Showing posts with label Kristi Noem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kristi Noem. Show all posts

Sunday, April 6, 2025

Trump Administration Wants To Get Rid Of FEMA Aid By October 1. If You Are A Disaster Victim, You're On Your Own.

The Trump administration wants to get rid of the 
Federal Emergency Management Agency, with
no plan to replace it. So I guess disaster victims
will be entirely on their own going forward.
 If a tornado, hurricane, flood, wildfire or some other big disasters destroys your house or business, you're kind of screwed.  

Even more so now that President Trump, Homeland Security Secretary Ice Barbie Kristi Noem and other administration officials are getting more and more hooked on the idea of ending the Federal Emergency Management Agency's role in disaster recovery by October 1. 

Like everything else in the Trump administration, we don't know exactly what that means. I doubt  they do, either. 

The Washington Post suggests that top on the chopping block are efforts to help rebuild after disasters strike, and funding resilience efforts to help communities get ready for the next inevitable calamity. 

I don't know what all this means for the help FEMA provides in the immediate aftermath of a disaster.  

That immediate aid includes helping evacuate people, shelter people who've lost homes, provide food to victims that need it, and other services that come in the hours and days after a tornado destroys a town like Cave City, Arkansas, or a flood roars out of the mountains and trashes a town like Montpelier, Vermont.

Without FEMA, I don't know where the money to help disaster victims will come from.  Per WaPo:

"Without that federal money, government may need to raid their budgets for education, health car and other areas in order to pay for emergency response - and even then might struggle to cope with mounting disasters,'  said (Rep. Jared Moskowitz D-Fla)."

A couple examples of what we might be facing:  

North Carolina is estimated to have suffered just under $60 billion in damage from Hurricane Helene. 

The state's general fund budget for fiscal year 2024 was $29.7 billon. North Carolina has so far allocated $1.3 billion for Helene relief in the state.  Imagine if North Carolina had to foot the entire bill for Helene recovery, which seems to be what at least some people in the Trump administration would have liked.

Another more local example for us Vermonters.  The July, 2023 floods caused more than $600 million in damage across the Green Mountain State. Vermont's 2024 general fund budget was $2.3 billion....

It appears FEMA/Trump want states to pull money out of thin air for disaster relief. As the Washington Post reports: 

"FEMA's acting administrator, Cameron Hamilton, spoke for about 45 minutes on Saturday to a gathering of state emergency managers about the difficulty of change and how stats need to be more resilient and responsible in their disaster response efforts, according to one state-level official who attended.

Hamilton repeatedly used the phrase that states need to work with private partners as the 'performance enhancing drugs of emergency response,' the official said."

It's unclear how the "private partners" would help, and how they might be compelled to help. 

The only thing standing in the way of Trump are laws regarding FEMA, and since he thinks laws are just stupid suggestions, I'm not sure how that will help.  

Per Washington Post:

"'Eliminating FEMA wiki dramatically hurt red states. It will hurt rural areas It will hurt cities. Places will not recover,' Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-Florida) said in an interview, adding that FEMA should be reformed but not eliminated,.

REFORM NEEDED

FEMA indeed needs to be reformed. Reform, though, does not mean screwing disaster victims and the states were calamities occur even more

Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vermont) has been pushing for FEMA reform for months if not years. His goal was to make things easier for disaster victims dealing with FEMA. Basically cut through the red tape.  Welch said the plan to get rid of FEMA does exactly the opposite. 

“The Trump Administration’s grand plan for victims of natural disasters is to abandon them—and it’s a complete non-starter," Welch said. 

After the immediate crisis, disaster victims get ensnarled in a bureaucratic mess, and Welch has long railed against what he rightly calls "FEMA's plodding bureaucracy."

Last year, all three members of Vermont's congressional delegation sent a formal letter to then-FEMA administrator Deanne Criswell calling for "long-term and structural reform:" at the agency.

The situation even created some strange Congressional bedfellows. 

Last fall, Welch and Sen Gary Peters (D-MI) joined, of all people Sen. Them Tillis (R-NC) and James Lankford (R-OK) on bipartisan legislation to reform FEMA individual assistance to help people escape FEMA's red tape. 

Tillis and Lankford are pretty MAGA. Welch and Peters are decidedly not MAGA, so this was quite a partnership. 

Had things worked out differently. this rare moment of bipartisanship maybe would have led to real reform.

But of course once Trump was in office, he blew it all up, like he tends to do. 

Here's an allegory of what went on here. 

Not long after I bought my house, I discovered carpenter ants had caused a lot of damage on one corner of the house.    The rest of the house was fine. 

So, we hired experts, who tore out the damaged wood, made sure the carpenter ants were gone, and fixed that corner of the house. I was able to live in the house comfortably while the workers fixed the exterior and living room wall in the southwest corner of the house. Obviously, there was no need to tear down the entire house to start over, right?

The solution Welch, Peters, Tillis and Lankford were working toward was getting rid of the "carpenter ants" in one corner of FEMA.

Trump's solution was to tear down the entire house, i.e. FEMA. 

We just had yet another wide ranging disaster across multiple states. The destruction is immense from tornadoes, flooding and other severe weather stretching from Texas to Ohio. 

Many of these storm victims will need help for months or even years. People whose house floated away or disintegrated in a tornado don't need bureaucracy, which was Senator Welch's point.

 But they also need federal help. Since there doesn't seem to be a plan in place to provide the necessary aid once FEMA evaporates later this year. I guess they're on their own.  

