logo
I study local government and Hurricane Helene forced me from my home − here's how rural towns and counties in North Carolina and beyond cooperate to rebuild

I study local government and Hurricane Helene forced me from my home − here's how rural towns and counties in North Carolina and beyond cooperate to rebuild

Yahoo22-04-2025
Last year was a record year for disasters in the United States. A new report from the British charity International Institute for Environment and Development finds that 90 disasters were declared nationwide in 2024, from wildfires in California to Hurricane Helene in North Carolina.
The average number of annual disasters in the U.S. is about 55.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency provides funding and recovery assistance to states after disasters. President Donald Trump criticized the agency in January 2025 when he visited hurricane-stricken western North Carolina. Though 41% of Americans lived in an area affected by disaster in 2024, according to the institute's report, the Trump administration is reportedly working to abolish or dramatically diminish FEMA's operations.
'FEMA has been a very big disappointment. They cost a tremendous amount of money. It's very bureaucratic, and it's very slow,' Trump declared, saying he thought states were better positioned to 'take care of problems' after a disaster.
'A governor can handle something very quickly,' he said.
Trump's remarks have prompted a heated response, including proposals to fundamentally overhaul – but not abolish – federal disaster recovery.
But I believe the current discussion about FEMA handling U.S. disasters puts the emphasis in the wrong place.
As a scholar who researches how small and rural local governments cooperate, I believe this public debate demonstrates that many people fundamentally misunderstand how disaster recovery actually works, especially in rural areas, where locally directed efforts are particularly key to that recovery.
I know this from personal experience, too: I am a resident of Watauga County, in western North Carolina, and I evacuated during Hurricane Helene after landslides severely impaired the roads around my home.
Here, in short, is what happens after a disaster.
Federal legislation from 1988 called the Stafford Act gives governors the power to declare disasters. If the president agrees and also declares the region a disaster, that puts federal programs and activities in motion.
Yet local officials are generally involved from the very start of this process. Governors usually seek input from state and local emergency managers and other municipal officials before making a disaster declaration, and it is local officials who begin the disaster response.
That's because small and rural local governments actually have the most local knowledge to lead recovery efforts in their area after a disaster.
Local officials determine conditions on the ground, coordinate search and rescue, and help bring utilities and other infrastructure back online. They have relationships with community members that can inform decision-making. For example, a county senior center will know which residents receive Meals on Wheels and might need a wellness check after disaster.
However, small towns cannot do all this alone. They need FEMA's money and resources, and that can present a problem. The process of applying and complying with the requirements of the grants is incredibly complex and burdensome. According to FEMA's website, there are eight phases in the disaster aid process, composed of 28 steps that range from 'preliminary damage assesment' to 'recovery scoping video' to 'compliance reviews' and 'reconciliation.' Getting through these eight phases takes years.
Larger cities and counties frequently have dedicated staff that apply for disaster aid and ensure compliance with regulations. But smaller governments can struggle to apply for and administer state or federal grants on their own – especially after a disaster, when demands are so high.
That's where regional intergovernmental organizations come in. Every region has its own name for these entities. They're often called councils of government, regional planning commissions or area development districts. My colleagues and I call them RIGOs, for their initials.
No matter the name, RIGOs are collaborative bodies that allow local governments to cooperate for services and programs they might not otherwise be able to afford. Bringing together local elected officials from usually about three to five counties, RIGOs help local officials cooperate to address the shared needs of everyone in their area. They do this in normal times; they also do this when disasters strike.
RIGOs operate throughout most of the U.S., in big cities and rural areas, in turbulent times and in calm. They serve different needs in different regions, but in all cases, RIGOs bring together local elected officials to solve common problems.
