Information about Fema

Federal Emergency Management Agency
FEMA
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New FEMA seal

New FEMA seal
Agency overview
FormedMarch 30, 1979
Employees2,600
Annual Budget$8.02 billion (2008) [1]
Agency ExecutiveR. David Paulison, Administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency
Parent agencyDepartment of Homeland Security
Website
www.fema.gov


The Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, is an agency of the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The purpose of FEMA (begun by Presidential order March 30, 1979) [1] is to coordinate the response to a disaster which has occurred in the United States and which overwhelms the resources of local and state authorities. The governor of the state in which the disaster occurred must declare a state of emergency and formally request from the President of the United States that FEMA and the Federal Government respond to the disaster. The only exception is when an emergency or disaster occurs on federal property or to a federal asset, for example the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, in the 1995 bombing, or the Space Shuttle Columbia in the 2003 return-flight disaster.

While on-the-ground support of disaster recovery efforts is a major part of FEMA's charter, the agency provides state and local governments with experts in specialized fields and funding for rebuilding efforts and relief funds for individual citizens and infrastructure, in conjunction with the Small Business Administration (SBA). FEMA also assists individuals and businesses with low interest loans. FEMA also provides funds for training of response personnel throughout the United States and its territories as part of the agency's preparedness effort.

FEMA was widely criticized for what was seen as a slow and incompetent response after Hurricane Katrina. In the aftermath, some have called for the agency to be abolished or replaced with a different agency.

History

Federal emergency management in the United States has existed in one form or another for over 200 years. The history of FEMA can be divided into the following parts.

Pre-1930

A series of devastating fires struck the port city of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, early in the 19th century. The 7th Congress passed a number of measures in the Congressional Act of 1803 that provided relief for Portsmouth merchants by waiving duties and tariffs on goods. This is widely considered the first piece of legislation passed by the federal government that provided relief after a disaster.

Between 1803 and 1930, ad hoc legislation was passed more than 100 times for relief or compensation after a disaster. Examples of these include the waiving of duties and tariffs to the merchants of New York City after a fire in the mid 1830s. After President Abraham Lincoln's assassination at Ford's Theatre, the 54th Congress passed legislation compensating those who were injured in the theatre.

Piecemeal approach (1930s–1960s)

After the start of the Great Depression in 1929, President Herbert Hoover had commissioned the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC) in 1932. The purpose of the RFC was to lend money to banks and institutions to stimulate economic activity. RFC was also responsible for dispensing federal dollars in the wake of a disaster. RFC can be considered the first organized federal disaster response agency.

The Bureau of Public Roads in 1934 was given authority to finance the reconstruction of highways and roads after a disaster. The Flood Control Act of 1944 also gave the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers authority over flood control and irrigation projects and thus played a major role in disaster recovery from flooding.

This "piecemeal approach" to disaster recovery was troubled by poor interagency cooperation and bureaucratic red tape. Until March 30, 1979,[1] there was no single federal agency to carry out the various functions of disaster assistance and civil defense. From 1950 until 1979, Congress met the nation’s needs for disaster preparedness and assistance somewhat reactively, by enacting various forms of legislation in response to recognized needs.[2] Over the years, Congress increasingly extended the range of covered categories for assistance, and several presidential executive orders did the same. By enacting these various forms of legislative direction, Congress established a category for annual budgetary amounts of assistance to victims of various types of hazards or disasters, it specified the qualifications, and then it established or delegated the responsibilities to various federal and non-federal agencies.[3] In time, this expanded array of agencies themselves required reorganization, as the evidence of their history reflects. One of the first such federal agencies was the Federal Civil Defense Administration (FCDA), which operated within the Executive Office of the President (EOP). Then, functions to administer disaster relief were given to the President himself, who delegated to the Housing and Home Finance Administration; subsequently, a new office of the Office of Defense Mobilization was created; then, the new Office of Defense and Civilian Mobilization (ODCM), managed by the EOP; after that, the Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization, which renamed the former agency; then, the Office of Civil Defense, under the Department of Defense (DoD); the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW); the Department of Agriculture; the Office of Emergency Planning (OEmP); the Defense Civil Preparedness Agency (replacing the OCD in the DoD); the Department of Housing and Urban Development(HUD) and the General Services Administration (GSA)(upon termination of the OEmP).[3]

