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Sunday, October 20, 2024

Digging into FEMA spending claims on campaign trail

By Peter Cohn, CQ-Roll Call

WASHINGTON — Former President Donald Trump and some of his GOP allies on Capitol Hill have been falsely telling voters in key swing states that the Biden-Harris administration diverted more than $1 billion in disaster relief for Hurricane Helene survivors to feed and shelter undocumented immigrants.

Here’s Trump on his Truth Social platform Monday: “The GREAT people of North Carolina are being stood up by (Vice President Kamala) Harris and (President Joe) Biden, who are giving almost all of the FEMA money to Illegal Migrants in what is now considered to be the WORST rescue operation in the history of the U.S.”

But a history of the program shows policymakers on both sides of the aisle, including Trump, have cut spending deals that included a small slice of Federal Emergency Management Agency appropriations specifically to help states and localities care for migrants released into their communities, totaling just over $1.7 billion.

During that time, FEMA’s disaster relief fund has gotten several orders of magnitude more money, nearly $244 billion, and the two funding streams are entirely separate.

As Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., who hasn’t joined the chorus of falsehoods in which some of his colleagues have engaged, put it in an interview with Fox News: “There are different programs that have different funding.”

The evolution of the agency’s funding, along with details about FEMA’s much larger disaster relief fund, point to how the complicated, behind-the-scenes nature of the federal appropriations process has fueled misleading talking points.

Reagan-era roots

While FEMA is best known for disaster relief, Congress appropriates more than $5 billion a year to the agency for other things, including a range of security-related grants for high-density urban areas, nonprofits, religious institutions, ports, Amtrak, bus stations, aid to local fire departments and more.

FEMA’s food and shelter program has its roots in the Reagan administration, expanded into migrant services during the Trump administration and Republican control of the Senate, and then got boosted by Biden and congressional Democrats as part of appropriations negotiations in 2022.

One of the smaller non-disaster programs began as part of an anti-recession package signed by President Ronald Reagan in 1983, containing $50 million for FEMA grants to charities and local governments to help alleviate hunger and homelessness.

The Emergency Food and Shelter Program stuck around and became a part of annual FEMA appropriations, receiving $117 million in fiscal 2024. The Biden administration requested $130 million for fiscal 2025, which House Republicans agreed to in their Homeland Security spending bill. Senate Democrats haven’t yet released their version.

Trump border request

A new innovation in FEMA’s food and shelter program emerged during the Trump administration in 2019.

Trump had requested a $4.5 billion emergency supplemental package to deal with the “humanitarian and security crisis at the southern border.” The largest piece was nearly $2.9 billion for the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Refugee Resettlement care for children who crossed the border unaccompanied by parents or guardians. There was no money for FEMA in the request.

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