FEMA Is a Disaster. Trump Is Right To Demand Changes.
The agency is ineffective, duplicative, and expensive.

During a recent visit to Asheville, North Carolina, President Donald Trump floated the idea of fundamentally overhauling the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). "If it was up to me," Trump said, "I'd end [FEMA] right now, and I'd just let the state take care of the problem." He subsequently signed an executive order to assess FEMA's ability to provide "immediate, effective, and impartial response to and recovery from disasters."
The president's comments brought immediate pushback. Kentucky Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear called the elimination of FEMA a "very bad idea." Sen. Bill Cassidy (R–La.) stopped short of condemning Trump's comments, saying some federal disaster agency is needed, even if that agency isn't FEMA.
But Trump is right about this one. The system of federal disaster relief does need reform. FEMA's failures are well-documented, and they have come at a steep cost to taxpayers. Though the agency has received nearly $30 billion in annual appropriations the past three years, areas impacted by natural disasters have seen suboptimal recovery, including Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Florida, and North Carolina.
The lack of response from FEMA is particularly evident in western North Carolina, which was hit hard by Hurricane Helene's flood waters in September. Residents of the area are sleeping in campers, many of which were donated by local and national charities, as they wait through the winter unsure when funding will come through to rebuild their homes. But the problem isn't insufficient spending. The federal disaster relief fund, the majority of which is spent by FEMA, is comprised of both annual and supplemental appropriations following disasters. Since 2020, actual spending from this fund has averaged four times higher than the average spent throughout the 1990s. Even with this increase, FEMA has failed to produce swifter, more effective aid.
Rather, FEMA's failures stem from a bloated bureaucracy and perverse incentives. Because the agency is guaranteed to pick up the check in an emergency no matter its size, states have less incentive to prepare for natural disasters. However, the American disaster response system is intended to rely on federalism and private charitable efforts. "Unfortunately, growing federal intervention is undermining this efficient, decentralized structure," writes Chris Edwards, an economist at the Cato Institute.
In the two decades since the agency's infamous Hurricane Katrina blunders, FEMA has failed to upend its deplorable reputation. Months after Hurricane Helene, FEMA had delivered only 46 temporary homes to North Carolina for the more than 500 families approved for a trailer. North Carolinians in Avery County remain baffled at the 80 trailers that remain vacant at a nearby FEMA staging area even today. In a response to the unused trailers, an agency spokesperson blamed weather and permitting requirements for the delay. But charities such as Samaritan's Purse and Cajun Navy have already overcome these hurdles to deliver temporary housing without the backing of federal funding. Perhaps organizations with better track records of resource stewardship might be better recipients of critical disaster response funding.
Any substantive changes to the agency would have to be approved by Congress. Hopefully, the assessment required by the recent executive order will help politicians find the will to reform the agency or abolish it outright.
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Not in the US Constitution, get rid of it.
Private charities do it better anyway.
A good rule of thumb.
I approve.
I can get my head around a federal backstop for regional disaster recovery.
But if the feds aren't competent in providing the administrative execution, then cut that function. Each State and County has their own emergency management infrastructure. Provide them with the funds to execute their mission.
HOWEVER, I'd push back against the trailer example. If the problem is local permitting, then the solution is for the local permitting agencies to get their shit together. The blame is not on the Feds for failing to overcome local bureaucracy. I don't need federal tax dollars going to one agency to overcome the inertia of another.
"But charities such as Samaritan's Purse and Cajun Navy have already overcome these hurdles to deliver temporary housing . . . "
Any substantive changes to the agency would have to be approved by Congress.
Tell that to Trump's defenders.
Poor sarc.
Have you contacted your congress critter about making Trump's actions permanent yet?
Do you know who my congress critters are? If you did you'd know it wouldn't do any good.
Poor Sarc.
1. Hyperventilate endlessly about how cuts have to be made by congress, otherwise, fascism.
2. Say asking congressmen to do it is a waste of time, so don't bother.
WTF do you actually want?
>>The agency is ineffective, duplicative, and expensive.
hey you do a pretty good Jackie Chiles.
Yes, the spending is real, and it is spectacular!
