FEMA Faces Leadership Upheaval and Workforce Cuts Ahead of Active Hurricane Season
- FEMA announced on Wednesday that 16 senior executives are leaving just prior to the June 1 start of the hurricane season.
- This leadership upheaval follows months of workforce losses and low morale amid an ongoing downsizing mandated by the Trump administration.
- FEMA has paused and is now restarting disaster response training at three major centers while projecting a workforce decline from about 26,000 to 18,000 by year-end.
- A FEMA official warned current actions are 'too little and not reassuring' and fears preparations will fall short this season despite recent efforts to stop staff departures.
- These developments imply FEMA’s reduced capacity may force states to manage more disasters independently, raising concerns about national preparedness gaps.
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44 Articles
Ahead of hurricane season on June 1, the Community Hubs program, promoted by the Bureau of Emergency Management and Disaster Administration (Nmead), seeks to integrate nonprofit and faith-based organizations into the emergency response phase. However, its implementation has not only been criticized by some participating entities, but there are also warnings about delays and operational deficiencies on the part of the government during past emerg…
This Louisiana community preps for hurricane season as questions linger about federal storm response
“These hurricanes are coming at us faster and they’re coming for a longer time of the year. They’re producing more rain, higher winds. And they’re going to places that may never have experienced that before."
White House defends FEMA staff purge before hurricane season
White House officials maintain the recent purge of senior Federal Emergency Management Agency officials won’t impact the nation’s hurricane preparedness. FEMA announced Wednesday that 16 agency executives, including the agency’s acting second-in-command MaryAnn Tierney, would be leaving their posts, roughly one week before the official start of hurricane season on June 1. HURRICANE WATCH: TRUMP’S REMADE WEATHER AGENCIES IN THE EYE OF THE DOGE ST…
Hurricane season is here. How will Trump's FEMA respond?
When disaster strikes, FEMA is there. The Federal Emergency Management Agency has led America's response to storms, wildfires and other catastrophes for decades, but that is changing under President Donald Trump. As a result, coastal states may struggle as hurricane season arrives.Trump is moving to "weaken FEMA and shift disaster response to the states," said the Los Angeles Times. The president made his preferences clear after January's devast…
By Andrew Freedman, Ella Nilsen and Gabe Cohen, CNN The start of another above-average hurricane season finds US weather and disaster response agencies more overwhelmed than ever, potentially leaving tens of millions of Americans more vulnerable to the massive storms. Both the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) are heading into the season struggling, having lost thousands of …
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