Noem demanding to sign off on all FEMA expenditures over $100K and staff says it’s impacting emergency response

Federal Emergency Management Agency workers claim they ran into red tape while trying to assemble resources in response to the catastrophic flooding in central Texas because of new guidelines implemented by Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem.
FEMA officials told CNN they were unable to pre-position Urban Search and Rescue crews from across the country to Texas, as flood waters dramatically rose to levels not seen in decades, destroying children’s summer camps, homes, and putting hundreds of lives at risk.
That was because Noem enacted a new rule requiring any department contract or grant over $100,000 to be personally signed off by her before funds can be utilized, several current FEMA officials told NBC News.
“FEMA doesn’t sneeze without spending that amount of money,” a former official anonymously told NBC News.
The rule, which is meant to cut back spending, could be a major problem for FEMA, which regularly accesses millions of dollars to assist in disaster response and recovery.
“We were operating under a clear set of guidance: lean forward, be prepared, anticipate what the state needs, and be ready to deliver it,” an unnamed longtime FEMA official told CNN.
“That is not as clear of an intent for us at the moment,” the official added.
The Independent has contacted the Department of Homeland Security for comment.
Noem eventually approved FEMA’s request on Monday, nearly three days after the initial flooding occurred, sources told CNN.
FEMA officials also adopted a more streamlined process to send requests to Noem, creating a task force to speed up the process, two people familiar with the situation told NBC News.
Tricia McLaughlin, a DHS spokesperson, told CNN that Noem did not need to authorize additional FEMA resources initially because the department used other search and rescue assets.
Noem approved the requested FEMA funding as time went on, and there was a need for it, McLaughlin said.
The department told NBC News it has taken an “all hands on deck approach to respond to recovery efforts in Kerrville.”
But FEMA officials told the news outlet that they fear the newly implemented rule could have far more devastating consequences when disaster strikes a larger area, or multiple states.


