FEMA is spending billions a year on decades-old disasters


Summary

Lorem ipsum dolor

Neque tempus tincidunt urna nisi sollicitudin porttitor rutrum condimentum massa feugiat habitasse finibus est, phasellus etiam maximus curabitur ligula sodales interdum purus curae id maecenas.

Parturient quam placerat pharetra

Magna praesent ridiculus tempor arcu quisque est, interdum suspendisse netus a.

Vitae vel per

Nam etiam ultricies per orci varius ridiculus elementum mollis arcu maecenas, dolor ullamcorper nullam inceptos platea parturient leo placerat.

Ad sodales ex vehicula

Ligula porttitor faucibus quisque dui urna per erat platea vehicula sollicitudin massa dapibus aptent pulvinar egestas, hendrerit taciti lorem magna tincidunt eros felis rutrum pellentesque sagittis finibus nisl vivamus id.


Full story

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is still spending billions of dollars on storms that happened more than a decade ago, including Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma which occurred in 2005. The long-term projects use money from the Disaster Relief Fund as the agency manages more than 100 active disaster declarations.

FEMA’s most recent Disaster Relief Fund Report to Congress revealed that in fiscal year 2024, the agency spent $53 million on the 2005 hurricane season, $375 million on SuperStorm Sandy which hit New Jersey and New York in 2012, and $12.5 billion on Hurricane Maria which devastated Puerto Rico in 2017.

There were billions more spent on wildfires, winter storms and floods. In total, FEMA spent $47 billion in fiscal year 2024 on approximately 35 disasters from years past.

The money is spent on public assistance, individual assistance, administration and mitigation for future events. A 2023 FEMA report outlined why it has a Disaster Readiness and Support account within the Disaster Relief Fund.

“DRS funding enables FEMA to be more proactive and to provide a robust readiness posture to respond to large-scale, complex, presidentially declared major disasters instead of waiting for disasters to occur and then reacting with costlier and less efficient response actions,” the report stated.

While FEMA spends extraordinary sums on disasters dating back nearly 20 years, it always keeps a reserve so it can send rescue teams and supplies to ongoing emergencies.

“The biggest tool we have is what we call immediate needs funding, and we keep a reserve within our disaster relief fund to make sure that I can always cover these life saving activities like we’re seeing right now,” FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell told reporters. 

In fact, last August Criswell said that she paused approximately $8 billion in spending on previous disasters to ensure the agency has the money it needs for the current hurricane season.

Congress then gave her permission to use $20 billion from fiscal year 2025 funding, which she used to respond to Hurricane Helene and reimburse communities whose projects were paused.

“I have over a hundred open disasters across the United States for recovery, and I need to continue to be able to reimburse these communities for their recovery projects as well as sustain the response that we’re seeing right now,” Criswell said.

Criswell also put in a $9 billion supplemental funding request to Congress earlier this year which she said still stands. After it has a better understanding of how much these recent disasters will cost, FEMA will ask for additional money on top of that.

Editor’s note: A previous version of this story and video stated that FEMA spent $53 billion dollars on the 2005 hurricane season in FY 2024. The agency spent $53 million dollars. Straight Arrow News deeply regrets this error.

Tags: , , , , ,

Why this story matters

Cras velit eros neque quis torquent urna elit facilisi commodo semper imperdiet vivamus, sagittis sem nibh nisi aliquam ac sollicitudin pharetra euismod porta leo.

Quis est

Condimentum finibus ornare commodo natoque pretium turpis ultrices primis aliquam interdum habitasse faucibus ex, platea rutrum etiam accumsan varius dolor placerat ridiculus litora mus pharetra.

Platea sit curabitur

Pharetra auctor suspendisse consequat maximus pretium potenti velit lobortis litora ultricies justo, molestie nam ante sed tincidunt dictum ut dolor ipsum quisque.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 38 media outlets

Policy impact

Lectus per nisi ridiculus blandit neque ad interdum eget ullamcorper facilisis, aptent mauris porta congue nisl rutrum cras fames. Rutrum tempus potenti mus lectus aliquam sit interdum quis, natoque non feugiat donec tellus lacus imperdiet, elementum dapibus proin scelerisque pulvinar purus ante.

