more congressional push back on personnel cuts at fema
Letters don’t accomplish much in the end. However, we have another indication that Congress is looking to push back on actions being taken to weaken the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) ability to provide services. See this letter to the Government Accountability Office (GAO) requesting they investigate the impacts such cuts in personnel will do to the effectiveness of the agency when it will be required to respond to future disasters.
World Screwworm Fly Infestation
Today is the first time I’ve heard or read anything about the New World Screwworm Fly Maybe climate change is helping it march north out of Texas?
there are battles ongoing within DHS
In the military we called it “unity of effort.” Getting everyone on the same page and pulling on the rope in the same direction. It is good leadership and it is good management that makes that happen. Putting the right people in the right positions with the necessary skill set and I’d add “mind set” to be a team player.
Find their full report at The Atlantic: “Battles Are Raging Inside the Department of Homeland Security.”
understanding risk of a 100 year flood
Many people have bemoaned the lack of understanding for what the threat of a 100 Year Flood means. From the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) there is this, “Risk Misconception: The "100-year" label is a statistical average based on historical data; it does not mean a flood will only occur once every 100 years.”
a wonky take on insurance
I get many emails from a wide variety of public relations people and topics. The one below is an example of something that is not directly in the realm of emergency management and disasters, but it is about insurance and the challenges insurers are facing in trying to figure out the future
Disaster Zone Podcast: Emerging Trends in Emergency Management and Homeland Security
An analysis of what has happened so far and what the future might hold by one of the senior professionals in the field of emergency management and homeland security.
Disaster Zone Podcast: Emerging Trends in Emergency Management and Homeland Security
fema cuts reimbursement payments to fire departments
The federal government, and that includes the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), is making many different cuts to programs that support state and local communities. One of them is described here, FEMA Cuts Reimbursement Payments to Local Fire Departments
unions sue fema over core employee cuts
The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) CORE employee saga continues. Check out, Unions Sue FEMA Over Work Force Cuts They Say Threaten Readiness
who might replace Kristi Noem as dhs secretary?
Maybe it is a fool’s errand to postulate who might replace the current Secretary of Homeland Security (DHS). However, it is clear that Kristi Noem has been “skating on thin ice” of late (pun intended). Tom Homan has been sent to Minnesota to take charge there and achieve better coordination with the Governor and local elected officials. He will also report directly to President Trump and not to his boss, Kristi Noem.
fema says, "don't say ice"
We live in a complicated world. The meaning of words can change over time and when ICE is in the news in Minneapolis, we get the following article about the Federal Emergency Management’s (FEMA) missive on words to use when it comes to winter weather. Don’t say ‘Watch out for ice’: FEMA warned storm announcements could invite memes
more "potential" action by congress to push back on eliminating disaster mitigation funding
A proposed piece of legislation doesn’t really carry any weight whatsoever. For example, from the Internet, “The U.S. Congress introduces thousands of bills each year, with recent Congresses seeing around 10,000 to over 17,000 total pieces of legislation (bills, resolutions) introduced per two-year session, though only a small fraction, often less than 10%, actually become law. For instance, the 117th Congress (2021-2023) introduced roughly 15,000-17,000 bills and other legislative items, while the 118th Congress (2023-2025) saw over 17,000 introduced, with about 600-1200 enacted.”
recommendations for electric utilities on preventing wildfires
Electric utilities are not helpless in the effort to prevent wildfires. See this new report from a national laboratory, New PNNL Report Aids Utilities in Preparing for Wildfires
Disaster Zone Podcast: A Parametric Approach to Disaster Recovery
As we look to the future, we need to find new ways of providing financial relief when accidents and disasters damage or destroy private and public property. This podcast looks at the parametric insurance model. Might it be a more efficient and effective way forward to compensate loss?
An Evaluation of City of Seattle's Emergency Management Program
The City of Seattle commissioned a study of its emergency management program. The consultant, BERK Consulting provided a verbal briefing to the Seattle Council committee responsible for emergency management in the city. King TV, a NBC affiliate covered the testimony in this story, Seattle warns [ed] its emergency management system is stretched thin ahead of major disasters I believe this study was funded by the city itself.
senators grow a backbone--in secret
The future of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and emergency management has been writ large and in the news since the beginning of the Trump Administration. Will FEMA be eliminated as a federal agency? Will FEMA be moved to Texas? How much funding will the federal government award via grants to states and local governments, before, during and after a disaster? Will the elimination of all mitigation grants continue into the future? What level of disaster will be supported by the federal level of government.
federal disaster mitigation fund disbursement is "in the dumper'
There is no way to sugar coat the chart below. Disbursement of disaster mitigation funds have ground to an abrupt halt. When or if they will ever recover to one degree or another is anyone’s guess. The chart came to me via Derrick Hiebert and LinkedIn. He was, by the way, an Senior Executive Service (SES) handling mitigation for the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) until he left, like many other talented staff, in 2025.
Disaster Zone Podcast: A City Manager Talks Government
Being in the US Army for twenty years did not familiarize myself with the different forms of city government. I learned it the hard way—by experiencing it firsthand as a local emergency manager. There are pros and cons for each type of government. The podcast below explores those differences with a knowledgeable expert and practitioner.
subscribing to ai is in your future
It has only three years since Artificial Intelligence (AI) burst onto the scene. Now every organization selling something is touting that their products and services are powered by AI.
might emergency management be impacted by an early census
You would not think that emergency management at the state and local government would be impacted by machinations around the topic of holding an early census of people living in the United States, but, but, but…there is a wrinkle…
Gen Z's problems with talking
One newspaper column or editorial is not proof of an issue. So you can take this Washington Post piece with a bit of skepticism, Gen Zers aren’t talking — and it could cost them