Wednesday, August 27, 2025

So much for the "Katrina Declaration"

 

I note with disgust that a large number of employees of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) have complained that "the Trump administration’s sweeping overhaul is gutting the disaster relief agency’s authority and capabilities, undoing two decades of progress since the failures of Hurricane Katrina".


Titled “Katrina Declaration,” the letter accuses President Donald Trump and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, whose department oversees FEMA, of eroding the agency’s response capabilities and appointing unqualified leadership. The group calls for FEMA to be shielded from political interference and for its workforce to be protected from politically motivated firings.

The warning comes as the nation marks 20 years since Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast, killing nearly 1,400 people, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA.) The botched FEMA effort exposed fatal flaws in the federal emergency response system – failures that led Congress to pass sweeping reforms, including the Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act, which strengthened FEMA’s independence and set higher standards for its leaders.

Now, the letter argues, those reforms are being unraveled, as the Trump administration moves to either abolish or drastically shrink FEMA’s role.


There's more at the link.

I remember FEMA and Katrina very well indeed, because I was part of the independent efforts to bring relief to New Orleans after that hurricane, and saw the official cock-ups at first hand.  I wrote about them at length at the time and afterwards.  Go read about them for yourself, if you haven't already read that earlier article.  It's eye-opening.  Let's just say that my respect for FEMA, the American Red Cross and a number of other big-name emergency management and disaster relief organizations was severely undermined.

As for "reforms" implemented after Katrina, why don't we ask the citizens of North Carolina how they feel about the agency after Hurricane Helene went through there last year?  The initial relief efforts were a shambles, and didn't improve until the Trump administration took office in January this year.  There were - and still are - persistent allegations that the Biden administration deliberately slow-walked aid to the area because it was largely conservative in its politics, and had not supported the Democratic Party and the Biden administration in the past.  FEMA was pilloried by many of the locals for its initial failure to act, and - when it did act - for ignoring the expertise of local agencies and taking over in a heavy-handed, inefficient, bureaucratic manner.  There were repeated reports of supplies sent in by independent agencies being confiscated by FEMA without so much as a "by your leave", and a number of rescuers reported that they were ordered out of the area on pain of arrest if they returned.

I think FEMA as presently constituted is nothing more than a collection of bureaucrats throwing their weight around in an attempt to justify their existence.  I think we'd be far better served if each State set up its own FEMA equivalent, using people who know the local area and population and are thus better positioned to help without delay in time of need.  The federal FEMA could then be used as a conduit to get supplies and equipment to the state(s) when and where it's needed, and hand it over to the local FEMA to put it to work.  The military could also establish permanent, working relationships with the State-level FEMA's to prearrange things like helicopter support, evacuations, etc.

Meanwhile, based on my own extensive (albeit two-decade-old) experience with FEMA, I consider this "Katrina Declaration" to be not worth the paper it's printed on.




Peter


21 comments:

tweell said...

I had hired a family to do some earthmoving and concrete work on my land, but they had to cancel after Helene hit. Instead they went to South Carolina to help family, and ended up staying there over the winter. Well, they finally got back and handled my request. They had nothing good to say about the government in general or FEMA. It seems that they got in trouble for making a new dirt road for access where the regular asphalt road had been washed out. There was threats of arrest, the locals turned out, shotguns in hand, and luckily cooler heads prevailed. They didn't say anything about the Red Cross, I don't think those folks made it that far in by the time the family left.

Anonymous said...

Each state (and each county) is required by law to have its own emergency management system.
I'm involved in mine.

Recently, FEMA "helped" in a haz mat drill we did - it was an uncoordinated mess that would have been better for us to do on our own.
They should, at most, provide training and grants to state and local organizations.
They also need to provide grants to private responders instead of keeping it in the government.
Jonathan

Dragon Lady said...

Correct me if I am wrong, but wasn't the initial failure a local government failure? IIRC the levee maintenance funds were spent on equestrian centers and such, evacuations weren't ordered, and local LEOs were no better than the thugs and looters in the aftermath (other than being better armed). Other areas were much harder hit by Katrina, but they weren't incompetent and didn't play politics with the recovery efforts.

glasslass said...

