logo
As Texas cleans up, ex-staffers say Fema has ‘eroded capacity' for multiple disasters

As Texas cleans up, ex-staffers say Fema has ‘eroded capacity' for multiple disasters

The Guardian15 hours ago
As the cleanup continues from this month's torrential rain storms and flooding in Texas that left more than 120 dead, recently departed officials from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) say the organization is dangerously underresourced and overstretched in the event of further natural catastrophes.
A mass staff exodus, plunging morale and a loss of key leaders has left the main US disaster-relief organization ill-equipped to cope with an anticipated deadly spate of storms in the current hurricane season, former agency insiders say.
Fema's weakness, exacerbated by grant cuts imposed by the Trump administration and the loss of institutional knowledge in strategic leadership positions, will be exposed if the nation is faced with more than one disaster simultaneously, according to Michael Coen, the agency's former chief of staff.
In an interview, Coen – who left his post in January after Donald Trump took office – said the officials at Fema had been preparing contingency plans that would enable the agency to meet the demands of hurricane season, which generally runs from early June until the end of November, with fewer resources.
'They understand that they don't have the resources they've had in past years, whether it's funding or even some contracts have lapsed,' he said. 'They are trying to make decisions so that they can handle multiple events at one time.'
But since Trump's inauguration, the agency has seen an estimated 2,000 departures through resignations or retirements, which may have rendered it incapable of coping with the widespread carnage likely to be wreaked by a succession of tropical storms.
'I'm concerned that Fema is going to be at a disadvantage because they don't have the resources to respond to the disasters we know could happen, which could be two or three concurrent disasters at the same time,' said Coen.
'Fema has eroded capacity since President Trump became president. Staff have departed. There have been cuts to grant programs and they are going to be running into a financial challenge with the disaster relief fund, because the president hasn't requested supplemental funding from Congress.'
Coen – a disaster relief career official who was also Fema's chief of staff during Barack Obama's presidency – said the cuts could mean the agency running out of funds to respond to disasters by the end of this month.
'Fema is currently supporting the state of Texas with the flooding and the urban search and rescue. But if in a week or two they also have to respond to a hurricane in the Gulf coast or an earthquake on the west coast, Fema is not going to be able to meet the expectations of the American people.'
The concerns over Fema's state of readiness come amid signs that Trump may have had a change of heart about the agency's future after months of signaling that he favored its abolition.
Last month, he said the administration planned to 'phase out' Fema after the current hurricane season to put more responsibility on individual states to respond to disasters.
He previously described the agency – established in 1979 by Jimmy Carter with the goal of coordinating the US government's response to disasters – as 'not good' and said he would 'recommend that Fema go away'.
But ahead of Trump's Friday visit to the worst-hit Texas flood areas, White House officials indicated that eliminating Fema entirely was no longer under consideration, the Washington Post reported.
The newspaper quoted an unnamed official as saying changes would probably amount to 'rebranding' the agency while stressing the leadership role of the states in disaster response.
Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary – who has overall responsibility for Fema and has chaired a review council looking into the agency's future – said in the wake of the Texas floods that Fema would be 'eliminated as it exists today and remade into a responsive agency', a hardline stance that nonetheless stopped short of abolition.
Coen said the Texas floods had proved Fema's worth: 'This flood is a defining moment and brings clarity for the necessity of the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Fema is an essential agency for the federal government to support states and support the American people in their greatest time of need.'
But he said grant cuts had rendered it less effective and may have caused 'an unnecessary loss of life' in the Guadalupe River area of the Texas Hill Country, the worst-hit flood region.
'One of the grant programs they cut was the Building Resilient Infrastructure Communities, which was a program that would have funded things like the siren system to line a river like the [Guadalupe] in Kerr county,' he said.
'Not that many people needed to lose their lives if more mitigation measures had been put in place. With the president cutting a grant program that provides federal funding to increase mitigation in the country, it only is foreboding for the future on what could happen to other communities if they don't mitigate and they don't have access to federal funds.'
The picture of an agency undermined by the Trump administration's hostility was corroborated by a former mid-level Fema official, who told the Guardian that staff had left because they felt disrespected.
Sign up to This Week in Trumpland
A deep dive into the policies, controversies and oddities surrounding the Trump administration
after newsletter promotion
'It's no secret that a lot of high-level leaders have left the agency,' the ex-official said. 'It's clear that Fema has lost a lot of leadership capability.'
Among those who have left are Tony Robinson, who was Fema's head administrator for the region that includes Texas, as well as his deputy. Also recently departing was Robert Samaan, the administrator for the region that covers Florida and several other states in the hurricane-prone south-east.
'Those are two of the three most critical regional administrators for hurricane season, and for them to leave at this time leaves people shaken for sure,' the former staffer said.
'The lack of experienced leadership is certainly going to hamstring efforts. It's not to say that there aren't other good leaders who will step up. But LinkedIn is littered with people whose names I knew who have left.'
The departure of 16 senior executives was announced on a single day in May.
Compounding the problem is the damage to the morale of those remaining from what insiders say is the scornful attitude of Noem and Fema's acting administrator, David Richardson, a former marine artillery officer with no previous experience in disaster management.
Richardson, who has been in the post since May, caused a stir among senior staff when he said during a briefing that he did not know there was a hurricane season. It was unclear if the comments were meant as a joke.
Richardson was installed after Noem ousted his predecessor, Cameron Hamilton, after he told a congressional hearing that he did not favor Fema's abolition. The new administrator also threatened to 'run right over' any staff members who resisted reforms.
'I, and I alone in Fema, speak for Fema. I'm here to carry out the president's intent for Fema,' he reportedly said.
Coen affirmed the picture of staff leaving due to fears for Fema's future. 'The reason many employees have departed since January 20 is because they had a fear that they were going to lose their job,' he said. 'Also, they didn't feel respected by the current administration. The current employees still there are supporting each other, but if they feel they are not getting support and understanding of how much they sacrifice when they go to disasters, it does have an impact on their mental health and wellbeing.'
Noem, meanwhile, has drawn criticism for issuing a decree requiring that any expenditures or contracts worth $100,000 or more are submitted to her for prior approval – a requirement that critics say could impede rapid disaster response.
'Typically, pre-Trump, a decision like that would come at a much lower level than the secretary of homeland security so you could get out and mobilize,' the former official said.
'It's just unconscionable that you would centralize a decision like that, [which] truly, on reflection, would have led to the loss of life, or at least the loss of the ability to find the remains of the victims.'
The Department of Homeland Security has publicly defended the directive as necessary to root out 'waste, fraud and abuse' and deliver 'accountability' to US taxpayers.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump news at a glance: Trump shocks EU and Mexico with tariffs as he gives Ice agents ‘total authorization' to protect themselves
Trump news at a glance: Trump shocks EU and Mexico with tariffs as he gives Ice agents ‘total authorization' to protect themselves