One example of this in western North Carolina is the Digital Seniors project, launched during COVID-19. Here, the local RIGO is called the Southwestern Commission. In 2021, the RIGO area agency on aging coordinated with the Fontana Regional Library to help dozens of elders who had never been connected to the internet get online during the pandemic. The Southwestern Commission used its relationships with the local senior centers to identify people who needed the service, and the library had access to hot spots and laptops through a grant from the state of North Carolina.
In rural areas, RIGOs work alongside regional business and nonprofits to allow local governments to offer regular services and programs they might not otherwise be able to afford, such as public transportation, senior citizen services or economic development.
Part of that work is helping member governments navigate the maze of federal and state funding opportunities for the projects they hope to get done, often by employing a specialized grant administrator. Each small local government may not have enough work or revenue to justify such a staff member, but many together have the workload and funding to hire someone specially trained to abide by the rules of funding from states and the federal government.
This system helps small local governments receive their fair share in federal grant money and report back on how the money was spent.
Disasters rarely respect borders. That's why governments generally work together to distribute grant money for rebuilding communities.
In the summer of 2022, eastern Kentucky faced deadly flooding after receiving about 15 inches of rain over four days – 600% above normal. The North Fork of the Kentucky River crested at approximately 21 feet, killing over two dozen people and damaging 9,000 homes and more than 100 businesses.
The Kentucky River Area Development District, a RIGO representing eight counties, played a key role in the area's recovery. It secured millions in FEMA aid and maintained critical services, including expanded food delivery and transportation for elderly residents.
Similarly, after disastrous flooding hit Vermont in 2023 and 2024, another RIGO, the Central Vermont Regional Planning Commission, jumped into action. It quickly provided emergency communication to the 23 small villages and towns in its region and has since supported local governments applying for grants and reimbursements.
Today, it continues to assist in Vermont's disaster planning and flood mitigation. This is also part of the recovery process.
Rebuilding after a disaster is a long, arduous process. It begins after national journalists and politicians have left the area and continues for years. That would be true no matter how Trump restructures emergency aid: The damage is massive, and so is the repair.
For example, here's how western North Carolina looks six months after Helene: Most businesses have reopened, most folks have running water again, and people can drive in and out of the area.
But many roads are still full of broken pavement. Mud from landslides presses up against the sides of the highway, and condemned housing teeters on the edge of ravaged creek beds.
It is, in other words, too soon to see the full impact of local government efforts to rebuild my region. But RIGOs across the region are hiring additional temporary staff to help local governments get federal money and comply with complex guidelines. Their support ensures that decisions affecting North Carolinians are voted on by the city and county leaders they elected – not decreed by governors or handed down from Washington, D.C.
Locally led rebuilding is slow and difficult work, yes. But it is, in my opinion, the most community-responsive way to deal with disaster.
Jaylen Peacox, a graduate student in public administration at North Carolina State University, contributed to this story.
This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit, independent news organization bringing you facts and trustworthy analysis to help you make sense of our complex world. It was written by: Jay Rickabaugh, North Carolina State University
Read more:
If FEMA didn't exist, could states handle the disaster response on their own?
Beyond bottled water and sandwiches: What FEMA is doing to get hurricane victims back into their homes
New flood maps show US damage rising 26% in next 30 years due to climate change alone, and the inequity is stark
Jay Rickabaugh receives grant funding from the National Science Foundation. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Comedians Pull Off Brazen Epstein Prank Inside Trump Tower Gift Shop
Comedians Pull Off Brazen Epstein Prank Inside Trump Tower Gift Shop

