海角大神

Transformed FEMA faces a torrent of challenges to its growing relief efforts

|
Marco Bello/Reuters
Fire & Rescue members descend toward the Broad River following the passing of Hurricane Helene, in Bat Cave, North Carolina, Sept. 30, 2024. While most rescues are locally executed, FEMA often plays a role in coordinating or funding the efforts, as the federal agency charged with overseeing disaster relief.

The grim faces of police officers blocking a main road into Bat Cave, an iconic Appalachian community, underscore the trauma and tragedy of an epic flood that has left nearly 100 residents of the mountain region still missing.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 need anybody down there complicating what鈥檚 going on any more than it already is,鈥 a police officer says.

Nearly 20 years after FEMA鈥檚 flawed response to Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, the Federal Emergency Management Agency鈥檚 efforts in western North Carolina point to successful reforms that lean on local first responders, volunteers, and neighbors while providing key financial support for lifesaving and longer-term efforts.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Effective deployment of the nation鈥檚 emergency resources depends on the goodwill of public officials, responders, and citizens. That goodwill is being tested now, as is the Federal Emergency Management Agency鈥檚 agility, in North Carolina.

Even as FEMA has improved, the current recovery efforts following Hurricane Helene also show how the agency has become a perennial pi帽ata for budget hawks and a culture war battleground 鈥 complicating America鈥檚 already polarized views of what government in action means.

鈥淐ommunities know how to pull together in times of crisis, and FEMA does the same thing 鈥 they don鈥檛 come riding in on horses with hats on and say, 鈥榃e鈥檙e here!鈥欌 says Susan Cutter, a professor at the University of South Carolina in Columbia and co-director of its Hazards Vulnerability & Resilience Institute. But 鈥渨hat鈥檚 happened in western North Carolina is that [people] don鈥檛 necessarily want FEMA there 鈥 they do and they don鈥檛. They don鈥檛 trust the government, and they haven鈥檛 trusted the government for a long time.鈥

By its own admission, the agency is short-staffed, and a fragmented federal approach to disaster recovery compromises its effectiveness. FEMA programs are spread across , making coordination of recovery efforts almost impossible, according to a 2023 report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office.

But FEMA at least is well aware of how important it is for the agency to partner and coordinate with others on the front lines.

鈥淭here will never, ever be any single organization, never any one group of humans, that can possibly respond to the totality of a natural disaster,鈥 says Natalie Simpson, an emergency operations management professor at the University at Buffalo.

And despite the increasing frequency and costs of disasters, and persistent criticism by both political parties, FEMA soldiers on.

Eduardo Munoz/Reuters
FEMA workers help process claims by local residents affected by floods following the passing of Hurricane Helene in Marion, North Carolina, Oct. 5, 2024.

FEMA staff have faced verbal attacks and the risk of physical harm. An armed North Carolina man was arrested on Oct. 12 after , highlighting a dynamic where storm victims are questioning 鈥 and threatening 鈥 those tasked with helping them rebuild.

That same day, a U.S. Forest Service official sent an alert saying that National Guard troops 鈥渉ad come across 鈥 trucks of armed militia saying they were out hunting FEMA.鈥欌 Although this report proved to be incorrect, FEMA operations were briefly paused in North Carolina鈥檚 Ashe and Madison counties as a result.

For some, the agency has become a symbol of government inefficiency and mismanagement.

For others, the question is not about intent but capacity: If climate change worsens how weather affects communities, how ready is America to respond?

鈥淯ntil Katrina, disaster response was framed in terms of what the professional response was, with one decision-maker,鈥欌 says Professor Simpson. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been a 20-year journey to change the vision of large-scale emergency response to focus on a common framework, a common language, and recognizing each other.鈥

FEMA鈥檚 role 鈥 and the rising costs of extreme weather

Signed into existence by President Jimmy Carter in 1979, FEMA employs about 20,000 workers and faces more than 100 declared disasters per year on average. As the frequency of major disasters has steadily grown, so have costs:聽From 1980 to 2007, only one year had more than seven billion-dollar disasters. From 2019 to 2023 the average year had more than 20 such events, according to a . A practice called 鈥渋mmediate needs funding鈥 was implemented 鈥 to prioritize lifesaving measures when FEMA funds are scarce 鈥 following extreme weather disasters in 2010, 2011, 2017, 2023, and 2024.

In essence, FEMA holds both checkbook and playbook for recovery, even as many costs still land on local communities.

