President Donald Trump criticized the Federal Emergency Management Agency on Friday and floated the idea of eliminating the agency.
The future of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is uncertain as President Donald Trump has suggested he may overhaul or eliminate the agency.
As President Donald Trump wraps up his first week in office, he has already sparked a major discussion on disaster response, particularly in Florida.
FEMA just hasn’t done the job,” the president said in North Carolina. “We’re looking at the whole concept of FEMA.”
President Donald Trump floated “getting rid” of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) on Friday as he visited western North Carolina to survey the damage and recovery efforts from Hurricane Helene.
The president said the Federal Emergency Management Agency has been too bureaucratic and slow in its response to disasters.
President Donald Trump said he'll sign executive order to eliminate or overhaul FEMA on Friday. What would that mean for Mississippi disaster relief?
A key population harmed by Donald Trump’s proposed shutdown of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) would be Americans living in “tornado alley” in the central U.S. and the flood and hurricane states of the southeast, which include a huge percentage of the president’s MAGA supporters.
Heating equipment is, unfortunately, one of the leading causes of home fire deaths, according to the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA). Heating stoves account for 46% of the fires, 76% of deaths, and 72% of the injuries in home fires caused by heating equipment, the NFPA adds.
President Donald Trump assailed the agency as he toured areas of North Carolina that were ravaged by Hurricane Helene.
Although President Donald Trump has floated eliminating FEMA with an executive order, he does not have unilateral authority, according to federal law.
President Trump on Wednesday was sharply critical of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), suggesting at one point states should handle their own response to natural disasters but still