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Comedians Pull Off Brazen Epstein Prank Inside Trump Tower Gift Shop

Pranksters this week trolled President Donald Trump by placing Jeffrey Epstein-themed postcards in the gift shop at Trump Tower in New York City. The cards were surreptitiously inserted onto a souvenir carousel and featured an old photo of Trump with the late convicted sex offender Epstein, when the pair were close friends. Comedy duo Davram Stiefler and Jason Selvig, known as The Good Liars, were behind the stunt. 'There are some new postcards in the Trump Tower gift shop,' they wrote on X, formerly Twitter. See the post here. It's unclear exactly when the cards were placed inside the store. HuffPost reached out to the duo ― who have a long history of trolling Trump and his supporters at rallies, bookstores and more ― for further information. The prank landed amid growing frustration from Trump's MAGA base over Trump's attempts to sweep any mention of Epstein under the rug, and his slamming of his supporters as 'weaklings.' Related... GOP Rep's Response To Trump's Slam Of 'Weaklings' Base Is Just… Wow Houston Chronicle Uses 4 Sarcastic Words To Shred Kristi Noem's Flood Response Fox News Star Stuns With Unreal Take On 'Nazis' And 'The Blacks'

Nvidia CEO Huang Emerges as Reluctant Emissary for US-China
Nvidia CEO Huang Emerges as Reluctant Emissary for US-China