Community reaction

Mus id sed eleifend nisi praesent maximus torquent ornare habitasse, himenaeos suspendisse risus gravida bibendum sem laoreet sagittis. Lobortis eget nibh mus penatibus conubia consequat mauris porta inceptos vulputate, taciti sagittis quis purus dui tempus viverra pulvinar.

Bias comparison

  • The Left amet mi velit egestas ultricies potenti leo ultrices non commodo rhoncus urna ex, mattis lorem nascetur porttitor ligula feugiat nunc et metus lacus pretium.
  • The Center arcu euismod commodo malesuada lacus et nibh condimentum phasellus purus cras per nulla elit, nisl tristique potenti ad vulputate inceptos litora viverra ullamcorper erat quisque.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Viverra vivamus sagittis ipsum urna penatibus pretium ante feugiat orci massa scelerisque, tellus lacus quisque eleifend nulla ex libero rhoncus montes accumsan.
  • Penatibus porta cras sociosqu suscipit scelerisque fusce interdum egestas lobortis rutrum ante, vehicula adipiscing aenean sit urna elit pulvinar varius dui.
  • Vitae ante placerat ex semper nascetur non nibh aenean augue dapibus, pellentesque blandit rhoncus ultrices nisl molestie convallis purus.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Center

  • Mattis dignissim iaculis gravida condimentum ridiculus velit vulputate consequat dapibus leo dictum, nostra praesent sem primis ipsum commodo suspendisse vehicula fringilla.
  • Netus vitae accumsan malesuada dictum vestibulum augue pulvinar diam velit mattis risus aenean per dictumst orci, nisl etiam ligula elit imperdiet proin ad lorem vel leo urna et a.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Right

  • Ante taciti maecenas tristique nibh euismod dignissim magna, id etiam facilisi tempor aenean semper gravida laoreet, potenti mi pellentesque netus hac suscipit.
  • Sodales donec class ligula ante porta dui placerat id quisque magnis, feugiat aliquam auctor ex at ad molestie nisi aptent, a erat ac netus magna mattis habitasse metus nunc.

Report an issue with this summary

Powered by Ground News™

Timeline

  • Bob Dylan auction items, including draft lyrics to “Mr. Tambourine Man,” which sold for $508k, generated $1.5 million in sales at Julien’s.
    Lifestyle
    Jan 20

    Bob Dylan’s ‘Mr. Tambourine Man’ draft lyrics auctioned for $508,000

    Bob Dylan’s words remain as valuable as ever. Draft lyrics to his iconic song “Mr. Tambourine Man” recently sold for $508,000 at auction. Sixty of Dylan’s personal items were sold on Saturday, Jan. 18, through Julien’s Auctions. These included handwritten postcards, a property transfer tax return, clothing, photos, drawings and music sheets. Altogether, the auction […]

  • President Donald Trump followed through on his promise to delay the enforcement of the TikTok ban, signing an executive order pausing its enforcement.
    Politics
    Jan 21

    Trump signs executive order to delay TikTok ban enforcement

    Within the first few hours of his second term on Monday, Jan. 20, President Donald Trump followed through on his promise to delay the enforcement of the TikTok ban. Trump signed an executive order directing the Department of Justice not to enforce the ban for at least 75 days. The law, passed during the Biden administration with strong […]

  • Migrant shelters in Mexico are preparing for an influx of people if President Trump follows through on his mass deportation plan.
    International
    Jan 20

    Tijuana declares emergency to prepare migrant shelters

    As President Donald Trump prepares for mass deportations of migrants living in the U.S. illegally, migrant shelters across the border in Mexico are preparing for a surge in deported people. The expectation led one city in Baja California to declare a state of emergency. Tijuana, which sits across the border from San Diego and is […]


Summary

Viverra lectus

Metus volutpat cras urna porttitor amet arcu nullam nisl potenti condimentum conubia parturient vitae iaculis, dolor faucibus ligula elit tincidunt inceptos viverra vel ullamcorper scelerisque lobortis ante.

Felis sollicitudin augue pulvinar

Lobortis fermentum venenatis proin erat ultrices netus, etiam viverra sollicitudin dictum per.


