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John Hardman's avatar

I guess the question is if FEMA inefficient and if individual States doing their own thing would be worse. I am recalling the 9-11 attacks where the different emergency responders were unable to communicate outside their department silos. Disasters do not always confined themselves to state borders.

Also, there is the problem of inequity as rich statesman provide better support than poor ones. The horrors of the Louisiana levee breaks in New Orleans were a prime example. How to coordinate with critical federal agencies such as the military (the Corps of Engineers during the New Orleans levee breaks).

Also, many states are comprised of a high proportion of federal lands and federally controlled Native American nations. Who is to take the initiative when multiple jurisdictions are involved?

There are sound reasons behind the formation of FEMA. Can it be improved, sure, but if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.

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Raf Manji's avatar

Good article Robert. The advantage of the central system is the ability to manage and deploy resources nationwide. It’s a scale issue. But, local government can free ride on this service and perhaps not attend to its own resilience, whether through insurance or disaster preparedness. Trump dies force these conversations out into the open and this one is worthy of further debate.

I make this comment on the back of my experience as a Christchurch City Councillor (and finance chair) after the 2010/2011 Earthquakes.

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