An executive order of Trump’s Trump Administration runs that the Federal Emergency Management Agency changes more responsibility for the emergency and reconstruction of emergency reconstruction of North -Americans in states and localities. It follows layoffs of more than 200 FEMA employees and a January 24 order that establishes a working group to review the agency’s efficiency to deal with disasters.
Critics see a strong concern that the new order would make it difficult for non-federal entities to respond to meteorological disasters, cyberterorism and other emergencies, but others claim that FEMA does not abolish, which Donald Trump had threatened as a presidency candidate, only offers a plan to review him.
Order calls for state and local governments to have a “ more significant role in national resilience and preparation ” by making more investments in infrastructure while, in the coming months, requires the development of a “ national resilience strategy ” and the revision of federal critical infrastructure policies, disaster preparation and risk assessment.
The FEMA changes follow a national public radio report in February that the Agency has withdrawn from the latest International Codes Council’s effort to improve the United States construction codes, with the next updating of the code to be published in 2027.
Chad Berginnis, Executive Director of the State Floodplain Association of Floodplain, says that the group agrees with much of politics, at least in theory. “The devil is in the details,” he told Enr. “I think we can increase capacity at local and state level through incentives … or penalties, but this will never deny the need for greater [federal] Coordination level for these larger events. “”
FEMA REPTED: GAO Report
FEMA is usually involved in the response to disasters when state and local resources are overwhelmed and a national emergency statement is made. But a report from the Government Account Office of 2023 concluded that FEMA is already underlined, around 35%, and the agency has often brought other agencies staff to support response efforts.
According to observers, the two executive orders, in addition to staff layoffs, could reduce the agency’s ability to respond effectively.
The North -American National Security Department, which includes FEMA, published a statement last month that “embraced the efforts of the Government Efficiency Department (DOGE) to make cuts to eliminate what they are” government waste “.
At a time when natural disasters occur more frequently and more damage and FEMA already extended thin in staff and resources, the risk of more cuts could lead to their response, according to Berginnis. “You cannot make an agency with a reduction of 25% or 50% staff and an increasing workload,” he says.
“Changing the charge of preparation for disasters without accompanying financial resources and technical experience does not reduce the risk and will harm people,” says Shana Udvardy, an analyst of the senior climate resilience policy of the Union of Scientists in his climate and energy program. “From the indiscriminate manner, this administration has fired staff with a deep experience and has increased critical sciences and federal agencies related to climate resilience, policies and programs, I am very concerned that the implications of this order suppose less support for communities to help them prepare and recover from disasters.”
Congressional leaders expanded the funding of the National Flood Insurance Program, which FEMA manages, until the end of the year 2025, on September 30, in the continuous resolution signed in the law on March 17. A clearer image of Trump’s administration’s priorities and FEMA plans will become more evident when the White House releases its budget proposal for the 2026 prosecutor.
You can also see how the federal changes will occur, says Edgar Westerhof, Vice President of Arcadis and the climate adaptation solution of North America. Giving states and localities more authority for planning and emergency response may not be a bad thing, adds, but time is essential.
“We are in an age of extremes. We are not ahead. We are, and the Hurricane season is around the corner,” he told Enr. “We have been saying for some time that investing in resilience in advance, preparation, and that means coordination, which involves governance.”
Wesherhoff emphasizes that while there is something to say “to change the rules as the circumstances change, we must not let go of the idea that the preparation [requires] Governance and efforts of the whole industry. “”