Back to homeEconomyArchive

Economy | Europe

FEMA Owes $10 Billion to Disaster-Hit Communities — and It Simply Isn't Paying

| 3 min read| By EuroBulletin24 briefing
FEMA Owes $10 Billion to Disaster-Hit Communities — and It Simply Isn't Paying
G. Edward Johnson wikimediaSource link

## Nearly $10 Billion Owed, and Communities Can't Get Paid In El Dorado County, California — a community in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada that experienced one of the most destructive wildfires in the state's recent history with the 2021 Caldor Fire — county staff have spent three years preparing an application tha

Nearly $10 Billion Owed, and Communities Can't Get Paid

In El Dorado County, California — a community in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada that experienced one of the most destructive wildfires in the state's recent history with the 2021 Caldor Fire — county staff have spent three years preparing an application that would allow them to enroll more than 500 homes in a fire-resistant materials and hardening program. The program is funded through FEMA. The county has submitted its paperwork and made every required preparation. FEMA simply has not responded. For more than a year.

El Dorado County is not an edge case or an administrative anomaly. It is one of hundreds of communities across the United States experiencing an identical problem: FEMA owes them money, has acknowledged owing them money, and is not paying. The scale of the backlog, according to internal agency documents obtained by NPR, approaches $10 billion in total outstanding obligations. That figure represents years of accumulated disaster recovery reimbursements, mitigation grants, and infrastructure repair funding that communities have in many cases already spent — incurring debt or cutting other programs to fund projects that federal commitments led them to believe would be reimbursed.

The specific mechanisms producing this backlog are multiple and overlapping. FEMA has lost thousands of employees since the current administration took office. Its CORE workforce — the Cadre of On-Call Response and Recovery employees who make up roughly 40% of the agency's operational capacity — had contract renewals restricted to 180-day terms and then subjected to approval requirements from DHS leadership, dramatically slowing the agency's ability to process claims. A government shutdown lasting eight weeks left FEMA employees unpaid for an extended period, creating additional processing paralysis in the middle of an ongoing disaster backlog.

The Programs Most Affected and the Communities Most Vulnerable

The FEMA backlog falls across two primary funding streams whose specific characteristics matter for understanding who bears the burden most acutely. The Public Assistance Program reimburses local governments for the cost of repairing major public infrastructure — roads, bridges, water treatment plants — after federally declared disasters. The specific program design requires communities to incur the costs upfront, undertake the repair work, and then seek reimbursement from FEMA. When FEMA's payment processing slows to the degree that the current backlog represents, communities that have borrowed to fund disaster recovery find themselves servicing debt on projects they expected to be compensated for, without the compensation arriving.

The Hazard Mitigation Grant Program — which funds proactive improvements like the El Dorado County fire hardening project — has been further compromised by the administration's cancellation of the Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities program on the grounds that it was focused on climate initiatives. A federal judge ordered the program reinstated, but FEMA has provided no timeline for when the cancelled funding might actually flow.

The communities most exposed to the backlog's consequences are those that are simultaneously most vulnerable to disaster and least resourced to absorb the financial shock of delayed reimbursement. Smaller counties and municipalities without significant reserve capacity have been forced into emergency borrowing or service cuts to bridge the funding gap — consequences that fall on residents who are already managing the aftermath of the disasters that created the FEMA claims in the first place.

Hurricane Season Is Six Weeks Away

The specific urgency that frames the FEMA backlog story is the Atlantic hurricane season, which begins June 1 — approximately six weeks from the date of this writing. FEMA's capacity to respond to major hurricane disasters depends on the functional availability of exactly the workforce and financial resources that the current backlog and staffing reductions have compromised. New Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin acknowledged the problem directly during his first official visit to survey Hurricane Helene recovery in North Carolina, saying he was trying to push things forward 'as fast as possible' and acknowledging that 'disasters are happening constantly.'

The specific Disaster Relief Fund — the financial mechanism through which FEMA's disaster response is funded and which, unlike many federal funding streams, does not automatically lapse during government shutdowns — is running low. The DHS appropriations bill that would replenish the fund with more than $26 billion has not been passed, meaning FEMA is heading into hurricane season with a depleted financial reserve and a reduced operational workforce.

#Economy#Europe#FEMA#Owes#Billion#Disaster#Hit Communities#It Simply Isn#Communities#County#Dorado#Paying
More in EconomyBrowse full archive

Comments

0 comments
Checking account...
480 characters left
Loading comments...

Related coverage

Economy
The Strait of Hormuz Just Reopened and Oil Prices Dropped 10% in Hours — What It Means for You
Iran declared the Strait of Hormuz completely open to commercial vessels on April 17, 2026, tied to the Israel-Lebanon c...
Economy
Spirit Airlines Is About to Liquidate and the Iran War Killed It — Here Is the Full Story
Spirit Airlines could liquidate as early as this week, with jet fuel prices nearly doubling since the Iran war began. Th...
Economy
FEMA Has a $10 Billion Backlog and Hurricane Season Is Six Weeks Away — The Disaster Nobody Is Talking About
FEMA is carrying a $10 billion disaster funding backlog as hurricane season approaches in June 2026. A $26 billion appro...
Economy
Hailey Bieber's Rhode Skincare Is One of the Most Successful Brand Launches in Beauty History — Here Is the Business Model
Hailey Bieber's Rhode skincare brand has grown into one of the most commercially successful celebrity beauty ventures in...
Economy
The Fed and Powell Are Now Under DOJ Investigation for Renovation Cost Overruns — Here Is What Is Happening
## The Central Bank Under Criminal Investigation In a development that has received less coverage than its institutional...
Economy
Iran War Created a Natural Gas Windfall for American Energy Companies — Here Is Who Is Profiting
## The Energy Story That Has Been Obscured by the Oil Story The dominant energy narrative from the US-Iran conflict has ...

More stories

Science
April 2026 Was the Hottest March Ever for the US Lower 48 — And El Niño Is Making It Worse
Entertainment
Sylvester Stallone Is Getting a Biopic and the Rocky Director Is Making It — Here Is Everything About 'I Play Rocky'
Technology
Reese Witherspoon Says It's Time for Women to Embrace AI and She Wants to Learn With You — Here Is Her Vision
Entertainment
Tom Cruise's New Film 'Digger' Made CinemaCon 2026 Stop — Here Is What the Grand Entrance Revealed
Entertainment
Karol G's Coachella Weekend 2 Set Made History Twice in the Same Evening — Here Is What Happened
World
The US Just Sent a Diplomatic Delegation to Cuba for the First Time in Years — Here Is What Changed
Entertainment
Zendaya Is 'Disappearing' From Public Life After 2026 — Here Is What's Actually Happening
Entertainment
Michael B. Jordan Is Starring in 'The Thomas Crown Affair' Remake — Here Is Why This Casting Is Perfect
Entertainment
Demi Moore Just Joined Charlize Theron and Julia Garner in a New Amazon MGM Thriller — Here Is Everything About 'Tyrant'
World
Chicago O'Hare Is Cutting 2026 Summer Flights — Here Is Why This Affects Every American Traveler
Military
Ukraine's Long-Range Strikes Into Russia Are Prompting New Threats Against Europe — What's Happening
Entertainment
Henry Cavill's Highlander Reboot Showed First Footage at CinemaCon — Here Is Every Detail