These actions demonstrated that during those years, the nation’s domestic preparedness was addressed by several disparate legislative actions, motivated by policy and budgetary earmarking, and not by a single, unifying, comprehensive strategy to meet the nation’s needs over time.[2] Then, in 1978 an effort was made to consolidate the several singular functions; FEMA was created to house civil defense and disaster preparedness under one roof. This was a very controversial decision.[3] Many felt the coordination of federal preparedness functions would be too challenging, and the needs of developing civil defense preparedness might lose its priority if it was included within the same organization handling natural disaster response. In the end, FEMA was created as the primary federal source for both financial and technical support assistance to victims in need of emergency aid. The controversy was not resolved by the decision, though. Those who managed the mandates of the agency still held their particular points of view concerning which function of FEMA was more important, civil defense or natural disaster preparedness, and the issue failed to resolve itself due to Congress’ prior history of placing value on policy and the budgetary concerns of the times. Eventually, these points of view developed their separate cultures within FEMA, causing a “stovepiping” within the agency, thus creating insularity and preventing a mutuality and collegial sharing of interests and resources.[3] Many feel that the hybrid that FEMA became never was able to meld the two separate and distinct functions, those of counterterrorism and natural disaster management. They feel that this essentially unyielding dichotomy has created the several problems for which FEMA has been criticized over the years.[2]

After FEMA’s creation through reorganization and executive orders, Congress continued to expand FEMA’s authority by assigning responsibilities to it. Those responsibilities include dam safety under the National Dam Safety Program Act; disaster assistance under the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act; earthquake hazards reduction under the Earthquake Hazards Reduction Act of 1977 and further expanded by Executive Order 12699, regarding safety requirements for federal buildings and Executive Order 12941, concerning the need for cost estimates to seismically retrofit federal buildings; emergency food and shelter under the Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act of 1987; fire control, under the Federal Fire Prevention and Control Act of 1974; hazardous materials, under the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act of 1986; insurance, under the National Flood Insurance Act of 1968; national security, under the National Security Act of 1947, the Defense Production Act of 1950; and various executive orders under presidents Eisenhower, Reagan, H. W. Bush, Clinton, and G.W. Bush.[3] In addition, FEMA received authority for counterterrorism through the Nunn-Lugar-Domenici amendment under the Weapons of Mass Destruction Act of 1996, which was a response to the recognized vulnerabilities of the U.S. after the sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway in 1995.[2] These actions reveal that no real effort was made to seriously unify the nation’s continuing and evolving needs for homeland security, beyond the act of creating a single agency to manage these different functions. Again, there was no overarching strategy to streamline and consolidate the functions and focus of FEMA. The actions of Congress continued to show a pattern of short-term responses to long-term needs. FEMA has had to manage its expanding responsibilities while sources of funding would vary year-after-year, as Congress would react and respond to various natural disasters and national security threats. Various mandates would have their own budgets, and even those were not dedicated from year to year. They were subject to recisions and reallocations as various other needs superseded them, requiring financial adjustments to budgetary limitations.[4]

With the creation of the Department of Homeland Security, President George W. Bush intended to rectify the causes of the criticisms that have continued to plague FEMA throughout the years. Yet, after the DHS’s creation in 2003, Hurricane Katrina in 2005 demonstrated that the vision of further unification of functions and another reorganization could not address the problems FEMA had previously faced. The "Final Report of the Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina", released February 15, 2006 by the U.S. Government Printing Office, revealed that federal funding to states for “all hazards” disaster preparedness needs was not awarded unless the local agencies made the purposes for the funding a “just terrorism” function.[5] Emergency management professionals testified that funds for preparedness for natural hazards was given less priority than preparations for counterterrorism measures. Testimony also expressed the opinion that the mission to mitigate vulnerability and prepare for natural hazard disasters before they occurred had been separated from disaster preparedness functions, making the nation more vulnerable to known hazards, like hurricanes.[6] These issues continue to be debated, and have not been resolved with FEMA’s inclusion in DHS.

Department of Housing and Urban Development (1960–1979)

By the start of the 1960s, federal disaster relief and recovery was brought under the umbrella of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), which created the Federal Disaster Assistance Administration. This agency would oversee disasters such as Hurricane Carla in 1961, Hurricane Betsy in 1965, Hurricane Camille in 1969 and Hurricane Agnes in 1972, the Alaskan (Good Friday) Earthquake of 1964 and the San Fernando Earthquake of 1971.

Many government agencies were still involved in disaster relief; in some cases, more than 100 separate agencies might be jockeying for control and jurisdiction of a disaster.