The Guardian

time20 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Trump news at a glance: Trump shocks EU and Mexico with tariffs as he gives Ice agents ‘total authorization' to protect themselves

Donald Trump has said he will impose tariffs of 30% on the European Union and Mexico from 1 August, threatening Europe that it would pay a price if it retaliated and telling Mexico it had not done enough to stop North America from turning into a 'Narco-Trafficking Playground'. 'If for any reason you decide to raise your Tariffs and retaliate, then, whatever the number you choose to raise them by, will be added onto the 30% that we charge,' he wrote in a letter to the EU. EU trade ministers will meet on Monday for a pre-arranged summit and will be under pressure from some countries to show a tough reaction by implementing €21bn ($24.6bn) in retaliatory measures, which they had paused until midnight the same day. Here are the key US politics stories at a glance: Donald Trump announced on Saturday that goods imported from both the European Union and Mexico will face a 30% US tariff rate starting 1 August, in letters posted on his social media platform, Truth Social. The tariff assault on the EU came as a shock to European capitals as the European Commission and the US trade representative Jamieson Greer had spent months hammering out a deal they believed was acceptable to both sides. Read the full story Donald Trump has given 'total authorization' to federal immigration agents to protect themselves after a series of clashes with protesters, including during enforcement raids on two California cannabis farms. 'I am giving Total Authorization for Ice to protect itself, just like they protect the Public,' Trump posted on Truth Social on Friday, adding that he was directing the homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, and border czar, Tom Homan, to arrest anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) protesters who impede immigration enforcement operations. Read the full story Recently departed officials from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) say the organization is dangerously underresourced and overstretched in the event of further natural catastrophes, as the cleanup continues from this month's torrential rain storms and flooding in Texas that left more than 120 dead. Read the full story FBI director Kash Patel has denied swirling resignation rumors over reported unhappiness at a justice department decision to close the book on Jeffrey Epstein after administration officials teased a big reveal earlier in the year. In a Saturday social media post, the agency director said: 'the conspiracy theories just aren't true, never have been. It's an honor to serve the President of the United States – and I'll continue to do so for as long as he calls on me.' Read the full story David Gergen, a veteran of Washington politics and an adviser to four presidents, Republican and Democrat, has died aged 83. As US regulators restrict Covid mRNA vaccines and as independent vaccine advisers re-examine the shots, scientists fear that an unlikely target could be next: cancer research. Catching up? Here's what happened on Friday 11 July.

