There are a lot of misperceptions about FEMA's role in disaster recovery, what it does — and does not — pay for and what residents in hurricane-hit areas can expect.
Bad actors coming in behind hurricanes in North Carolina is nothing new. This time, the White House felt the need to respond.
Alabama Sen. Tommy Tuberville has added his voice to those leveraging criticism of FEMA’s Hurricane Helene response into ...
The vice president has sought to show herself as a leader firmly in control in a crisis, while also visiting shelters to ...
FEMA faces accusations of misusing $1.4 billion intended for Hurricane Helene relief. Tavia Hunt and Rachel Bush criticized ...
Misinformation is adding to the chaos and confusion in many storm-battered communities. Social media platforms such as X have allowed the falsehoods to spread.
Lost in those clouds of controversy were a positive jobs report and the abrupt suspension of the East Coast port strike.
In May of this year, county supervisors in San Diego, California accepted $19.6 million from FEMA to fund a "migrant transition" day center.
High schools in dozens of communities in southern Appalachia are closed, and many have no clarity on when their sports teams can resume their schedules.
There is no evidence that disaster relief funds were used on immigrants in the U.S. illegally. FEMA disaster money comes from dedicated funds that cannot be used for other purposes.
Exceptional circumstances, too often repeated, cease to be exceptions.