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HomeSocial Justice & ActivismEnvironmentBlack Communities Could Pay For FEMA Chaos

Black Communities Could Pay For FEMA Chaos

By Willy Blackmore, Word In Black

When President Donald Trump returned to power last year, he put the Federal Emergency Man­agement Agency on the chopping block as part of his efforts to reduce the federal government. With his blessing, then-Homeland Security Secre­tary Kristi Noem slashed FEMA’s budget and staff­ing, and Trump himself openly discussed shutting down the agency entirely.

However, as the slash-and-burn approach delayed critical federal disaster declarations and the services they trigger, people within the agency began speaking up — despite risking their jobs.

“FEMA risks entering hurricane season without the clarity and dis­cipline required for effective response,” Victoria Barton, the politically appointed communications chief at FEMA, wrote in one of a series of memos at the begin­ning of the year, according to Politi­co’s E&E News.

And now, just ahead of hurricane season, FEMA’s new leadership appears to be listening.

Katrina Declaration

While hurricanes can hit up and down the east­ern seaboard, they are most concentrated in the southeast, where Black people are nearly twice as likely to be affected as other residents living in the same part of the country. Lower-income people in particular disproportionately depend on FEMA, which often ends up playing a major role in the lives of Black residents after a natural disaster.

In addition to the internal memos, there was also the so-called Katrina Declaration, an open let­ter FEMA employees sent to Congress last year on the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, the deadly storm that devastated New Orleans. The document detailed to lawmakers how far the agency had drifted from the reforms made to ensure Black and low-income people weren’t stranded as they were after Hurricane Katrina.

Rather than engaging with the critique, however, Noem — whose office has FEMA in its portfolio — suspended the 14 workers who wrote it.

Stormy Weather Ahead

With hurricane season rapidly approaching on June 1, FEMA is finally taking steps to rebuild the agency — at least somewhat.

Trump replaced Noem with former Sen. Mark­wayne Mullins, an Oklahoma Republican. Last week, along with reinstating the suspended FEMA workers, Mullins rehired hundreds of disas­ter response workers whom Noem had fired.

“As we approach the 2026 hurricane season and the FIFA World Cup, FEMA is taking targeted steps to stabilize our workforce and strengthen read­iness,” Barton, FEMA’s communications director, said in a statement. “Under new leadership, FEMA is addressing outstanding personnel actions to ensure workforce stability and a strong, deploy­able surge force for upcoming national events and potential disasters.”

The workers Mullin rehired are from FEMA’s Cadre of On-Call Response and Recovery Employees program, or CORE. The unit is often the first fed­eral response after a natural disaster, and some­times continues to work with communities for years as communities rebuild.

First Steps

Still, the agency’s critics are clear that bringing back these workers alone is not enough to solve all of FEMA’s problems.

“FEMA is arguably in a worse state than it was back in August when I signed the Katrina Dec­laration,” Abby Mcllraith, an emergency man­agement specialist who signed the Katrina Declaration, told the Washington Post after she returned to work.

“A hiring freeze is still in effect,” she said. “FEMA still has no legally qualified administra­tor, money isn’t getting to states that need it, (and) we have wildfire and hurricane seasons coming up.”

This editorial was originally published in Word In Black.

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