Retired Dr. friend has worked with a Christian org that goes in after an event happens. He's been doing this for the last 10 years. He has worked a lot in Texas and was there for the floods with the kids. Samaritan Purse is always first in but what never get mentioned in the news are the chef's/line cooks/prep people who show up and make the meals for the workers and the people who were affected by the event.

RegT said...

Amen. The Executive Orders giving FEMA total control over the property and rights of individuals need to be abolished, after having been urinated upon by one and all.

Landroll said...

Katrina Declaration? Isn't that like an answer to the question of 'Whose ox is getting gored'?

Jess said...

FEMA is full of grifters. All the funds should be removed from the bureaucracy and given to the states only as needed. Fire them all, cut the costs, and relieve the country from the petty, ignorant staff.

dearieme said...

Weren't they the outfit that instructed staff not to give aid to any household that displayed pro-Trump placards?

So fire all of them who didn't themselves display pro-Trump placards. Tell them it's "tough love".

JNorth said...

I've heard all the issues the rest of you have but I'm just not sure when things changed, some years back I was involved in the recovery of a town where the river ice got shoved into town and flattened half of it. FEMA was involved but I don't think any of them were ever there, they just cut some checked to pay the state to handle everything.

Dad29 said...

IIRC, your propsal, Peter, is near-exactly what Trump wants to do with FEMA. States should do the front-end assessment and secure Fed emergency money; FEMA to make sure the goods are delivered to the States.

As to the letter: more useless appendages sucking your blood.....

Anonymous said...

It would make a lot of sense for each state to develop their own FEMA program. California doesn't have many hurricanes but has forest fires - earthquakes - and mudslides. Texas has none of natural hazards but has hurricanes and ice storms that other states deal with annually. Each state has their issues and expecting a national response for all 50 states is not as efficient as seperate.

Birdchaser said...

I was in Charleston during Hugo, lost my apartment & everything in it, may car & job. But FEMA gave us a bag of ice & 6 bottles of water so everything was good.

Anonymous said...

There is a metric ——ton of B/S about the Katrina disaster. I live 45 miles NW of New Orleans and at the time I was employed as a patrol pilot doing aerial surveillance and photography for a well known oil company with many assets in south Louisiana. My home airport became a relief and rescue station after the storm. FEMA had nothing to do with our efforts. Some of us including me and my friends saw a need for aid and we got busy. Soon a couple of churches and other groups began to donate food, meds, clothing and toiletries. Tents were set up and hot food was cooked everyday. Angel Flight Pilots, volunteers , came in and we delivered what was needed to other airports for distribution. Many who were rescued by helicopter were brought to our airport (KREG, back then it was L38) and they were fed and reunited with family and friends. Transport was arranged for some and a couple of those rescued even came back to help. It morphed into a big operation and MANY folks were helped. And FEMA wasn’t there. There was no mention of reimbursement, although we didn’t expect or look for any. The only time I saw anyone from FEMA was when two officials came to catch a flight out. I would have expected to see them since we were one of the three surviving airports with jet fuel which was in very high demand at that time. I could write a book about those experiences and many more but for the topic of FEMA, they are a failure and a testament to big government incompetence.
I did get a good look at how benevolent, kind and helpful people can be and that part was great.

Jim from down the Bayou

Anonymous said...

All they did in Katrina was bus the blacks from New Orleans to cities in Texas and increade our crime rate.

Beans said...

FEMA, as originally envisioned, was supposed to just be an advisory unit that showed up and helped facilitate operations. A follow-up to the Civil Defense Corps (which, I feel, needs to be reactivated as locals do know more than outsiders.)

Unfortunately, bureaucratic bloat and democratic capture totally destroyed the potential. Obama really 'fixed' the agency. Which is a good reason to unfix it by abolishing it or paring it way down.