Family of Chinese scientist speaks out after she committed suicide amid probe into research
Family of Chinese scientist speaks out after she committed suicide amid probe into research

Daily Mail​

time38 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Family of Chinese scientist speaks out after she committed suicide amid probe into research

The family of Dr. Jane Wu, a renowned Chinese American neuroscientist who died by suicide last year, is speaking out for the first time, accusing Northwestern University of discrimination, retaliation, and abuse that they say drove her to take her own life. The family are now suing the institution that once championed her work, alleging it helped destroy both her career and her spirit. Dr. Wu, 60, a naturalized US citizen and longtime faculty member at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine, died in mid-2024, just months after her lab was shut down following a federal investigation into foreign ties - part of a broader government crackdown that disproportionately targeted Chinese researchers. Wu was never charged with any wrongdoing. The university, however, began limiting her activities, quietly winding down her influence while the investigation dragged on. Now, as the one-year anniversary of her death approaches, her daughter, Elizabeth Rao, is publicly demanding answers. 'As painful as it is for us as her family to recount how Northwestern treated her, we are seeking justice to prevent this from happening again to others in the future,' Rao said to NBC News. Wu spent nearly four decades in neuroscience, including almost 20 years at Northwestern. Her lab focused on tumor development, metastasis, and neurodegenerative diseases - research that had brought in significant federal funding, according to the family's lawsuit, filed last month. Her daughter also said how she a devoted mother and music lover who found joy in everything from Taiwanese pop icon Teresa Teng to country star Tanya Tucker. Yet in 2019 Wu became one of hundreds of US-based scientists investigated by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for alleged foreign influence - part of a sweeping national security campaign that has since drawn accusations of racial profiling. NIH Deputy Director Dr. Michael Lauer later defended the program stating, 'This is not xenophobic racism, this is not targeting and this is not stigma. This is real theft.' In Wu's case, her family said, there was 'no evidence of wrongdoing', yet despite that, Northwestern allegedly continued to punish her. 'NU did nothing to support her nor help lift the racial stigma placed over Dr. Wu despite her obvious innocence and the enormous funding her work had brought to NU,' the lawsuit states. Wu was left in professional limbo. Her family says that once the probe concluded in 2023 with no evidence of wrongdoing, instead of restoring her status, the university intensified its restrictions. The suit accuses Northwestern of systematically dismantling Wu's professional standing - limiting her research, reassigning her grants to white male colleagues, and isolating her from her team. The dean of the medical school slashed her salary and imposed new requirements to reinstate her funded status. Her team was broken up and her lab space diminished. Her grants were reassigned. Her legacy, her family says, dismantled piece by piece. After the university abruptly shut down her lab without explanation in May 2024, the emotional toll was devastating, the complaint says. According to the suit, Wu suffered a stress-induced stroke that damaged her vision. Still able to work, she clung to her research, but Northwestern allegedly used her emotional state as a 'pretext' to evict her. That same month, acting on the university's orders, police officers entered her campus office. Wu was handcuffed, forcibly removed, and involuntarily committed to Northwestern Memorial Hospital's psychiatric unit without notice to her family or consultation with outside physicians, the suit claims. 'The physical assault directed by NU and the forced hospitalization sent Dr. Wu into a severe state of shock,' the lawsuit states. Two weeks after her release, she died by suicide. In a statement Northwestern said it was 'deeply saddened' by her death but 'vehemently denies' the allegations. The school added it plans to file a motion to dismiss the case by early September and has declined to comment further. Wu's death is now being cited by advocacy groups as a chilling example of the fallout from what they describe as discriminatory federal scrutiny of Chinese American scientists. The NIH acknowledged in December 2024 that its efforts had created 'a difficult climate for our valued Asian American, Asian immigrant and Asian research colleagues who may feel targeted and alienated.' Gisela Perez Kusakawa, executive director of the Asian American Scholar Forum, issued a statement condemning the university's alleged actions. 'Universities must be places of community, support, and fairness, not fear and coercion,' she said. Beyond the legal battle, Wu's daughter wants the public to remember her mother as more than just a brilliant scientist. 'She made sure that my brother and I had got not only a great education but also got to do all the stuff of a quintessential American childhood,' Rao recalled. 'Sports, road trips, dance classes, choir, you name it.' Rao told of a home life filled with movie nights, road trips, and singalongs, in stark contrast to the 'tiger mom' stereotype. 'She turned simple houses into warm homes,' Rao said, adding how the family are determined to shine a light on what happened - not just for justice, but to ensure other scientists don't meet the same fate. 'We carry this with us: her upstanding morals and conviction to fight against injustice,' she said. The lawsuit is still in early stages but seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages. For Rao, it's not just about financial redress but vindicating her mother's name, her legacy, and the thousands of scientists like her who may suffer in silence. If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline offers 24/7, free and confidential support at 988 or by texting 988.

