FEMA head sounds the alarm over disaster funding after double hurricanes

A woman stands to the left and looks at a giant oak tree that landed on her 100-year-old home in Valdosta, Georgia.
Rhonda Bell looks on after an oak tree landed on her 100-year-old home after Hurricane Helene moved through, Friday, Sept. 27, 2024, in Valdosta, Ga. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart, File)

The money available to help communities hit by disasters has shrunk after back-to-back hurricanes Helene and Milton, and the funding problems might jeopardize the government’s ability to respond to new emergencies in the future, the Federal Emergency Management Agency chief said Wednesday.

Deanne Criswell warned during a Senate hearing with other agency heads that FEMA’s disaster relief fund — the country’s emergency checkbook — is down to less than $5 billion.

The Biden administration has asked Congress for nearly $100 billion for disaster aid. The largest chunk of that money, about $40 billion, would go to FEMA’s disaster relief fund.