FEMA ends in the canvas disaster areas to the door


In This chapter has made significant changes in how to respond to the land, including ending the federal door canvas to the survivors in the disaster.

A note reviewed by Wired, dated May 2, and to FEMA Regional Leaders of Cameron Hamilton, a senior official who performs the duties of the manager, orders the program offices to “implement” five “key reforms” for future storm and fire season. “

Under the first reforms entitled “Prioritization of Constant Features”, the note states that “FEMA provides to focus on access to survivors and register aid in more targeted locations, improve access to people needed, improve access to needy people and increase cooperation with them, and increase cooperation with them, and enhance registration and registration needs. [state, local, tribal, and territorial] Partners and non -profit services providers. “

FEMA has been deployed for years to travel to the door in the disaster, and directly interacts with survivors in its homes to provide an overview of the FEMA request processes and help them register for federal aid. This group of workers is part of the larger staff, often called the “boots on the ground” disaster.

One FEMA worker says that ending the canvas to the door, “will strictly prevent our ability to achieve vulnerable people.” They say that the help of workers who go to the door says: “It is usually focused on the most affected and vulnerable societies in which elderly or disabled or non -transportation are unable to achieve catastrophe recovery centers.” This person spoke with wired on condition of anonymity because they were not allowed to talk to the press.

“Another example of the FEMA program is useless and inefficient,” says Jeff Harbag, director of FEMA for the Foreign Office. “Under the leadership of President Trump and the NOEM Secretary of State, FEMA is changing how and reforming its policies to support survivors better than the American disaster and people. Recent executive orders of President Trump allows states to effectively respond to natural disasters and provide resources at the community level.”

Todd Dave, an emergency management coordinator for the city of Ingloud, California, and the second vice president at the International Association of Emergency Managers, says he has seen his disaster management years working that the number of survivors does not receive information on recovery or non-door-free doors-as emergency and emergency managers.

“Going to the door to the door, especially in critical areas, is very important to share information,” he says. “There is a need for it. Can it be done more efficiently? Probably, but getting rid of it completely prevents some.”

The canvas at the door of FEMA became a political flash point at Milton’s storm last year, when an agency whistle warned the conservative news site that a Daily Sim, a official, told Florida workers to prevent Trump’s backyard from approaching homes. The former FEMA manager, Dean Chrisol, told the Majlis Supervision and Response Committee last year that the incident had been separated for an employee who was fired since then. The employee, in turn, claimed that he had acted on the orders of a superior, and this is a model of “hostile encounters” with the survivors who had signs of Trump’s yard.

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