www.texasmonthly.com/arts-enterta... definitely worth a read!
www.texasmonthly.com/arts-enterta... definitely worth a read!
Interesting numbers in $2.2 billion in FEMA funding announced today for past disasters. The DHS press release lists only the 15 largest of 1,721 recovery projects, but of those $875 million, $768 million went to states that voted for President Trump.
www.dhs.gov/news/2026/01...
Hurricane Katrina was a βbefore-and-after momentβ for emergency management in the U.S., says @sarahlabo.bsky.social. The Trump administrationβs cuts to FEMA are setting 2025 up to be another.Β
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Sarah explained on @kcrw.com: www.kcrw.com/news/shows/p...
Thanks for having me on to talk about #disasters and FEMA @pbsnews.org! www.youtube.com/live/6Vp2LAZ...
I wrote about the relationship between the state and #FEMA in Texas and how much we rely on federal help to recover from disasters @texasmonthly.bsky.social www.texasmonthly.com/opinion/texa...
Talking with @texasnewsdude.bsky.social at noon central today (Wed 7/30) about #flooding in Texas www.tpr.org/people/david... @texasstandard.bsky.social
Acting #FEMA Administrator Richardson said today that the response in Texas was nearly perfect (we'll see). But what about all the other places that are waiting and waiting for FEMA to show up? I talked to Mayor @caraspencer.bsky.social in STL to find out. www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/202...
There's a hearing tomorrow with acting FEMA administrator Richardson in the House Transportation & Infrastructure committee. Worth tuning in: transportation.house.gov/calendar/eve...
We're up to 32 disasters in 2025 that have been denied or gotten no response on Hazard Mitigation requests, with New Mexico being added for the flash floods in early July www.cnn.com/2025/07/08/w...
Here's an updated view of 2025 v 2024 and how the administration is batching review of requests for disaster help. Disasters get added to the queue and just sit until there's a WH review day and a bunch get approved/denied all at once. Last year, it was an ongoing cycle of review, w/o big backlogs.
We're up to 13 open declaration requests in the FEMA Daily Brief content.govdelivery.com/attachments/...
Here's #disaster data as of today on open disaster declaration requests and how the administration is batching governors' requests for #FEMA help...
#3 cont'd - sorry the approvals and denials are flipped on the two graphics, but this shows how TX is the exception not the rule in terms of approval speed. Looks like the White House is only doing approvals every few weeks, instead of at the steady pace from 2024.
#3 Texas got a very fast disaster declaration for the #hillcountryfloods. But most states are not getting quick turnarounds on their disaster declaration requests this year. The administration is letting requests sit, then approving them in batches. See 2025 compared to 2024:
Oops, would help if I screenshotted the whole HMGP table all the way back to Jan. Here it is.
#2 cont'd - Hazard Mitigation is post-disaster $$ for states to βrebuild in a way that reducesβ¦future disaster losses.β Itβs the funding that could have paid for sirens in Kerr County. www.fema.gov/sites/defaul...
#2 The administration hasnβt approved a single request for Hazard Mitigation since 2/17/25. 31 requests are either denied or pending.
#1 There are 10 disaster declaration requests from governors all over the country that have gone unanswered since May
Some #disaster data to end the week...
π§΅President Trump and his administration frame disaster recovery as a question of state-level self-sufficiency. But does that reflect the reality? Some of our Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics scholars provide some clarity.
Even in states with big economies β like Texas and Florida β rebuilding after a disaster without federal assistance is functionally impossible. @sarahlabo.bsky.social breaks it down: youtube.com/shorts/fTR5D...
Hurricane season is off to a rocky start. For some disasters, the admin is taking *months* to approve governors' requests for disaster declarations that activate federal help. Average number of outstanding requests in the 2 weeks before hurricane season for the last decade: 4. This year? 13.
Spreading out disaster risk across a big and rich country makes so much more sense than concentrating the risk in a few states. Our latest on the start of hurricane season, with @leonardom-d.bsky.social & Debbra Goh carnegieendowment.org/emissary/202...
Mystery and intrigue are no way to prepare for a disaster. States need an on ramp for major changes in funding and responsibility for disaster recovery. wapo.st/45RTx2B
The Trump administrationβs cuts to critical FEMA programs have left communities β even in red counties β struggling to pick up the pieces.
@sarahlabo.bsky.social weighed in on support for one cancelled program for @nytimes.com:
And Leonard Leo has another $1b for more conservative film & tv projects www.wsj.com/business/med...
Meanwhile, the #txlege created a $2.5b film incentive fund (that Gov. Abbott has approval over!) for conservative films made in Texas www.kxan.com/news/texas-p...
Investing in creatives to be creative is the work of βnarrative.β
In spaces Iβm in, βnarrativeβ is abstract. Itβs reports, trainings, prescriptions for what narrative βshouldβ be - everything except creating compelling content about characters & events that people want to read/watch/consume.
βWe donβt know if there will be federal resources and personnel. It leaves people incredibly exposed to unimaginable risk," said Sarah Labowitz, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace who studies disasters.