As to 'The Katrina Declaration,' what? They named the declaration after the single most damaging event by dems upon the US of A since the election of FDR and the New Deal. Brilliant. Tell everyone that you are incompetent jackwagons without actually calling yourself incompetent jackwagons.

In the Actual Katrina, Biloxi and all the small communities on the Pearl River, like Picayune and Lumberton, were basically wiped off the face of the earth. In comparison, New Orleans took a lot less damage. And would have taken little to no real flooding damage if the Levee Committees (local districts and wards) hadn't stolen the money for decades and if the FedGov had actually monitored said committees and kept them honest. Combine that with a mayor who refused to declare an emergency beforehand and a governor who did the same, both finally declaring way after the storm had passed, and that tying the hands of federal assistance and mobilization of other state's national guards for aid, and it was a perfect storm of corruption and bad reporting.

Fredrick said...

I was approved for temporary housing after evacuating for Hurricane Micheal. My reimbursement for 7 days hotels was rejected 7 consecutive times for things like 1) no proof of buying a generator, (not claimed) 2) no proof of loss of electricity (not claimed) 3) no copy of the mandatory evacuation order 4) just rejected no reason given, and on and on. At no time was a supervisor available to speak with no did they respond. At this point it's a letter to Trump and 2 senators and the useless congressman. After that it's a lawyer, because why not. It's clear these are just first name only contractors generating trouble ticket clearance by saying no, lying on the 'recorded' phone call (like needing a copy of a fema flood map or the evacuation order or hurricane declaration). Pretty clear the contractor is getting paid a full billable hour rate for every useless letter and phone call.

Old NFO said...

They're bureaucrats, ALL they are after is more payraises and less work...

Rick m said...

I was in Gulfport for Katrina. Started seeing a Guard truck or two a few days after the storm. Search teams as soon s they could get through the debris to the destroyed areas. The Guard was handing out water, ice, and MRE's after the first week. FEMA was nowhere to be seen other than the temporary centers for aid distribution a few weeks later. There was a 800 number but the phones weren't working except right next to a crooked cell tower a few miles inland.. They coordinated the distribution of FEMA cottages and travel trailers. It was new to them and they made mistakes and wasted a lot of taxpayers money, but a lot of temporary housing did get roofs over heads pretty quickly for government.
I think that Mississippi had better political leverage in DC than Louisiana had at the time. It's better to get smashed by a storm for a few hours than flooded for weeks as New Orleans was. Katrina came ashore twenty years ago Friday, and it's taken this long to rebuild many of the beach properties. If it happens again, I can't see the federal government footing the bill to the same extent.
FEMA should be restricted to coordinating state EMA's without telling them what to do. Local administration has it's own problems, but the crooked locals grifting i saw after Katrina and working in Venice la during the Deepwater Horizon spill convinced me that it's got to be local watchdogs who know the local crooks and scammers, who to trust and what stuff should cost to replace. The Feds handed out money to everyone with a plausible tale, and many of those stories never got checked out. More than a few people got rich from undeserved fed aid.
It's pretty offensive to offer a "manifesto" like they're political refugees instead of a bunch of lower-mid-level federal functionaries. If they don't like their jobs and the protected, benefit-laden status they enjoy, the private sector beckons.
Rick m

Anonymous said...

You are not wrong.
The then Mayor failed to tell the bus drivers to help evacuate the city, so the only bus to take evacuees out was one stolen by a 13 y.o. kid to get his family and neighbors out before the bus yard was flooded. Mayor also refused day-of-event offer by WalMart of free, combat loaded, trailers of relief supplies.
Of the New Orleans police, the less said, the better.
It was Mississippi that started individual and independent recovery efforts before the rain stopped, and got it done.
John in Indy

Anonymous said...

Went to Avery Co, NC. Hit hard by Helene. Not one person we met thought FEMA gave a damn about them.

ruralcounsel said...

After FEMA's disasterous performance in western North Carolina, I can't see that they aren't already politicized and primarily useless. Slow, ineffective, and offering mostly "management" and not aid. In fact, their "management" seems designed to thwart effective aid from being provided, so that the feds can claim credit.