Some in Hurricane Helene-ravaged North Carolina embrace Trump's push to
abolish FEMA
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[February 17, 2025]
By MAKIYA SEMINERA
SWANNANOA, N.C. (AP) — Emily Russell remembers feeling hopeful after she
managed to get an appointment with the Federal Emergency Management
Agency not long after Hurricane Helene ripped though her home in
Swannanoa, North Carolina.
But after several assistance requests were denied or left pending,
Russell says the agency has been of “no help” to her family after the
late September storm. Still reeling in a world turned upside-down by the
most damaging storm in state history, she finds herself open to
President Donald Trump's suggestion about “getting rid of” FEMA.
That is a common sentiment in the mountains of western North Carolina,
where living in a trailer with limited supplies for months can try
anyone's patience. Russell, who like many others did not have flood
insurance, endured those stresses as she prepared for the birth of her
son, but then volunteers stepped up to rebuild her home. Back there now,
she can cradle her tiny infant in her arms on her newly constructed
front porch — overlooking a heaping pile of rotting debris and two
Trump-Vance signs posted to a pole in her yard.
Frustration with stopgap relief efforts has been exacerbated by
confusion over where long-term help should come from. FEMA is meant to
be a first line, providing temporary housing and funding for repairs
while insurance foots most of the bill. It is not the message residents
heard initially, when politicians, including then-President Joe Biden,
who toured the damaged area, promised residents they would have whatever
they needed.
As more time passes, the reality of long-term recovery has gotten
complicated.
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To Russell and many others, Trump saying he would consider eliminating
FEMA made sense. To some experts and officials, however, that could
cause more problems than it would solve.
Days after Trump took office on Jan. 20, he surveyed the fallout from
wildfires in California and the hurricane in North Carolina and
suggested that states primarily manage the response to natural
disasters. As a candidate, he had disparaged FEMA's work in the southern
states hit by Helene. That criticism, which began almost as soon as the
wind stopped blowing, has not stopped.
More recently, FEMA was criticized by Trump adviser Elon Musk over
payments to reimburse New York City for hotel costs for migrants. Four
FEMA employees were fired, accused of circumventing leadership to make
the transactions, which have been standard for years through a program
that helps with costs to care for a surge in migration.
North Carolina's government estimated that Helene caused a record $59.6
billion in damages. FEMA has contributed almost $380 million through
public assistance grants to the state and local governments, as well as
approximately $372 million directly to North Carolinians as of Feb. 11,
according to the agency. FEMA's responsibilities include direct
financial assistance to individuals and reimbursements to governments
for recovery tasks like debris removal and rebuilding roads.
Russell was confused when she was denied on her FEMA application,
especially after she said an inspector told her the home was a complete
loss. Rushing floodwaters tore off the side of her house, and heavy mud
seeped inside, warping the floorboards and rendering most things
unsalvageable. She thought the home she grew up in would be bulldozed.
Russell called FEMA and spoke with representatives in-person about her
denied request. She said they told her she needed receipts for certain
personal items, which she did not have.
“To keep being told it’s pending or not approved, it’s just, it’s just a
devastating feeling,” Russell said. “I mean, you just feel lost.”
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In Buncombe County, where Russell lives, about 70% of homeowners who
registered with FEMA received some level of assistance, according to the
agency's data. Approximately 91% of those approved received up to
$10,000, while about 3.6% got between $25,000 and a maximum payment that
would likely top out at a little over $40,000.
Danny Bailey, a 61-year-old Buncombe County retiree, said he received
$42,500 after losing practically everything from flooding, including the
trailer he lived in, his sister's double-wide mobile home and a barn.
His family had moved to the property in 1968.
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A trailer sits on Vickie Revis' property after her home was
destroyed by Hurricane Helene, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025, in
Swannanoa, N.C. (AP Photo/Kathy Kmonicek)
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Bailey already spent some of his money on necessities, such as
propane to make it through the winter. He lives in a donated trailer
on his property, now a muddy, rutted expanse, and said FEMA
"should’ve done more.”
“If this is the way they are, he ought to do away with them,” Bailey
said of Trump, whose win in North Carolina helped propel him to
victory in November.
Bailey ran into issues getting the money. A few days after Helene,
he said a FEMA inspector came to his property and told him to go
online to apply for disaster assistance, but Bailey had no computer
or reliable cell service. He traveled almost 100 miles east to
Statesville to use his nephew's computer, Bailey said, and then had
problems getting clear answers from FEMA on his application status.
Eventually, he received his money.
“Their attitude was, you know, this happened to you, but it's up to
you to fix it. And I ain't the one who caused it," he said with a
laugh.
Complaints about FEMA's application process are common because of
the administrative hurdles in place to ensure applicants'
eligibility, said Miyuki Hino, a city and regional planning
professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. People
may also believe FEMA should provide more assistance when its role
is mainly to meet immediate needs such as shelter, Hino said.
There always has been an underlying tension on the federal
government's role in natural disaster response, but Hino said the
agency's increasing politicization could be attributed to the rising
frequency of expensive disasters caused by climate change.
Dissolving FEMA could create issues when disasters extend beyond
state lines or localities need expertise on disasters they are not
used to confronting.
Overall, eliminating FEMA would likely slow the recovery process for
future disasters, she said.
FEMA's potential eradication worries Dalton George, the mayor pro
tempore of Boone, a mountain town in Watauga County that was ravaged
by Helene. Despite understandable frustrations, he said the agency
moved quickly to help. It has contributed money for home
restorations, as well as keeping several families in hotels under
its transitory sheltering program, he said.
“It feels like people are more anti-FEMA than they are about
actually solving some of these problems,” George said.
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Responsibilities would be partly shifted onto local governments, and
George said towns such as Boone do not have resources for that.
Private organizations would need to step up more than they have,
George said, and they already are overextended.
Vickie Revis relies heavily on private entities such as churches to
supply almost everything on her property, including the trailer she
stays in with her husband along the Swannanoa River. Her home of
eight years was completely swept away by the river — something she
used to associate with beauty and peace but now ties to “terror.”
“It’s like a friend that came in and robbed you of everything you
have,” Revis said.
Her restoration process, however, will largely be funded by FEMA, as
Revis said she received more than $40,000. She said she had no
issues with how the agency handled her situation.
Instead, Revis talked at length about the grief she still lives
with: lost pets; meaningful possessions that disappeared; home
expansion plans to accommodate more family members that will not
happen. She said she rarely left her trailer until recently because
she could not bear to face the devastation.
Now, it is the rebuilding that keeps Revis going. How long will that
go on?
“However long it takes,” she said.
___ Associated Press data journalist Larry Fenn in New York
contributed to this report.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
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