California migrant worker dies after falling from greenhouse while trying to run from ICE
California migrant worker dies after falling from greenhouse while trying to run from ICE

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

California migrant worker dies after falling from greenhouse while trying to run from ICE

The Mexican migrant worker who fell 30 feet off a greenhouse trying to run from ICE agents has died in the hospital, his family said Saturday afternoon. Jaime Alanís was just one of the dozens of migrants working at Glass House Farms, a weed operation in Southern California, when ICE raided it on Thursday. Amid the chaos of people running from smoke canisters and tear gas, Alanís fell off a greenhouse on the farm and broke his neck and skull. He was rushed to the hospital in critical condition and spent nearly two days on life support. The family confirmed he had died as of 4:38pm on Saturday. 'Jaime was not just a farmworker, he was a provider, and a human being who deserved dignity. His death is not an isolated tragedy. It is the result of a targeted raid at Glass House Farms,' the family wrote on Instagram. 'Workers were met not with protection, but with chaos and fear. Some were detained. Others were traumatized. Jaime lost his life,' they said. 'This cannot be swept under the rug. We are demanding answers from Glass House Farms. Calling on all legal and community organizations to investigate this raid.' Yesenia Duran, Alanís's niece, has explained that he was the sole provider for his family back in Mexico. Duran started a GoFundMe immediately after Alanís suffered his catastrophic injuries, and more than $127,000 has been raised as of Saturday evening. The family said Alanís would be buried in Mexico if he didn't pull through. The raid was on Glass House Farms, which employs hundreds of people and bills itself as the largest cannabis operation in the world. Customs and Border Protection said it served a warrant on the Camarillo farm, accusing it of employing illegal migrant workers. ICE and the National Guard executed that warrant on Thursday. Protestors showed up to impede federal agents, some of whom threw smoke canisters and flash bangs to control the growing crowd. Once the smoke and tear gas was deployed, most of the protestors ran in the opposite direction, though some were seen throwing rocks at the agents. The demonstration lasted past 11pm on Thursday, with federal agents remaining on the scene as well. Video and photos from the scene showed ICE agents clashing with a crowd of more than 100 people - many of them farmworkers or their family members - who had initially formed a human blockade along the road. It was a scene of absolute chaos, with protesters, farmworkers, and family members scattering throughout the fields. In photos and videos that have been widely shared, one individual at the scene pointed a gun at federal agents and appeared to fire on them. Bill Essayli, the US Attorney for the Central District of California, said the alleged shooting happened at around 2:30pm on Laguna Road. 'FBI has issued a $50,000 award for information leading to the conviction of an Unknown Subject who appeared to fire a pistol at Federal Law Enforcement Officers near Camarillo,' he wrote on social media. Things got so out of control at the farm that the Ventura County Fire Department was on the scene to provide treatment to people who were affected by tear gas or smoke inhalation. 'The Ventura County Fire Department was dispatched at approximately 12:15 pm on Thursday, July 10th to provide medical aid as a result of federal enforcement activity along Laguna Road in the Oxnard Plains,' the department said in a statement. 'VCFD was requested through our county's 911 system solely to provide medical aid and has no connection with any federal immigration enforcement actions.' Although some have sought to cast the raid as a chaotic failure, CBP Commissioner Rodney Scott revealed that 10 illegal juveniles were found working at the cannabis farm. He then shared a photo of the kids they discovered, who were all sitting in front of five federal agents. 'These are the juveniles found in the marijuana facility - almost all unaccompanied, one as young as 14,' Scott said. 'California are you ready to partner with us to stop child exploitation?'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store