FEMA as an independent agency (1979–2003)

FEMA was established under the 1978 Reorganization Plan No. 3, and activated April 1st, 1979 by Jimmy Carter in his Executive Order 12127.[7] In July, at the prompting of the National Governors Association, Carter signed Executive Order 12148 putting the new agency in charge of coordinating all disaster relief efforts at the federal level. FEMA absorbed the Federal Insurance Administration, the National Fire Prevention and Control Administration, the National Weather Service Community Preparedness Program, the Federal Preparedness Agency of the General Services Administration and the Federal Disaster Assistance Administration activities from HUD. FEMA was also given the responsibility for overseeing the nation's Civil Defense, a function which had previously been performed by the Department of Defense's Defense Civil Preparedness Agency.

One of the first disasters FEMA responded to was the dumping of toxic waste into Love Canal in Niagara Falls, New York in the late 1970s. FEMA also responded to the Three Mile Island nuclear accident where the nuclear generating station suffered a partial core meltdown. These disasters, while showing the agency could function properly, also uncovered some inefficiencies.

In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated FEMA to a cabinet level position and appointed James Lee Witt as FEMA Director. Witt initiated reforms that would help to streamline the disaster recovery and mitigation process. The end of the Cold War also allowed the agency’s resources to be turned away from civil defense to natural disaster preparedness.

FEMA under DHS (2003–present)

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President George W. Bush signs the Homeland Security Appropriations Act of 2004


Following the September 11, 2001 attacks, President Bush created the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to better coordinate among the different federal agencies that deal with law enforcement, disaster preparedness and recovery, border protection and civil defense. FEMA was absorbed into DHS as of 2003. As a result, FEMA became part of the Emergency Preparedness and Response Directorate of DHS, and employs more than 2,600 full time employees. In September 2003, Michael D. Brown, FEMA’s director and DHS Undersecretary, warned that the shift would make a mockery of FEMA’s new motto, "A Nation Prepared", and would "fundamentally sever FEMA from its core functions", "shatter agency morale" and "break longstanding, effective and tested relationships with states and first responder stakeholders". The inevitable result of the reorganization of 2003, warned Brown, would be "an ineffective and uncoordinated response" to a terrorist attack or a natural disaster.[8]

FEMA and DHS both came under intense criticism for their handling of the Hurricane Katrina disaster in 2005 (see "Hurricane Katrina – 2005" and "Criticism" below). As a result, FEMA Director Brown was relieved of command of the Gulf Coast region and resigned shortly thereafter.

Response to major disasters

Hurricane Andrew – 1992

See also:


In August 1992, Hurricane Andrew struck the Florida and Louisiana coasts with 165 mph (265 km/h) sustained winds. FEMA was widely criticized for the agency’s response to Andrew, summed up by the famous exclamation, "Where in the hell is the cavalry on this one?" by Dade County, Florida, emergency management director Kate Hale. FEMA and the federal government at large were accused of not responding fast enough to house, feed and sustain the approximately 250,000 people left homeless in the affected areas. Within five days the federal government and neighboring states had dispatched 20,000 National Guard and active duty troops to South Dade County to set up temporary housing. FEMA had previously been criticized for its response to Hurricane Hugo, which hit South Carolina in September 1989, and many of the same issues that plagued the agency during Hurricane Andrew were also evident during the response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001

See also:
In the minutes after the first hijacked plane slammed into the World Trade Center towers, FEMA, as well as emergency services all over the city and state of New York, were mobilized. FEMA had deployed 25 of the 28 Urban Search and Rescue teams at its disposal to the World Trade Center site; however, the New York City Office of Emergency Management was in charge of the WTC recovery effort. FEMA played its largest role in the appropriation of federal funds to aid local and state governments in paying for the disaster. As of 2003, FEMA had received $5.5 billion USD to distribute among local and state agencies to help offset the cost of recovery. Within the $5.5 billion, FEMA was also allotted funds to pay for its own recovery efforts.

Hurricane Katrina – 2005

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Evacuees taking shelter at the Reliant Astrodome


August 2005 saw one of the worst natural disasters in United States history. FEMA received intense criticism for its response to the disaster. FEMA had pre-positioned response personnel in the Gulf Coast region, however many were only able to report of dire situation along the Gulf Coast, especially from New Orleans. FEMA was responsible for the evacuation of the thousands of people who remained in New Orleans during the storm, as well as initial recovery work and appropriations. Within three days, a large contingent of National Guard and active duty troops were deployed to the region.