鈥淔EMA operates on the premise that disaster response is federally supported, state managed, and locally executed,鈥 says former FEMA recovery director Greg Eaton, now an emergency management professor at Purdue Global in West Lafayette, Indiana. 鈥淎ll disasters start and end locally.鈥

Hurricane Katrina, which pummeled Louisiana鈥檚 coast in the fall of 2005, became the organization鈥檚 nadir. Congress found the effort deeply flawed, partly because of inexperienced political appointees muddling efforts and partly because up to $2 billion of taxpayer dollars disappeared to fraud and waste, according to its investigators. In response, the agency undertook a deep transformation, hiring experienced first responders to administer the agency.

Current FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell began her career as an emergency manager in Aurora, Colorado, finding housing and support for people displaced from Katrina.

Throughout the first days of rescue in Appalachia, an army of volunteers, including Louisiana state troopers, New York City firefighters, and Canadian power line workers joined local citizens in leading the initial response, which experts see as one sign of how the nation鈥檚 large-scale disaster response capabilities have strengthened.

Civilian pilot Nathan Smith also saw FEMA staff playing their part, as he flew supply missions into the North Carolina flood zone. 鈥淭hose folks were doing their job and really working hard,鈥欌 says Mr. Smith. 鈥淚t was all-hands-on-deck.鈥

But as western North Carolina begins what will no doubt be a long rebuilding effort, local suspicions about the agency have mounted, amplified by national political figures sharing conspiratorial ideas.

Jonathan Drake/Reuters
Army soldiers from the 27th Engineer Battalion of the 101st Airborne Division clear mud from a building near the French Broad River after Hurricane Helene in Marshall, North Carolina, Oct. 10, 2024.

Many citizens see local or nonprofit help as pivotal.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 really driving the response isn鈥檛 the government, but the people,鈥欌 says South Carolina resident Tracy Meink, a local cleanup coordinator whose father鈥檚 house down the road from Bat Cave flooded during Helene鈥檚 rains, when asked about FEMA鈥檚 response.

Citing delays in Defense Department troop deployments to the flood-wrecked region, 鈥渢his wasn鈥檛 the response that the people of Western North Carolina deserved,鈥 U.S. Sen. JD Vance, the Republican vice presidential nominee, wrote in .

Distrust of federal authorities

Suspicions about government intent or inaction have negatively impacted past emergency responses. During the 2020 wildfires in Oregon, for example, armed men hampered firefighting, fueled by unproved rumors that antifa had set the fires. After the Houston floods in 2017, false rumors that immigration officials would investigate citizenship status led many people to refuse aid.

鈥淎 lot of people don鈥檛 trust the authorities,鈥 says Aaron Clark-Ginsberg, a policy analysis professor at the Pardee RAND Graduate School, in Santa Monica, California. 鈥淭hese people are survivors, and they鈥檙e victims as much as everyone else.鈥

It used to be that government officials who helped citizens during disasters were rewarded at the ballot box. But experts say being responsive is no longer enough.

鈥淒eliverism is not really working anymore,鈥 says Neil Malhotra, a political scientist at Stanford Graduate School of Business, in California, referring to the idea that economic policy can drive people鈥檚 political allegiances.

That reality is complicating Washington鈥檚 task.

The White House has asked Congress for an extra $4 billion for FEMA to respond to tornadoes and wildfires and rebuild Baltimore鈥檚 Francis Scott Key Bridge. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said on Oct. 2 that 鈥渨e are meeting the immediate needs with the money that we have鈥 but 鈥淔EMA does not have the funds to make it through the season.鈥

Amid those worries, recovery efforts here near Bat Cave and nearby Hendersonville have given way to a sense of unity among many who formed impromptu platoons to rescue neighbors.

Indeed, goodwill toward fellow Americans 鈥 reflected in interviews with survivors 鈥 may hint at the nation鈥檚 capacity to rally behind a robust disaster response.

In an atmosphere where many people are uncertain about the government鈥檚 motives, Professor Clark-Ginsberg says there is an opportunity to 鈥減rovide factual, evidence-based responses in a nonconfrontational tone that can help change the narrative.鈥

Editor鈥檚 note: A paragraph with information on the frequency and cost of natural disasters was corrected on Oct. 18, this article鈥檚 date of original publication.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Transformed FEMA faces a torrent of challenges to its growing relief efforts
Read this article in
/Environment/2024/1018/helene-fema-distrust-north-carolina
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe