Orlando Sentinel

FEMA faces added strain in year filled with disasters

Agency’s response to Laura comes on top of pandemic, fires

- By Ben Fox

WASHINGTON — As it cut a destructiv­e path through Louisiana and surroundin­g states, Hurricane Laura was also testing an already-stretched Federal Emergency Management Agency in what is shaping up to be a unpreceden­tedly disastrous year.

The federal disaster agency has a major role in hurricane response, working with state and local authoritie­s to prepare beforehand and clean-up and rebuild in the aftermath.

But FEMA, like the country as a whole, has never faced a year like 2020. In addition to COVID-19, which prompted emergency declaratio­ns for all U.S. states and territorie­s for the first time, the agency has deployed personnel to help with wildfires in the west and the damaging series of recent storms in Iowa.

“The only thing we can liken this to is 2017, which was one of our busiest years in decades,” said Steven Reaves, president of the FEMA employees union. “This is far eclipsing 2017.”

That year, 16 weather events, including Hurricane Maria, did a combined $306 billion in damage in the U.S., a record.

There are no signs yet that FEMA will be unable to adequately respond to Hurricane Laura, as the agency assesses damage and begins the process of parceling out federal contracts for what will inevitably be an expensive clean-up.

The response can have political consequenc­es. That was a lesson learned perhaps most famously by President George W. Bush, whose popularity sank as a result of his administra­tion’s handling of Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath in 2005.

President Donald Trump, after receiving a briefing Thursday at FEMA headquarte­rs, said the agency and local authoritie­s had done a “fantastic job” and he plans over the weekend to visit

Texas, Louisiana and perhaps another state affected by the storm.

“We got a little bit lucky,” he said. “It was very big. It was very powerful. But it passed quickly.”

FEMA Administra­tor Peter Gaynor said the agency can handle the hurricane even as he acknowledg­ed the challenge posed by multiple crises.

“I think even in a normal hurricane season, a traditiona­l hurricane season, it’s complicate­d enough,” Gaynor said on ABC’s “Good Morning America” on Thursday. “Responding to a hurricane in a COVID-19 environmen­t makes it a little bit more complicate­d. But we’ve been working on this for a while, since May.”

Members of Congress have expressed concern for months about FEMA’s ability to deal with multiple disasters with leadership vacancies and strains on its budget. Reaves said there are also hundreds of rank-and-file jobs that need to be filled as well as fewer people available to deploy because of the coronaviru­s.

Those concerns grew after Trump issued an executive order to partially extend COVID-19 jobless benefits with $44 billion from the FEMA federal disaster fund after his administra­tion failed to reach a deal with Congress to extend the benefits.

“The fact that President Trump would take up to $44 billion from FEMA’s disaster relief fund right before a possibly record-setting hurricane season shows his inability to protect our country during a crisis,” said Rep.

Donald Payne, a New Jersey

Democrat.

FEMA, in a written response to questions about the fund, said the executive order includes a provision that ensures the disaster fund won’t drop below $25 billion.

The concern about leadership vacancies isn’t new under a president who has said he prefers acting officials who can be easily removed and there are many throughout the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees FEMA.

A FEMA report on 2017 noted that staff shortages hindered the agency’s response to the series of storms that included hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria. It has made efforts to address the issue, but its training academy was forced to shut down for months this year because of COVID-19.

Reaves, the president of Local 4060 of the American Federation of Government Employees, said there are hundreds of open jobs, including for the people whose duties include evaluating damage from hurricanes and approving contracts for recovery. He cited the slow process of conducting background checks and competitio­n from private companies seeking to lure away FEMA workers, among other factors.

With a hurricane season that runs through Nov. 30 and fires still blazing in California, it may get worse.

“I can tell you from FEMA history what comes next,” Reaves said. “After the fires are over, what comes next? Mudslides and floods.”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? President Donald Trump, Vice President Mike Pence and FEMA Administra­tor Peter Gaynor listen Thursday during a briefing about Hurricane Laura in Washington.
EVAN VUCCI/AP President Donald Trump, Vice President Mike Pence and FEMA Administra­tor Peter Gaynor listen Thursday during a briefing about Hurricane Laura in Washington.

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