Though the agency has received nearly $30 billion in annual appropriations the past three years...
USAID is only $50 billion, why bother. - Reason earlier today.
They do not use tax dollars - Tony, earlier today.
Yeah, federal expenditures, not tax dollars.
He’s such a fucking dumbass, maybe he’s fighting for charlihall’s spot.
Noticed that little twit popped up again just the other day; seems to have even less to contribute than previously [if that's even possible].
Start small to see how it goes. Learn from early experiences and grow the process accordingly. I don't know how far Trump wants to go, but I say that the final outcome should use a massive wrecking ball.
Any wagers on whether this will be the last Autumn Billings article?
Yeah, an actual not anti-Trump article. Couldn't believe my eyes. For a site that purports to be libertarian, it is curious how opposed to someone who wants to reduce government.
Trump Is Right
Are those words even allowed to be printed in an article at Reason?
FEMA's failures stem from a combination of expecting them to do the impossible while underfunding the one thing they should and could be expected to do well: emergency response. The Federal government should have absolutely no role in disaster recovery. The one thing that might be reasonable to assign to the Federal government would be coordination of military resources in the immediate aftermath of a natural disaster - communications; emergency medical; and logistics. During the COVID pandemic, reserve and active mobile surgical hospitals were set up to help with overflow in the event that local medical resources were overwhelmed. Although they turned out to be unnecessary, they were set up and staffed efficiently and provided valuable training to the personnel involved at minimum expense to the taxpayers. Communications and logistics under the most extreme circumstances would also translate from worldwide combat to natural disaster response in a similar manner. When the disaster is stabilized and local resources are back online, FEMA can then step back. There is no need for Congress to send money from New York taxpayers to North Carolina flood victims to bail them out.
Or to California to rebuild homes in a fire zone.
This may come as a surprise, but the military can do coordination without another layer of BS from a bunch of worthless union flunkies.
"The agency is ineffective, duplicative, and expensive."
Not to mention subject to politicization:
"FEMA employee fired after telling relief team to skip houses with Trump signs following Florida hurricane"
https://www.cnn.com/2024/11/08/politics/fema-employee-trump-florida-hurricane/index.html
How many others weren't caught?
"FEMA Is a Disaster. Trump Is Right To Demand Changes."
Wrong.
Trump would be right to demand FEMA's demise.
Disasters and emergencies are best handled at the state and local level.
"The agency is ineffective, duplicative, and expensive."
This is true.
Just ask the victims of Katrina, Maui, East Palestine, OH and NC.
East Palestine, Ohio wasn't a disaster, it was a meal ticket for the trial lawyers. Even now people affected by that incident are trying to sue because of the way the settlement is being handled. The trial lawyers got a Judge to rule that the people can't sue until they post a large Bond.
As is every [Na]tional So[zi]alist Agency...
...because 'Guns' don't make sh*t. They just preform 'armed-theft'.
Thus is why D.C. is packing 2.4 to 5 TIMES the wealth as any other state in the U.S.
The only thing Democratic [Na]tional So[zi]alist politicians have been "helping" is helping themselves with 'Guns' into your wallet. Course they indoctrinate you too by calling you 'rich' first and them 'poor'.
Tell FEMA that if they want to continue to exist, they have ONE YEAR to prove the value of their existence.
And I have just the task for them: replenish the Strategic Oil Reserve. Don't give them instructions, just give them the goal. And tell them that the Dept. of Energy will do whatever they say to facilitate it. I think it's at half capacity right now. One year to get it back to full or full+.
This is a simple test of FEMA's ability to get things done in the name of emergency preparedness.
If they can't figure that out, then they're not needed. That simple.
30 years ago, I was a Captain in the National Guard. At that time, FEMA provided us real time training, equipment, and organizational help for the disasters to which we were dispatched. They did an excellent job.
Of course that was 30 years ago...Before FEMA got gobbled up by DHS. Nevertheless, we need an agency LIKE the old FEMA to coordinate the nation's disaster response.
What part of the US Constitution enumerates the power for Nationally addressing every natural disasters?
It would have to be the general welfare clause, I think.