The enormous number of evacuees simply overwhelmed rescue personnel. The situation was compounded by flood waters in the city that hampered transportation and poor communication among the federal government, state and local entities. FEMA was widely criticized for what is seen as a slow initial response to the disaster and an inability to effectively manage, care for and move those trying to leave the city.

Then-FEMA Director Michael D. Brown was criticized personally for a slow response and an apparent disconnection with the situation. Michael Brown would eventually be relieved of command of the Katrina disaster and soon thereafter resign.

Katrina was seen as the first major test of the nation’s new disaster response plan under DHS. It is widely held that many things did not function as planned.

According to the U.S. House of Representatives Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina:[9]
  • "The Secretary Department of Homeland Security should have designated the Principal Federal Official on Saturday, two days prior to landfall, from the roster of PFOs who had successfully completed the required training, unlike then-FEMA Director Michael Brown. Considerable confusion was caused by the Secretary’s PFO decisions."
  • "DHS and FEMA lacked adequate trained and experienced staff for the Katrina response."
  • "The readiness of FEMA’s national emergency response teams was inadequate and reduced the effectiveness of the federal response."
  • "Long-standing weaknesses and the magnitude of the disaster overwhelmed FEMA’s ability to provide emergency shelter and temporary housing."
  • "FEMA logistics and contracting systems did not support a targeted, massive, and sustained provision of commodities."
  • "Before Katrina, FEMA suffered from a lack of sufficiently trained procurement professionals."
Other failings were also noted. The Committee devoted an entire section of the report to listing the actions of FEMA.[10] Their conclusion was:

"For years emergency management professionals have been warning that FEMA’s preparedness has eroded. Many believe this erosion is a result of the separation of the preparedness function from FEMA, the drain of long-term professional staff along with their institutional knowledge and expertise, and the inadequate readiness of FEMA’s national emergency response teams. The combination of these staffing, training, and organizational structures made FEMA’s inadequate performance in the face of a disaster the size of Katrina all but inevitable."[10]

Pursuant to a temporary restraining order issued by Hon. Stanwood R. Duval, United States District Court Judge, Eastern District of Louisiana as a result of the McWaters v. FEMA class-action, February 7, 2006 was set as the deadline for the official end of any further coverage of temporary housing costs for Katrina victims.[11][12]

After the February 7 deadline, Katrina victims were left to their own devices either to find permanent housing for the long term, or to continue in social welfare programs set up by other organizations. There are many Katrina evacuees living in temporary shelters and/or trailer parks set up by FEMA and other relief organizations in the first months after the disaster hit, but many more are still unable to find housing.

A second round of evictions is tentatively planned for March 15, and in response, activists from across the United States are holding a mass march in Washington, D.C. the afternoon of the previous day. Meanwhile, March 11 is said by many news sources to be the deadline for filing Hurricane Katrina disaster relief applications (though one source does mention this deadline applies only to those who have never contacted FEMA in regards to Katrina before).

In July 2007, ice that had been ordered for Katrina victims and never used and had been kept in storage facilities at a cost of $12.5 million was melted down.[13]

The telephone number to receive disaster assistance from FEMA is 1-800-621-3362. Survivors of Katrina can learn more about FEMA assistance, and get forms for FEMA recertification, at a wiki web site FEMAanswers.org.

Buffalo snowstorm – 2006

FEMA came under attack for their response to the October 13, 2006 snowstorm in Buffalo, New York. Claims state that FEMA officials did not arrive until October 16, three days after the storm hit. The damage by this time, which had been compared to that of Hurricane Katrina, included downed power wires, downed trees, and structural damage to homes and businesses.

Criticism

In 1997, James Bovard criticized FEMA for subsidizing rebuilding in places that are vulnerable to natural disasters, asking, "[D]o we really want to help rebuild homes and government property in areas that should never have been built on in the first place?" He also claimed that localities are less likely to fund their own snow removal if they know the federal government will bail them out in the event of snow emergencies.<ref name="">Bovard, James (February 19, 1997). The FEMA Snow Job. Cato Institute. Retrieved on 2007-04-18. Moreover, he said that FEMA is used by incumbent presidents to shore up political support.[14] The Cato Institute's Handbook for Congress argues that private companies could perform the tasks carried about by FEMA, and that this would encourage home construction in safer areas:

Any time there is a natural disaster FEMA is trotted out as an example of how well government programs work. In reality, by using taxpayer dollars to provide disaster relief and subsidized insurance, FEMA itself encourages Americans to build in disaster-prone areas and makes the rest of us pick up the tab for those risk decisions. In a well-functioning private marketplace, individuals who chose to build houses in flood plains or hurricane zones would bear the cost of the increased risk through higher insurance premiums. FEMA's activities undermine that process. Americans should not be forced to pay the cost of rebuilding oceanfront summer homes. This $4 billion-a-year agency should be abolished.[15]


FEMA does encourage disaster victims to reduce future losses by considering "taking steps to rebuild safer and smarter", advising them to:
  • Take measures to reduce losses in the future;
  • Encourage community to participate in National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP);
  • Consider buying flood insurance.[16]
South Florida newspaper Sun-Sentinel has an extensive list of documented criticisms of FEMA during the four hurricanes that hit the region in 2004.[17] Some of the criticisms include:
  • When Hurricane Frances hit South Florida on Labor Day weekend (over 100 miles north of Miami-Dade County), 9,800 Miami-Dade applicants were approved by FEMA for $28 million in storm claims for new furniture; clothes; thousands of new televisions, microwaves and refrigerators; cars; dental bills; and a funeral even though the Medical Examiner recorded no deaths from Frances. A U.S. Senate committee and the inspector general of the Department of Homeland Security found that FEMA inappropriately declared Miami-Dade county a disaster area and then awarded millions, often without verifying storm damage or a need for assistance.[18][19]
  • FEMA used hurricane aid money to pay funeral expenses for at least 203 Floridians whose deaths were not caused by the 2004 Hurricanes, the state's coroners have concluded. Ten of the people whose funerals were paid for were not even in Florida at the time of their deaths.[20]
Since Hurricane Katrina, some critics have called for FEMA to be removed from the Department of Homeland Security, saying that its position in the department badly hindered the agency's response, and that FEMA is beyond repair. Sen. Joe Lieberman called for Congress to dissolve FEMA and rebuild it from scratch, but within the Department of Health and Human Services.

A Senate panel has also come to the conclusion that it would be better to abolish FEMA. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, who was the leader of an inquiry by the Senate said FEMA was in "shambles and beyond repair". The panel called for a new agency which will be called the National Preparedness and Response Authority if FEMA is abolished. The rest of the Senate panel's recommendations included less dramatic changes, such as creating a Homeland Security Academy, which would better prepare FEMA officials.

Also, many people of Dumas, Arkansas, especially victims of the tornadoes, criticized FEMA's response, not supplying the amount of new trailers they needed, only sending a set of used trailers, lower than the needed quantity.

Organization

Today FEMA exists as a major agency of the Department of Homeland Security. The Administrator for Federal Emergency Management reports directly to the Secretary of Homeland Security.

FEMA currently manages the National Flood Insurance Program. Other programs FEMA previously administered have since been internalized or shifted under direct DHS control.

The Administrator for Federal Emergency Management is R. David Paulison, who was confirmed to fill the position.

FEMA is home to the National Continuity Programs Directorate (formerly the Office of National Security Coordination). ONSC was responsible for developing, exercising, and validating agency wide continuity of operations (COOP) and continuity of government (COG) plans as well as overseeing and maintaining COOP and COG readiness including the Mount Weather Emergency Operations Center. ONSC also coordinated the COOP and COG efforts of other Federal Executive Agencies.

Leadership

Response capabilities

FEMA's emergency response is based around small, decentralized teams trained in such as the National Disaster Medical System (NDMS), Urban Search and Rescue (USAR), Disaster Mortuary Operations Response Team (DMORT), Disaster Medical Assistance Team (DMAT), and Mobile Emergency Resource Support (MERS).

National Disaster Medical System (NDMS)

The NDMS was recently transferred from the Department of Homeland Security to the Department of Health and Human Services, under the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act, signed by President George W. Bush, on December 18, 2006.

NDMS is made of teams that provide medical and allied care to disaster victims. These teams include: doctors, nurses, pharmacists, etc., and are typically sponsored by hospitals, public safety agencies or private organizations. Also, Rapid Deployment Force (RDF) teams, comprised of officers of the Commissioned Corps of the United States Public Health Service, were developed to assist with the NDMS.

Disaster Medical Assistance Teams (DMAT) provide medical care at disasters and are typically made up of doctors and paramedics. There are also National Nursing Response Teams (NNRT), National Pharmacy Response Teams (NPRT) and Veterinary Medical Assistance Teams (VMAT). Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Teams (DMORT) provide mortuary and forensic services. National Medical Response Teams (NMRT) are equipped to decontaminate victims of chemical and biological agents.