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Nvidia CEO Huang Emerges as Reluctant Emissary for US-China

(Bloomberg) -- Days after a White House meeting with President Donald Trump, Jensen Huang was being hailed by an audience on a stage in Beijing. The Dutch Intersection Is Coming to Save Your Life Advocates Fear US Agents Are Using 'Wellness Checks' on Children as a Prelude to Arrests LA Homelessness Drops for Second Year Manhattan, Chicago Murder Rates Drop in 2025, Officials Say Mumbai Facelift Is Inspired by 200-Year-Old New York Blueprint On his third trip to China this year, the world's ninth richest man announced this week that Nvidia Corp. will resume China sales of its H20 chips, an abrupt policy reversal from the Trump administration. He also opened a major supply-chain expo in Beijing — speaking briefly in Mandarin, as requested by his host, former Chinese Commerce Ministry official Ren Hongbin — with a clarion call for closer business ties. The episode showed that Huang, 62, is becoming increasingly adept at pulling off a delicate diplomatic dance that is both benefiting his company and helping the world's biggest economies manage their differences. The Nvidia boss has long been leery of politics. In January, he was among the few American tech tycoons who stayed away from Trump's inauguration ceremony, spending that week in China where his firm has some 4,000 staff, and Taiwan. Yet trying to keep Washington and Beijing from escalating a rivalry that's weaponized his technology has now become a key part of his job description — whether he likes it or not. With Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping yet to set a date for an in-person summit that's expected in the coming months, a broader question is whether he could emerge as some sort of go-between. While Tesla's Elon Musk and Apple Inc. chief Tim Cook have fallen out of favor with Trump to differing degrees, Huang has maintained warm ties with the unpredictable US leader. 'Huang is obviously on good terms with Trump administration. Yet his chip business is one of the biggest flashpoints between Beijing and Washington,' said Feng Chucheng, founding partner of Hutong Research. 'It's possible the two leaders may want such a channel for messaging, but is he willing to?' Nvidia declined to comment. How much access Beijing will grant Huang remains to be seen. During this trip, the chip boss sat down with Vice Premier He Lifeng, who is spearheading China's trade war negotiations, and Commerce Minister Wang Wentao, but wasn't given an audience with the top echelon of leaders. 'It would be an honor to see President Xi,' Huang said. 'I just wasn't invited.' Shuttle diplomacy has become de rigueur for corporate chiefs aiming to retain major business in the world's biggest economies, given the political sensitivities and suspicions in each capital city toward the other. Apple's Cook similarly has regularly visited China while seeking to engage with the Trump administration. It's unclear how much sway such figures have, beyond smoothing a path for their own business operations. Expectations for Musk — whose EV giant has a significant presence in China — to become a back channel in US-China ties never materialized. The Tesla boss stayed quiet on matters involving Beijing this year, before leaving the Trump administration. While Huang has little political ambition, he has argued to successive US administrations that tightening a chip-export ban would only incentivize China to foster a homegrown industry. His rationale is simple: Allowing Nvidia to compete with China's champion, Huawei Technologies Co., on its own turf is essential to America winning the AI race. China's Commerce Ministry said Friday the US should abandon its 'zero-sum mindset' and scrap its 'unjustified' trade restrictions when commenting on Washington lifting the H20 chips ban. Huang, whose company became the first to hit a $4 trillion market valuation this month, brushed off speculation that he influenced Trump's recent U-turn. Speaking to a group of reporters in Beijing, he said: 'I don't think I changed his mind.' Cultural Sensitivity Over the years, Huang has demonstrated himself to be well-versed in local Chinese culture and able to make himself popular on trips. Photos of him dancing in a vest with a flowery print — traditional to China's northeast — during his company's annual party last year went viral online in the Asian country. Chinese state media outlets this week highlighted the good news on H20 chips, which still fall short of Nvidia's most cutting-edge products. For his part, the Taiwan-born naturalized American showered praise on Chinese tech researchers and entrepreneurs, name-dropping local AI companies, posing for photos with Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun and telling reporters it's the American people's 'misfortune' that Xiaomi electric vehicles aren't available in the US. 'He's a skillful CEO who, like the Apple CEO and others, must navigate the China and non-China technology ecosystems to the maximum extent possible,' said Kurt Tong, a former US consul general in Hong Kong and a partner at the Asia Group. The Taiwan-born billionaire has steered clear of controversy. He was quick to clarify his remarks after referring to the self-ruled democracy as a 'country' last year while touring one of the island's night markets. That reference displeased Beijing, with a spokesperson at the office handling Taiwan affairs calling on him to 'read up on the history.' Days later, Huang said: 'I wasn't making a geopolitical comment, but thanking all of our technology partners here for all their support and contributions to the industry.' That stands in contrast to fellow tech titan Musk who publicly said Taiwan should effectively be under Beijing's control, aligning with Xi's view of the matter. Huang has limited his comments on the Taiwan Strait to how US chip restrictions could influence Beijing's calculations on a possible invasion of the island where much of the world's semiconductors, including Nvidia's, are made. 'You got to ask yourself, at what point do they just say, 'F—- it. Let's go to Taiwan. We've got nothing to lose.' At some point they will have nothing to lose,' he told Bloomberg Businessweek in 2023. Tech is a particularly sensitive sector for a CEO to act as a bridge between the two nations, because of a strategic desire on both sides to decouple in the long term, said Dominic Chiu, senior analyst at Eurasia Group. But there may still be a more immediate opening. 'In the short run, in the midst of these negotiations and transactional deals and back-and-forth, there could be some space for these tech firms to be bridges,' Chiu said. --With assistance from Ian King, Josh Xiao, Lucille Liu, Jessica Sui, Colum Murphy, Luz Ding and Alan Wong. (Update with comments from China's Commerce Ministry in the 12th paragraph.) What the Tough Job Market for New College Grads Says About the Economy How Starbucks' CEO Plans to Tame the Rush-Hour Free-for-All Godzilla Conquered Japan. Now Its Owner Plots a Global Takeover Forget DOGE. Musk Is Suddenly All In on AI Why Access to Running Water Is a Luxury in Wealthy US Cities ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

