With 4,500 Federal Emergency Management Agency staffers already
helping survivors of Hurricane Harvey in Texas, FEMA chief Brock
Long told managers in an internal memo to ready every member of the
agency's on-call reservist workforce for deployment.
In the following months, thousands of FEMA reservists, who account
for about half of the agency's disaster-response personnel, would
descend on Florida, Puerto Rico, California and elsewhere to help
recovery efforts after an unprecedented string of natural disasters.
But not all would respond. About 500 reservists, or one of every
twelve workers, ignored FEMA's deployment request, current and
former officials told Reuters.
"We didn't even hear from them," Patrick Hernandez, who oversees
FEMA's disaster workforce, said in an interview. "We need to get
people in here who understand the system and adhere to the
protocols."
With the 2018 hurricane season already underway, FEMA is scrambling
to hire more people who are willing to depart at a moment's notice
for assignments that can last months at a stretch.
Internal documents obtained through a Freedom of Information Act
request show the agency's disaster-response force is understaffed by
26 percent. And as last year revealed, many of those who sign up
don't always respond when needed. (For graphic, see https://tmsnrt.rs/2Juw4LV)
That comes at a cost. At times, staffing shortages force FEMA to
shuffle personnel from one disaster to the next and in some cases
rely on workers who do not know how to do the job effectively,
according to interviews with 15 current and former FEMA workers.
Some local officials say the agency's central mission - getting
federal aid where it is needed - is undercut by the constant
turnover.
"They had no knowledge of the system. They had no knowledge about
how to do anything but fill out forms," said Junior Shelton, mayor
of Central, Louisiana, which experienced catastrophic flooding in
2016. "We're still sitting around waiting for that money to get
here."
Hernandez said staffing issues have not affected FEMA's ability to
get the job done. "I would not agree with that statement
wholeheartedly," he said.
Help wanted at FEMA: https://tmsnrt.rs/2Jxn6O1
'A VERY LOW NUMBER'
The extraordinary string of domestic disasters in 2017 continues to
weigh on the U.S. agency. With thousands of workers still out in the
field, official figures show that 33 percent of FEMA's
disaster-response workforce is available for deployment, down from
56 percent at this time last year.
Some specialties are stretched especially thin: Only 13 percent of
the workers who direct federal aid to pay for rebuilding costs after
a disaster hits are currently available.
"That's a very low number, and that would be very scary going into
more disasters," said Elizabeth Zimmerman, a former senior FEMA
official.
Unlike military reservists, those who work for FEMA don't have a
guarantee that their regular jobs will be available when they return
home. As a result, most are retirees who don't need steady work or
recent college graduates who don't yet have a full-time job, current
and former managers say.
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Reservists are allowed to turn down up to three assignments each
year, meaning FEMA cannot count on a full reserve force during peak
periods. According to internal figures, FEMA's reservist corps has
grown by roughly 1,000 workers over the past year. Still, it remains
3,700 workers short of the 10,949 reservists it has determined it
needs to be able to respond to several disasters at once.
Some reservists say they are not in a position to accept months-long
assignments far from their homes.
"I could get a phone call tomorrow telling me to go to Puerto Rico,
but the truth is I'm not going to go," said Alessandra Jerolleman,
who said family obligations prevent her from leaving Louisiana.
FEMA officials point out they can pull in other types of workers
when needed. Some 22,000 federal employees from agencies like the
Defense Department participated in disaster-relief work with FEMA in
2017, for example.
"We rely on our reservists and we love them," said FEMA's Hernandez.
"But FEMA's made up of a lot of different elements."
SECOND-CLASS CITIZENS
FEMA also hires residents of disaster zones to help out, a practice
that is widely praised for boosting employment and harnessing local
knowledge. But some say it can hinder FEMA's effectiveness.
Carlos Mercader, Puerto Rico's top lobbyist in Washington, said he
received numerous complaints of poorly trained FEMA workers who
assess damaged houses in a seemingly arbitrary manner. While one
might be declared a total loss, another that appeared to suffer
similar damage might be denied reconstruction assistance, he said.
Local hires accounted for more than half of the 2,878 FEMA employees
in Puerto Rico in May, according to agency figures obtained by
Reuters. Only 100 are permanent FEMA employees.
"They probably should be sending us more people with as much
experience as possible," Mercader said.
FEMA officials say Congress could help with recruiting and retaining
reservists by guaranteeing they can keep their regular jobs while on
assignment, as is the case with military reservists. Officials have
also asked Congress to change hiring laws to give reservists
preferential status when they apply for a full-time FEMA job.
Congress has yet to act on those requests.
But FEMA's own actions may also drive away some who are willing to
serve, reservists say.
Paul Seldes, 59, said he tried unsuccessfully since 2011 to find an
assignment that matched his background in field operations.
Instead, the agency repeatedly asked him to report to a telephone
call center to screen financial-aid requests from disaster
survivors. By last fall, he no longer bothered to respond to such
deployment requests, he said.
"I have this capability, I have this knowledge, I have this training
- why don't you want to listen to me?" he said.
(Reporting by Andy Sullivan; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Paul
Thomasch)
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