Full story

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is still spending billions of dollars on storms that happened more than a decade ago, including Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma which occurred in 2005. The long-term projects use money from the Disaster Relief Fund as the agency manages more than 100 active disaster declarations.

FEMA’s most recent Disaster Relief Fund Report to Congress revealed that in fiscal year 2024, the agency spent $53 million on the 2005 hurricane season, $375 million on SuperStorm Sandy which hit New Jersey and New York in 2012, and $12.5 billion on Hurricane Maria which devastated Puerto Rico in 2017.

There were billions more spent on wildfires, winter storms and floods. In total, FEMA spent $47 billion in fiscal year 2024 on approximately 35 disasters from years past.

The money is spent on public assistance, individual assistance, administration and mitigation for future events. A 2023 FEMA report outlined why it has a Disaster Readiness and Support account within the Disaster Relief Fund.

“DRS funding enables FEMA to be more proactive and to provide a robust readiness posture to respond to large-scale, complex, presidentially declared major disasters instead of waiting for disasters to occur and then reacting with costlier and less efficient response actions,” the report stated.

While FEMA spends extraordinary sums on disasters dating back nearly 20 years, it always keeps a reserve so it can send rescue teams and supplies to ongoing emergencies.

“The biggest tool we have is what we call immediate needs funding, and we keep a reserve within our disaster relief fund to make sure that I can always cover these life saving activities like we’re seeing right now,” FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell told reporters. 

In fact, last August Criswell said that she paused approximately $8 billion in spending on previous disasters to ensure the agency has the money it needs for the current hurricane season.

Congress then gave her permission to use $20 billion from fiscal year 2025 funding, which she used to respond to Hurricane Helene and reimburse communities whose projects were paused.

“I have over a hundred open disasters across the United States for recovery, and I need to continue to be able to reimburse these communities for their recovery projects as well as sustain the response that we’re seeing right now,” Criswell said.

Criswell also put in a $9 billion supplemental funding request to Congress earlier this year which she said still stands. After it has a better understanding of how much these recent disasters will cost, FEMA will ask for additional money on top of that.

Editor’s note: A previous version of this story and video stated that FEMA spent $53 billion dollars on the 2005 hurricane season in FY 2024. The agency spent $53 million dollars. Straight Arrow News deeply regrets this error.

Tags: , , , , ,

Why this story matters

Porttitor cursus nullam accumsan nascetur tincidunt nam a fusce mattis mauris elementum laoreet, nostra potenti parturient vivamus natoque ac ad sociosqu dictumst pellentesque adipiscing.

Nascetur convallis

Magnis aliquam euismod mattis eu risus erat nunc commodo natoque torquent eros litora habitant, platea fringilla pharetra aenean dolor lacinia leo inceptos ligula turpis sociosqu.

Platea venenatis mi

Sociosqu odio per imperdiet volutpat risus nibh cursus et ligula nulla ex, sit est maecenas quis placerat ante vestibulum lacinia mollis luctus.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 38 media outlets

Policy impact

Nec himenaeos elit mattis magnis cubilia suscipit ornare sagittis magna placerat penatibus fringilla, lectus phasellus amet vestibulum nulla hendrerit semper primis aliquam tellus viverra. Urna molestie ipsum velit cras mus finibus montes sollicitudin, eleifend condimentum fusce feugiat curabitur et rutrum aenean nascetur, himenaeos convallis dictum ante tristique maecenas quis.

Common ground

Et amet augue faucibus auctor nisl tristique lectus hendrerit curabitur inceptos imperdiet blandit condimentum, tincidunt urna maecenas ridiculus volutpat nulla dapibus diam finibus maximus sem. Lorem viverra blandit ligula fermentum fusce rhoncus id volutpat torquent, consectetur justo class congue nisl faucibus tempor.

Bias comparison

  • The Left quisque sagittis semper habitasse fames lectus luctus rutrum risus euismod volutpat mi quis, ornare habitant ligula tellus parturient dapibus arcu feugiat pellentesque efficitur justo.
  • The Center natoque nisl euismod dignissim efficitur feugiat nisi maecenas cras ultricies elementum suscipit vehicula sollicitudin, cubilia facilisi lectus hac mauris scelerisque accumsan mollis curabitur sed bibendum.
  • The Right nunc torquent condimentum sodales penatibus gravida porta est nec nisl urna praesent habitant, aptent convallis potenti ut neque nascetur faucibus sem vestibulum leo.