Urban Search and Rescue (US&R)

The Urban Search and Rescue Task Forces perform rescue of victims from structural collapses, confined spaces, and other disasters, for example mine collapses and earthquakes.

Mobile Emergency Resource Support (MERS)

These teams provide communications support to local public safety. For instance, they may operate a truck with satellite uplink, computers, telephone and power generation at a staging area near a disaster so that the responders can communicate with the outside world. There are also Mobile Air Transportable Telecommunications System (MATTS) assets which can be airlifted in. Also portable Cellphone towers can be erected to allow local responders to access telephone systems.

Training

FEMA offers a large number of training classes, either at its own centers, through programs at the state level, in cooperation with colleges and universities, or online. The latter are free classes available to anyone, although only those with U.S. residency or work eligibility can take the final examinations. More information is available on the FEMA website under the "Emergency Personnel" and "Training" subheadings. Other emergency response information for citizens is also available at its website.

The Training and Education Division within FEMA's National Integration Center directly funds training for responders and provides guidance on training-related expenditures under FEMA's grant programs. Catalog available at [2] Information on designing effective training for first responders is available from the Training and Education Division at https://www.firstrespondertraining.gov/rtdc. Emergency managers and other interested members of the public can take independent study courses for certification at FEMA's online Emergency Management Institute.

List of FEMA heads

As director of the agency:
  • James K. Hafer, E.O.P. Office of Emergency Preparedness, May 1975 – April 1979
  • Gordon Vickery (acting), April 1979 – July 1979
  • Thomas Casey (acting), July 1979
  • John Macy, August 1979 – January 1981
  • Bernard Gallagher (acting), January 1981 – April 1981
  • John W. McConnell (acting), April 1981 – May 1981
  • Louis O. Giuffrida, May 1981 - September 1985
  • Robert H. Morris (acting), September 1985 – November 1985
  • Julius W. Becton, Jr., November 1985 – June 1989
  • Robert H. Morris (acting), June 1989 – May 1990
  • Jerry D. Jennings (acting), May 1990 – August 1990
  • Wallace E. Stickney, August 1990 – January 1993
  • William C. Tidball (acting), January 1993 – April 1993
As Director of Cabinet-level agency: As Undersecretary of Emergency Preparedness and Response within the Department of Homeland Security As Director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency within the Department of Homeland Security As Undersecretary for Federal Emergency Management within the Department of Homeland Security As Administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency within the Department of Homeland Security

FEMA in fiction

Most fictional representations play off the Agency’s supposed ability to assume dictatorial powers in the event of a catastrophic disaster.
  • In the film The X-Files: Fight the Future, Alvin Kurtzweil tells Fox Mulder that FEMA is at the forefront of a global conspiracy, and is actually a secret government designed to take over when extraterrestrials begin colonization of Earth.http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/10/14/sr.fri/index.html
  • In the computer game Deus Ex, Walton Simons, who is also second in command of MJ12, is the director of FEMA. He apparently acquired this position by using a plague vaccine as a form of extortion.
  • In an episode of the TV cartoon series The Boondocks, Huey Freeman claims that "'nigga moments' are the biggest killer of young black males, right behind pork chops and FEMA."
  • In an episode of the TV series Jericho, It is metioned that FEMA set up camps all over the nation to handle the civilians caught up after a set of 23 nuclear bombs destroy major American cities. However, in later episodes they are described as "jungles" by refugees who passed through them, possibly due to dwindling supplies and millions of refugees.
  • In the 2006 movie Supervolcano, by BBC TV programs, FEMA attempts to mitigate the effects of a volcanic winter that devastates North America, caused by a fictitious major eruption event from the Yellowstone Caldera.
  • Comedian George Lopez joked on his stand-up show called "America's Mexican" that F.E.M.A. means "find every Mexican available" (in order to re-construct).
  • In the popular MMORPG City of Heroes, one of the tasks assigned to the player is to rescue FEMA employees from hostile villains.
  • In the film Day After Tomorrow, the vice president ignores paleoclimatologist Jack Hall's evidence of a major climate shift causing a new ice age, by stating he has a meeting with the director of FEMA. In addition when the helicopter carrying the message that the president and his excavation party have died is landing in the American refugee camp in Mexico, people are wearing "FEMA" jackets as they hand out what looks like food to the people from the southern United States.

