Trump-appointed FEMA Review Council proposes sweeping changes to federal
disaster support
[May 08, 2026]
By GABRIELA AOUN ANGUEIRA
A council meant to reform the Federal Emergency Management Agency
proposed Thursday a series of long-awaited changes to the disaster
recovery body that stop short of the administration’s promises to
dismantle it, but could reduce the number of disasters the federal
government supports and the amount of money it doles out.
The council appointed by President Donald Trump approved a highly
anticipated report that outlines ways the Trump administration could
potentially put far more responsibility on states, tribes and
territories for disaster preparedness, response and recovery.
It proposes upending how the federal government determines which
disasters to support, how FEMA pays states and other governments for
disaster recovery costs, and what kind of FEMA assistance survivors
receive, among other reforms.
“These recommendations are all about accelerating federal dollars,
streamlining the process, making it less bureaucratic so that Americans
can get the help they need on the worst day of their lives,” former
Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, a council member, said in a public meeting
Thursday with nearly 6,000 virtual attendees.
There is broad agreement that FEMA needs reforms to move faster and
relieve bureaucracy. However, the council’s recommendations raise
concerns among some disaster experts that shifting responsibilities will
be more than some state and local governments, the private sector, or
survivors can handle.

Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin said the report offered him
“a clear direction and an oversight of an agency that is in need of
reform, but is still mission capable.”
The recommendations will now be sent to Trump, though many of the
reforms would require congressional action.
Trump “looks forward to reviewing the recommendations,” White House
spokesperson Abigail Jackson said in a statement, and “remains committed
to getting resources to communities in need while also working with
states to ensure they invest in their own resilience before disaster
strikes.”
Major changes to federal aid
Among the council’s most significant recommendations is changing how
states, tribes, and territories qualify for federal support from a
decision informed by a per-capita formula that weighs costs against
population to a pre-defined set of metrics for a disaster to trigger
federal support.
It also recommended giving states direct payments within 30 days of a
disaster, with a potential for another payment further down the line,
replacing the current system of reimbursing states after recovery work
is done.
Survivors’ assistance would be upended, too: The council proposed
limiting housing assistance to those whose homes are rendered
uninhabitable and offering survivors a one-time payment instead of
multiple channels for rental, repair, and replacement assistance.
FEMA would focus its survivor aid on emergency housing, moving away from
long-term housing assistance and giving states the option to run their
own housing programs while adhering to federal standards.
“States, figure it out,” said council member and Florida emergency
management director Kevin Guthrie. “Do what’s best for you.”
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The Federal Emergency Management Agency headquarters is
photographed in Washington, May 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar,
File)

Other recommendations include shifting most flood insurance policies
away from the National Flood Insurance Program, which is over $20
billion in debt, to the private market, and continuing to align
premium costs more closely with risk.
A bumpy road to a final report
Trump has threatened to dismantle FEMA and has repeatedly said he
wants to push more responsibility for disaster preparedness,
response and recovery to the states.
The 12-person council he appointed is co-chaired by Mullin and
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. It is comprised of current and
former officials and emergency managers from predominantly
Republican-led states.
Emergency managers, local leaders, nonprofits involved with disaster
management and survivor groups have anxiously awaited the council’s
findings, which were due roughly six months ago but were delayed as
former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and council members
clashed over drafts.
The final recommendations seemed to move away from at least one of
the most controversial reforms included in past drafts: Cutting the
FEMA workforce by 50%, a recommendation included in a December draft
reviewed by The Associated Press.
Can Congress pass FEMA reforms?
In a statement to The Associated Press, a spokesperson for The
National Emergency Management Association said the group “broadly
supports the overarching principles outlined by the council of less
complexity in federal programs, faster assistance, and cost savings
at all levels.”
Some disaster experts worry local governments and nonprofits won't
be able to fill in potential voids left by a federal pullback.
Limiting survivor aid to those whose houses are uninhabitable, for
example, “would dramatically increase the level of displacement and
economic insecurity” for low-income survivors, said Noah Patton,
director of disaster recovery at the National Low-Income Housing
Coalition.

Most major changes would require legislative action. A FEMA reform
act passed out of a House committee last year, but no further action
has been taken.
Patton said he was skeptical that lawmakers could pass FEMA reform
soon, especially with limited time before the midterm elections, and
said the recommendations are not a foregone conclusion.
“It is important to remember that these are suggestions — they
aren’t set in stone,” he said.
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