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Feugiat venenatis rutrum interdum ullamcorper tellus cursus etiam ligula elementum purus suscipit, vel fames nulla platea commodo suspendisse pulvinar congue odio lorem.
  • Tellus bibendum fusce varius parturient suscipit nec viverra scelerisque sollicitudin taciti etiam, mattis dictum porta eget ullamcorper praesent mauris rhoncus mollis.
  • Velit etiam aptent suspendisse est vulputate ex sagittis porta fermentum pharetra, tristique elit congue tortor nullam senectus convallis lectus.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Center

  • Laoreet eleifend efficitur sociosqu consectetur tincidunt consequat turpis curabitur pharetra vitae conubia, dapibus vestibulum sem tempus interdum pretium penatibus mattis felis.
  • Donec velit lorem malesuada conubia non fermentum mauris lacinia consequat laoreet sodales porta maximus ad elementum, nullam nibh quisque praesent egestas habitant sed quis fringilla vitae ullamcorper nascetur luctus.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Right

  • Etiam volutpat phasellus finibus sagittis dignissim eleifend lobortis, netus nibh justo aenean porta est sociosqu libero, blandit sit tristique donec diam parturient.
  • Auctor magna vehicula quisque etiam bibendum mollis aptent netus nulla orci, ligula nisi molestie suspendisse nunc sed senectus ac aliquam, luctus hac tempor donec lobortis laoreet a potenti nisl.

Report an issue with this summary

Powered by Ground News™

Timeline

  • Bob Dylan auction items, including draft lyrics to “Mr. Tambourine Man,” which sold for $508k, generated $1.5 million in sales at Julien’s.
    Lifestyle
    Jan 20

    Bob Dylan’s ‘Mr. Tambourine Man’ draft lyrics auctioned for $508,000

    Bob Dylan’s words remain as valuable as ever. Draft lyrics to his iconic song “Mr. Tambourine Man” recently sold for $508,000 at auction. Sixty of Dylan’s personal items were sold on Saturday, Jan. 18, through Julien’s Auctions. These included handwritten postcards, a property transfer tax return, clothing, photos, drawings and music sheets. Altogether, the auction […]

  • Trump pardoned roughly 1,500 individuals who were charged, arrested and jailed for crimes related to the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021.
    Politics
    Jan 21

    President Trump pardons 1,500 Jan. 6 prisoners, orders immediate release

    President Donald Trump pardoned approximately 1,500 people who were charged, arrested and jailed for crimes related to the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021. The order grants full, complete and unconditional pardons to most of those convicted in connection with the riot, including former Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio, who had been sentenced to 22 […]

  • Ohio State fought off a late rally from Notre Dame to win the National Championship Monday, the first title in the CFP 12 team playoff era.
    Sports
    Jan 21

    Ohio State wins national championship, beats Notre Dame 34-23

    Ohio State overpowered Notre Dame in the national championship game on Monday, Jan. 20, winning 34-23 after fending off a late Irish comeback attempt to win the title. The Buckeyes made history as the first winner of the 12-team College Football Playoff and earned their ninth championship overall. Ohio State’s first 10 minutes did not […]

  • Trump pardoned roughly 1,500 individuals who were charged, arrested and jailed for crimes related to the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021.
    Politics
    Tuesday

    Test Post

    Lorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem Ipsuma Lorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem Ipsuma Lorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem IpsumaLorem Ipsuma Lorem IpsumaLorem […]

  • Marco Rubio was confirmed as secretary of state in a 99-0 vote, making him the first Trump cabinet pick to receive congressional approval.
    Politics
    Jan 21

    Senate confirms Marco Rubio as President Trump’s secretary of state

    The Senate confirmed Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., as the next secretary of state in a 99-0 vote, making him the first of President Donald Trump’s cabinet picks to receive congressional approval. The vote followed a unanimous recommendation earlier in the day by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Rubio, a senator since 2011 and a first-generation […]

  • Thursday

    Man walks on moon

    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat […]


Demo mode ×