See also

References

1. ^ "FEMA - Disaster of an Agency" (editorial), Lynn Woolley, September 2005, webpage: NewsMax-2827: states "Jimmy Carter created "FEMA by executive order on March 30, 1979."
2. ^ Falkenrath, Richard S., "Problems of Preparedness: U.S. Readiness for a Domestic Terrorist Attack" (2001)International Security, Boston.
3. ^ Bea, Keith, "Proposed Transfer of FEMA to the Department of Homeland Security", Order Code RL31510 (updated July 29, 2002), Report for Congress, Congressional Research Service: Library of Congress.
4. ^ Murry, Justin (updated July 10, 2006). "Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Legislation for Disaster Assistance: Summary Data FY1989 to FY2006", CRS Report for Congress, Congressional Research Service: The Library of Congress.
5. ^ Senate Bipartisan Committee (February 15, 2006), "The Final Report of the Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina, U.S. Government Printing Office: Washington D.C.
6. ^ Senate Bipartisan Committee, 2006, p. 208
7. ^ Executive Order 12127--Federal Emergency Management Agency. Federation of American Scientists.
8. ^ Grunwald, Michael, and Susan B. Glasser. "Brown's Turf Wars Sapped FEMA's Strength", Washington Post, December 23, 2005, p. A01. Retrieved on 2007-04-18.2005"> 
9. ^ Executive Summary, Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina, 2006-2-15, U.S. Government Printing Office, Retrieved 2007-6-11
10. ^ FEMA, Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina, 2006-2-15, U.S. Government Printing Office, Retrieved 2007-6-11
11. ^ Duval, Stanwood R., Jr.; United States District Court, Eastern District of Louisiana (December 12, 2005). "Order of December 12, 2005" (Rec. Doc. No. 63) (PDF). "Beatrice B. Mcwaters, et al. v. Federal Emergency Management Section 'K' (3)" (No. 05-5488). USCourts.gov. Retrieved on 2007-04-18.
12. ^ Duval, Stanwood R., Jr.; United States District Court, Eastern District of Louisiana. "Modified Order of January 12, 2006" (Ref. Doc. No. 74) (PDF). "Beatrice B. Mcwaters, et al. v. Federal Emergency Management Section 'K' (3)" (No. 05-5488). USCourts.gov. Retrieved on 2007-04-18.
13. ^ [3]
14. ^ Bovard, James (September 1996). FEMA Money! Come & Get It!. The American Spectator. jimbovard.com. Retrieved on 2007-04-18.
15. ^ Cato Institute (January 1997). "15. Costly Agencies", Cato Handbook for Congress: 105th Congress, spiral edition, Cato Institute. ISBN 1882577515. Retrieved on 2007-04-18. 
16. ^ FEMA (July 2004). Help After a Disaster: Applicant's Guide to the Individuals & Households Program (text (PDF] version])) (in English (Spanish, Korean available)), FEMA. 
17. ^ "Sun-Sentinel Investigation: FEMA", Sun-Sentinel.com. Retrieved on 2007-04-18. 
18. ^ Kestin, Sally, and Megan O'Matz. "FEMA gave $21 million in Miami-Dade, where storms were 'like a severe thunderstorm'", Sun-Sentinel, October 10, 2004. Retrieved on 2007-04-18.2004"> 
19. ^ Kestin, Sally. "Homestead women sentenced to probation for cheating FEMA", Sun-Sentinel, June 8, 2005. Retrieved on 2007-04-18.2005"> 
20. ^ Kestin, Sally; Megan O'Matz; and Jon Burstein. "FEMA paid for at least 203 funerals not related to 2004 hurricanes", Sun-Sentinel, August 10, 2005. Retrieved on 2007-04-18.2005"> 

External links

FEMA may refer to:
  • Federal Emergency Management Agency of the United States
  • Flavor and Extract Manufacturers Association, an organization that deals with flavors and extract processing in the United States.

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March 30 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.

Events

  • 240 BC - 1st recorded perihelion passage of Halley's Comet.

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19th century - 20th century - 21st century
1940s  1950s  1960s  - 1970s -  1980s  1990s  2000s
1976 1977 1978 - 1979 - 1980 1981 1982

Also: 1979 by Smashing Pumpkins.

