The city of St. Louisis witnessing the consequences of President Donald Trump’s attacks on the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) happen in real time. And to be expected, it’s the city’s Black residents and other vulnerable groups who are suffering the most.
After a tornado ripped through St. Louis this past weekend, all eyes were on the federal government to see exactly how… and when, they would respond. Although FEMA finally began assessing the damages on Wednesday (May 21), according to STLPR, the government agency drew criticism over its delayed arrival.
On Monday (May 19), Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe and St. Louis Mayor Cara Spencer pleaded for the president to send FEMA to their city. “On the local level, every organization, community member, elected official, has been on point. What we need right now is federal assistance,” Spencer told MSNBC. “This is what the federal government is for.”
The process of getting FEMA on the groundisn’t as simple as snapping your fingers. First, local officials have to send a formal request, which then must be approved by the president. This process can take days to weeks to occur, but as history has shown us, if FEMA help is delayed, local residents will pay the ultimate price.
Remembering Hurricane Katrina
This year marks the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans. In the aftermath of the disaster which killed 1,800 people in 2005, FEMA was criticized for their delayed response. A Congressional reporteven found there was “a complete breakdown in communications that paralyzed command and control and made situational awareness murky at best” between the federal agency and local officials. This led to families without food, electricity and water and residents stuck in flood water with no help.
Even at the Louisiana Superdome, a shortage of supplies quickly devastated the New Orleans community. Of the victims, 51 percent were Black, according to the American Medical Association. Twenty years later, another city with a significant Black population is suffering a similar fate.
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