Trump-Driven Chaos Comes to U.S. Attorney's Offices in Waves
Trump-Driven Chaos Comes to U.S. Attorney's Offices in Waves

New York Times

time11 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Trump-Driven Chaos Comes to U.S. Attorney's Offices in Waves

On Wednesday afternoon, the highest ranking federal prosecutor in Manhattan, Jay Clayton, was blindsided. He had just learned that officials in Washington had decided to fire Maurene Comey, a veteran prosecutor in his office, without first notifying him, according to three people with knowledge of the interaction. He was not told the reason. The sudden firing from the Southern District of New York — and Mr. Clayton's inability to intervene — raised questions about his autonomy as the leader of an office that has long prided itself on its independence from Washington and has led high-profile investigations into public corruption, financial crimes and gang violence. The episode typified the chaos that has gripped four U.S. attorney's offices in the New York region since President Trump reclaimed the White House, taking closer control of the Justice Department than any president in the last half-century and rattling the nation's legal system. None of the offices in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Albany and Newark has a permanent leader. Instead, Mr. Trump has concentrated power within the Justice Department in Washington and, in two of the offices, has elevated loyalists with little prosecutorial experience, leading to confusion and plummeting morale within the rank and file. His moves raise the question of what, exactly, a U.S. attorney is empowered to do, beyond serving Mr. Trump's chosen agenda. 'It's not a one-off,' said Daniel Richman, a professor at Columbia Law School and a former federal prosecutor in Manhattan. 'Sad to say, there are a number of U.S. attorney's offices across the country that have been caught in various partisan efforts that have reduced the quality of the work they do, and the respect they get.' Though U.S. attorney's offices have always answered to top Justice Department officials in Washington, they have historically enjoyed a certain sway over their own territory, including the ability to hire and fire and to conduct investigations without micromanagement from the Washington headquarters, typically referred to as Main Justice. The Southern District in particular has historically set its own course, earning the nickname the Sovereign District. But on Wednesday, Mr. Clayton was reduced to a bystander. 'The role of the U.S. attorney is to mediate between the dictates from Washington and the integrity of the office's day-to-day work,' Professor Richman said. 'And if he can't do that, he's just a paper-pusher.' A spokesman for the Southern District declined to comment. The ouster of Ms. Comey, who is the daughter of James B. Comey, the former F.B.I. director and an adversary of President Trump, was just the latest jolt to the Southern District in Mr. Trump's second term. In February, the administration moved to drop corruption charges against Mayor Eric Adams of New York City, saying they were hindering him from helping with immigration enforcement. The office's interim U.S. attorney, Danielle R. Sassoon, resigned in protest. She was succeeded by an interim official who held the office for about two months before Mr. Trump named Mr. Clayton, who served as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission during Mr. Trump's first term. But Mr. Clayton, like the U.S. attorneys in Newark, Brooklyn and Albany, remains unconfirmed by the Senate. Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, a Democrat, used a Senate provision known as a blue slip to block the nominations of Mr. Clayton and Joseph Nocella Jr., the interim U.S. attorney in Brooklyn. That has left it unclear how long they can continue to lead those storied New York offices. Mr. Clayton's 120-day term expires in mid-August. After that, if he remains unconfirmed, the judges of the federal court in the Southern District could appoint him. In Mr. Trump's first term, all 85 of his nominees for U.S. attorney were confirmed by the Senate. But so far in his second term, he has formally nominated only around a quarter of that figure, relying on interim and acting officials to lead offices around the country. Of the four U.S. attorneys in the New York region, the tenure of John A. Sarcone III, Mr. Trump's choice to lead the U.S. attorney's office in Albany, has perhaps been marked by the most personal disarray. Mr. Sarcone, who took over in March as head of the office, was never formally nominated to lead it. Mr. Sarcone had never worked as a prosecutor before his elevation, and had been a regional administrator for the General Services Administration, which manages the federal government's property portfolio. In his brief tenure, Mr. Sarcone has harshly criticized immigrants and the Albany police and removed The Albany Times Union from his office's press distribution lists for its probing coverage of his leadership. This week, still lacking Senate confirmation, Mr. Sarcone needed the approval of the judges of the Northern District of New York in order to extend his tenure. But in a rare decision, the judges declined to appoint him as the office's permanent leader. After that, Mr. Sarcone was reappointed by the Justice Department to lead the office as a 'special attorney to the attorney general.' A spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office in Albany declined to comment. In New Jersey, Alina Habba, Mr. Trump's former campaign spokeswoman and personal lawyer, has courted controversy as the interim U.S. attorney. She has aggressively targeted critics of the Trump administration, including by investigating and bringing charges against Democratic elected officials. In May, a magistrate judge in New Jersey admonished her office's prosecutors during a hearing in which the prosecutors dropped trespassing charges against Ras Baraka, the mayor of Newark. Ms. Habba, who was also appointed in March and had no prior prosecutorial experience, previously ran a small civil litigation firm. She met Mr. Trump through his Bedminster, N.J., golf club, and started working for him in 2021. Like Mr. Sarcone, Ms. Habba faces a deadline to be named permanent U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey, and may face challenges to a court appointment. On Thursday, she acknowledged as much in an all-hands meeting at her office, thanking prosecutors for their work should she not be voted in. In Brooklyn, President Trump has appointed Mr. Nocella, a former Long Island family court judge and a product of Long Island Republican politics. Mr. Nocella is the only one of the four who had any experience as a federal prosecutor before being appointed, having served as an assistant U.S. attorney in the Eastern District of New York in the early 1990s. That office, which has been a leader in cases prosecuting the leaders of drug cartels, transnational repression by the Chinese government and public corruption, has experienced less turmoil than its counterparts in Manhattan, Albany and Newark. A spokesman for the Eastern District declined to comment. The U.S. attorney's office in New Jersey did not respond to a request for comment. The deputy attorney general, Todd Blanche, a former federal prosecutor in Manhattan, has emphasized the particular importance of the Brooklyn office to Mr. Trump — in part because it includes Kennedy Airport, a nexus for international criminal cases, according to two people with knowledge of his thinking. Mr. Blanche has also emphasized the importance of relying on the expertise and experience of veteran prosecutors in the office to help execute the president's law-and-order agenda, the people said. But the Brooklyn office also hasn't been entirely insulated. In March, before Mr. Nocella was appointed, some members of the office were stunned when they learned that Carlos Watson, the convicted fraudster, had been granted clemency by President Trump, according to two people with knowledge of the situation. 'The message seems to be that unitary executive gets to do what it wants, and damn those who interfere,' Mr. Richman said.

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