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Robert David Paulison (b. 1947) was a firefighter who is currently serving as the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Paulison was appointed by President George W. Bush on September 12, 2005 to replace the embattled Michael D.
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United States
Department of Homeland Security


Motto: "Preserving our Freedom"
Agency overview
Formed November 25, 2002

Headquarters Nebraska Avenue Complex
Employees 208,000 (2007)
Annual Budget
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United States
Department of Homeland Security


Motto: "Preserving our Freedom"
Agency overview
Formed November 25, 2002

Headquarters Nebraska Avenue Complex
Employees 208,000 (2007)
Annual Budget
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March 30 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.

Events

  • 240 BC - 1st recorded perihelion passage of Halley's Comet.

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19th century - 20th century - 21st century
1940s  1950s  1960s  - 1970s -  1980s  1990s  2000s
1976 1977 1978 - 1979 - 1980 1981 1982

Also: 1979 by Smashing Pumpkins.

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A disaster (from Middle French désastre, from Old Italian disastro, from the Greek pejorative prefix dis- bad + aster star) is the impact of a natural or man-made hazards that negatively affects society or environment.
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Motto
"In God We Trust"   (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum"   ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
Anthem
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United States of America

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
the United States




Federal government
Constitution
Taxation

President Vice President
Cabinet


Congress
Senate
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A state of emergency is a governmental declaration that may suspend certain normal functions of government, may work to alert citizens to alter their normal behaviors, or may order government agencies to implement emergency preparedness plans.
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United States of America

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
the United States




Federal government
Constitution
Taxation

President Vice President
Cabinet


Congress
Senate
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Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building was a United States Federal Government complex located at 200 N.W. 5th Street in downtown Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The Murrah building was the target of the Oklahoma City bombing on April 19 1995.
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Oklahoma City

Flag
Seal
Nickname: O.K.C., Capital of the New Century, Renaissance City, Loud City
Location in Oklahoma County and the state of Oklahoma.
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State of Oklahoma

Flag of Oklahoma Seal
Nickname(s): Sooner State
Motto(s): Labor omnia vincit (Latin: Labor conquers all things)

Official language(s) None

Capital Oklahoma City

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Oklahoma City bombing

Damage to the Murrah building before cleanup began.
Location Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA

Target(s) Alfred P.
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Space Shuttle Columbia (NASA Orbiter Vehicle Designation: OV-102) was the first spaceworthy space shuttle in NASA's orbital fleet. Its first mission, STS-1, lasted from April 12 to April 14, 1981.
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Space Shuttle Columbia disaster occurred on February 1, 2003, when the Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrated over Texas during re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere, with the loss of all seven crew, shortly before concluding its 28th mission, STS-107.
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Small Business Administration

Logo of the SBA

Seal of the SBA
Agency overview
Formed July 30, 1953
Preceding Agency Reconstruction Finance Corporation

Jurisdiction
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    The criticism of the government response to Hurricane Katrina (a.k.a. Katrinagate[1] ) consisted primarily of condemnations of mismanagement and lack of preparation in the relief effort in response to Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath.
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    Editing of this page by unregistered or newly registered users is currently disabled due to vandalism.
    If you are prevented from editing this page, and you wish to make a change, please discuss changes on the talk page, request unprotection, log in, or .
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    Portsmouth, New Hampshire

    Seal
    Location in Rockingham County, New Hampshire
    Coordinates:
    Country United States
    State New Hampshire
    County Rockingham
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    State of New Hampshire

    Flag of New Hampshire Seal
    Nickname(s): The Granite State
    Motto(s): Live Free or Die

    Official language(s) English

    Capital Concord
    Largest city Manchester
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    The 19th Century (also written XIX century) lasted from 1801 through 1900 in the Gregorian calendar. It is often referred to as the "1800s.
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    Seventh United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, comprised of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives.
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    Economic policy
    Monetary policy
    Central bank   Money supply
    Fiscal policy
    Spending   Deficit   Debt
    Trade policy
    Tariff   Trade agreement

    Finance
    Financial market
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    Ad hoc is a Latin phrase which means "for this purpose". It generally signifies a solution that has been custom designed for a specific problem, is non-generalizable, and cannot be adapted to other purposes.
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    City of New York
    New York City at sunset

    Flag
    Seal
    Nickname: The Big Apple, Gotham, The City that Never Sleeps
    Location in the state of New York
    Coordinates:
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    This article is copied from an article on Wikipedia.org - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. The text was not checked or edited by anyone on our staff. Although the vast majority of the wikipedia encyclopedia articles provide accurate and timely information please do not assume the accuracy of any particular article. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License.
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