October 7 2021 at the Wayback Machine Kneeland Timothy W Playing Politics with Natural Disaster Hurricane Agnes the 1972 Election and the Origins of FEMA Cornell University Press 2020 online Kousky Carolyn Facts about FEMA household disaster aid examining the 2008 floods and tornadoes in Missouri Weather Climate and Society 5 4 2013 332 344 online Lindsay Bruce R FEMA Disaster Housing The Individuals and Households Program Implementation and Potential Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service 2017 online Murphree Vanessa Bryan H Reber and Frederick Blevens Superhero instructor optimist FEMA and the frames of disaster in Hurricanes Katrina and Rita Journal of Public Relations Research 21 3 2009 273 294 Sadiq Abdul Akeem Kevin Tharp and John D Graham FEMA versus local governments Influence and reliance in disaster preparedness Natural hazards 82 1 2016 123 138 online Schneider Saundra K FEMA federalism Hugo and Frisco Publius The Journal of Federalism 20 3 1990 97 116 MSNBC Article Senate panel recommends abolishing FEMA Federal Emergency Management A Brief Introduction from the Congressional Research ServiceExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Federal Emergency Management Agency Official website nbsp Federal Emergency Management Agency in the Federal Register Works by or about Federal Emergency Management Agency at Internet Archive FEMA Taking Shelter From the Storm Fema gov Retrieved March 6 2019 safe room construction plans Portals nbsp United States nbsp Politics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Federal Emergency Management Agency amp oldid 1197747630, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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