Thursday, December 12, 2024

Kristi Noem, Trump's Pick For Homeland Security/FEMA, Pretty Bad; EPA Pick Not Great Either

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem is Trumps not so good
pick for head of Homeland Security and FEMA
To nobody's surprise, as Trump keeps announcing picks for his cabinet and other top Washington jobs, it's clear we're all on our own in dealing with climate change, and the disastrous, stormy effects of climate change on the United States and the world. 

Earlier on, Trump picked a climate denier, Chris Wright, to be energy secretary.  Later on, we got a couple more not so great for the environment picks. 

Predictable but not good. 

KRISTI NOEM

Trump has picked South Dakota Go. Kristi Noem to run the Department of Homeland Security, which also oversees FEMA. 

That agency distributes billions annually for disaster recovery. With more and more people benign the way when disaster strikes, and climate change intensifying storms, this is an increasingly critical federal role, and one that will take someone willing to live in a world of reality when it comes to climate change. 

Judging from press reports, Noem is not up to the job. 

Back on December 4, the Washington Post has a damning piece comparing Kristi Noem's performance with that of Iowa during and just after a catastrophic flood event that straddled the two states on June 23

To summarize the article, Noem appeared to drag her feet in both activating responders, and then seeking FEMA help from Washington. She was more into posturing for Trump and MAGA apparently. 

Reports WaPo

"After spending million of taxpayers dollars to send South Dakota National Guard soldiers to the Mexico border, Noem did not deploy them to help prepare for the flood or cope with the aftermath. And she waited more than a month to ask President Joe Biden for a disaster declaration, leaving victims without access to federal assistance during crucial period of recovery and rebuilding."

Meanwhile, In Iowa, Gov. Kim Reynolds, also a very conservative governor and another fan girl of Trump, was right top of the disaster 

Reynolds "oversaw a dramatically different response to the same flood just a few miles away. Reynolds immediately deployed the Iowa National Guard and requested a presidential disaster declaration before the floods had ended - a request that Biden approved the next day," reports WaPo.

Meanwhile, Noem busied herself with performance art, sending members of the South Dakota National Guard to the Mexican border as props to "prove" President Biden's supposed failed border policies and to prop up Trump's claim that he was somehow our savior from "invasions" of illegal aliens. Or something like that. 

Noem spent more than $1.3 million in South Dakota state funds through February to conduct this show.  

Even some Republicans in South Dakota were pretty aghast at Noem. Lee Schoenbeck, Republican president pro temper of the South Dakota State Senate, wrote on X, formerly Twitter:

"Gov. Kristi Noem sent troops to Texas and billed us, South Dakota taxpayer, BUT Noem said it's too expensive to use our guard to help our taxpayers fight a flood......Explain this hypocrisy???"

 Noem is also known to be skeptical at best regarding climate change and declined to take federal climate money for South Dakota. This also doesn't bode well in an age in which climate change is accelerated destructive storms and more and more people live in areas prone to storm surges, hurricanes, wildfires and other disasters. 

As Politico reports, Noem is one of only five governors who wouldn't accept EPA planning grants that the Biden administration offered every state to help deal with climate pollution.

And she was the only governor to opt out a new $4 billion Energy Department program that sends money to states. That one is in turn distributed to residents for rebates on energy efficient home improvements and appliances. 

South Dakota's $69 million share would have been one of the largest amounts per capita in the United States, says Politico.

Politico also lists other troubling climate policies and moves by Noem. She was among 15 Republican governors who protested a move by the Securities and Exchange Commission to disclose their risks from climate change. She was also part of a lawsuit seeking to stop the Biden administration from putting a price on the social cost of carbon emissions, though that lawsuit was dismissed.

 LEE ZELDIN

Lee Zeldin has been picked by Trump to be EPA 
administrator. Bad, but maybe not as bad as
the ones from his first administration>
Zeldin has been picked to run the federal Environmental Protection Agency. Obviously, it regulates a wide range of pollution and environmental issues. Climate change is an increasing part of that role. 

As the Washington Post describes it, Zeldin was once a moderate Republican who backed protections of wildlife habitat from development. 

Now, like so many Republicans who drank the Kool Aid, he's full MAGA.

Zeldin has said, "We will restore US energy dominance, revitalize our auto industry to bring back American jobs ,and the make the US. the global leader of AI. We will do so while protecting access to clean air and water."

While keeping the United States' economy strong is a good thing, the outline he gave us there is the some of the most energy sucking, and potentially the most fossil fuel-using agenda you can come up with. 

More evidence hat Zeldin's environmentalism, such as it is, does not include combating climate change.

Trump has vowed to eliminate environmental rules that the make the fossil fuel industry faint dramatically onto the couch because those regulations are supposedly far too burdensome to bear. 

Zeldin never used to be this way, but like so many Republicans, he's suddenly clinging to Trump for dear life.  His past isn't horrible, but we'll see how he does if the Senate confirms his nomination.

When he was in the House from 2015-2023, Zeldin joined the House Climate Solutions Caucus, a group of Republicans who actually thought the GOP should play a greater role in climate policy debates. So yay!

Zeldin also in those days opposed Trump's idea to open up the East Coast to offshore oil drilling. Zeldin, from Long Island, reasonably worried an oil spill would wreck the important tourism industry there. 

Or not. That seems to have gone by the wayside.

Zeldin has since pledged to embrace Trump's drill, baby, drill approach to fossil fuels.

Still, he might be better than the two EPA administrators during Trump's first administration. Scott Pruitt, as Oklahoma Attorney General before his stint, sued the EPA fourteen times. He resigned from his EPA position in 2018 amid a series of ethics scandals.

Andrew Wheeler, who had been a coal industry lobbyist before Trump picked him, took over for Pruitt.