Weekly Opinion Editorial
FEMA IS A DISASTER!
by Steve Fair
The Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) was created in 1978 during the Carter administration by executive order
(EO). After FEMA’s creation Congress expanded its scope
of authority. FEMA handles dam safety,
disaster assistance, earthquake monitoring, and procuring medical supplies
during a pandemic, in addition of a dozen other functions. FEMA’s motto is, “A Nation Prepared.”
After 9/11, Congress created the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). FEMA was absorbed into the new cabinet level
agency, along with 21 other federal agencies.
The FEMA director reports directly to the Secretary of Homeland
Security. President George W. Bush
appointed Oklahoman Michael D. Brown as FEMA director. Brown warned
the absorption into DHS of FEMA would ‘sever FEMA from its core functions.’ DHS’s
priority was and remains counter terrorism, not disaster relief. Brown’s 2003 prophecy came true when
Hurricane Katrina hit Louisiana in 2005.
FEMA’s response to the hurricane was
late and unorganized. Brown was forced
to resign, but the lack of training of FEMA personnel and DHS’s deemphasis of FEMA’s
core function was the real issue. FEMA
has around 3,000 full time employees.
FEMA, along with the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP),
administers the Shelter and Services Program (SSP), a federal grant program that
gives money to illegal immigrants.
President Trump has claimed FEMA’s slow response in North Carolina is
due to FEMA being out of money because they gave the money to illegals. FEMA responded by adding a ‘rumor’ tab on
their website. They say they have money
and the SSP and disaster relief are not connected. They say the appropriated monies for two separate
programs and are earmarked and can’t be used for any other purpose. Three observations:
First, FEMA is a disaster. Since
its creation, it has been a joke. Prior to FEMA’s creation, the federal
government responded to disasters in a variety of ways. More than a hundred times in 150 years,
Congress passed ad hoc legislation for relief or compensation after a natural disaster. They let local authorities administer the
monies. FEMA has evolved into a bureaucratic
nightmare. Billions of tax payer dollars
are wasted and fraud runs rampart. Brown’s
prognosis the agencies core mission would be compromised has come to past. The agency has morphed into a social services
behemoth and response to natural disasters has become secondary.
Second, the money comes out of the same bucket. Shelter and Services and Disaster Relief may
be earmarked, but bureaucrats are only interested in not co-mingling monies
when it is convenient. U.S. taxpayers
are funding both programs. Taxpayers expect FEMA to be more interested in
helping their fellow U.S. citizens displaced by a hurricane and flooding than getting
an illegal immigrant a hotel room like the local Marriott.
Third, the president controls FEMA response. The costs of a disaster to a state or local
government can escalate quickly. Federal
assistance becomes fully available with the approval of the president and at
the request of the state’s governor. North Carolina Democratic Governor Roy Cooper declared
25 of the state’s 100 counties disaster areas after the hurricane swept across
the western half of the state. Cooper
has praised President Biden and the federal response. But residents in the Tar Heel state affected
by the disaster haven’t been as complimentary.
Rumors of activated National
Guard troops and volunteers being hindered, blocked and thwarted by FEMA
abound. Once again, FEMA has failed to ‘manage’
a national emergency and the Biden/Harris administration controls FEMA.
After Trump’s remarks regarding FEMA’s lack of response, the liberal media
went into ‘fact checking’ mode. Not
surprisingly, they found Trump’s comments inaccurate and FEMA’s response to be
stellar. Who fact checks these
so-called fact checkers? Today’s
mainstream ‘fact checkers’ appear to be biased, one-sided, partisans
editorializing under the guise of journalism.
Americans aren’t fooled- they recognize their fellow citizens in North
Carolina need help and the feds aren’t providing it. [S1]
At a news conference in 1986, President Ronald Reagan said, “the nine most terrifying words in the English language are: “I’m from the government and I’m here to help.” Truer words were never spoken.
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