In June, President Donald Trump told a gathering at the Oval Office that he wanted to eliminate the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and hand its responsibilities to the states — possibly as early as this December, once the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season ends. That was just before FEMA played a critical role in the response to the Texas Hill Country floods, which cost more than 130 lives.
The FEMA Review Council — a presidential task force taking public input on how to reshape the agency — held its second meeting on July 9, less than a week after the floods. The council’s co-chair, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem, praised the federal government’s response to the Texas floods, calling it a model for how disaster management should work.
“We owe it to all the American people to deliver the most efficient and the most effective disaster response,” Noem said. “In fact, some of how we’ve responded to Texas is exactly how President Trump imagined that this agency would operate: immediately making decisions, getting them resources and dollars that they need so that they can conduct the response that they need to do on the ground.”
Nevertheless, Noem left little doubt that FEMA’s future is very much in jeopardy, repeating Trump’s argument that FEMA itself needed to be abolished.
“Federal emergency management should be state and locally led, rather than how it has operated for decades,” Noem said. “It has been slow to respond at the federal level. It’s even been slower to get the resources to Americans in crisis, and that is why this entire agency needs to be eliminated as it exists today and remade into a responsive agency.”
What FEMA’s elimination could mean for Texas and smaller states
Deanne Criswell, FEMA administrator under President Joe Biden, admitted FEMA has room for improvement in the way it carries out its mission. But she said getting rid of the agency is not the answer. Instead, she said it needs to be strengthened, particularly given the challenges of future disasters that will come with climate change.
“We shouldn’t be asking state and local emergency managers to do this on their own,” Criswell said. “That’s not a good use of taxpayer dollars, whether it’s federal tax dollars or state tax dollars. If you have a central agency like FEMA that has the capability to support states, we don’t have to redundantly duplicate that kind of capability in all 50 states and our territories.”
FEMA played a major role in the Houston area’s recovery from Hurricane Harvey. In 2018, the agency awarded more than $76 million to the Harris County Flood Control District to buy out more than 460 flood-prone homes that had been damaged by the 2017 storm.
Criswell pointed to Texas’ response to the Hill Country flooding as another example of why a robust federal role in emergency management is needed.
“Texas is, I would argue, the most capable state when it comes to emergency management, when it comes to personnel, the knowledge and resources that they have,” Criswell said. “They have responded to many types of different events, and so they had the resources to begin this response. But even this response required additional help.”
Michael Coen, FEMA’s chief of staff under Biden and President Barack Obama, said Trump’s aim of phasing out FEMA with so little lead time could go badly for Texas and worse for smaller states with fewer resources.
“Without a glide path for states to be able to plan to absorb more of these costs,” Coen said, “most states, they haven’t had enough time to deliberate on that, decide how they would fund their emergency management programs, how they would fund mitigation programs.”












