Saturday, October 05, 2024

Run out of disaster response money

FEMA deploys to difficult terrain after Helene as it faces criticism and fights misinformation

Molly Hennessy-Fiske, Maxine Joselow, Clara Ence Morse and Will Oremus 
| The Washington Post
Oct 5, 2024

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has deployed more than 1,000 personnel, along with millions of meals and liters of water, to communities hard hit by Hurricane Helene but is struggling to reach some areas deep in the mountainous and remote regions of North Carolina that were most affected by the storm.

FEMA has deployed more than 1,500 personnel to respond to Helene. As of Friday, the agency had shipped more than 11.5 million meals, 12.6 million liters of water, 400,000 tarps and 150 generators to the affected region. The agency sent a similar number of personnel — roughly 2,000 — to Florida and the Southeast a week after Hurricane Ian struck there in 2022, according to a news release.


About 6,700 National Guard members from 16 states were involved in relief operations as of Thursday, said Maj. Gen. Win Burkett, director of domestic operations and force development for the National Guard Bureau, along with roughly 1,000 active-duty troops.

Enormous logistical challenge

But the sheer scope of the disaster area, which stretches across six states in the Southeast, has presented an enormous logistical challenge. As federal officials help state and local agencies respond, they are also battling significant misinformation, adding to the challenges of a mission that has no immediate end in sight. As of Friday, at least 221 people have died in six states across the Southeast as a result of the storm.

Several Republican governors and senators from storm-battered states that could prove pivotal in the 2024 election have praised FEMA’s response. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., on Friday offered a strong defense of the federal recovery efforts so far.

“I’m actually impressed with how much attention was paid to a region that wasn’t likely to have experienced the impact that they did,” Tillis told reporters. “I’m out here to say that we’re doing a good job, and those who may not be on the ground, who are making those assessments, ought to get on the ground.”

But some residents of western North Carolina have lamented that federal assistance has not yet reached them.

“Nobody has come for us,” said Josh Paul, founder and president of Anchor Ridge, a western North Carolina-based nonprofit supporting families across Appalachia. “Of course it takes a long time for the government to respond, but not a lot of people have heard from them.”

FEMA is at the center of several debates about the administration’s ability to respond to the crisis, fueled in part by the agency’s comments and by mischaracterizations or incorrect information repeated on social media about the agency’s response.

Run out of disaster response money

Politicians and others have spread false information about the response to the storm on social media. For example, some have claimed that FEMA has run out of disaster response money and that hurricane victims can only receive $750 in federal assistance.

Several right-wing influencers have used their large online followings to amplify these claims on X, which has declined to remove the posts or label them as misleading. The trend underscores how election-year politics, combined with lax misinformation policies by major tech platforms, are complicating efforts to keep communities safe.

“There’s always misinformation that flows during disasters, but after Helene, it is really difficult to find good and accurate information,” said Samantha Montano, a disaster expert and assistant professor of emergency management at Massachusetts Maritime Academy.

“The average person does not know how FEMA aid works, so some of this is unintentional,” Montano added. “Where I see lines potentially being crossed here is the intentional misinformation being spread.”

During a rally Thursday in Saginaw, Michigan, former President Donald Trump suggested without evidence that FEMA had used some disaster relief money to help immigrants in the country illegally resettle in the United States. There is no evidence that FEMA has diverted any disaster relief funding for this purpose.


“They stole the FEMA money, just like they stole it from a bank, so they could give it to their illegal immigrants that they want to have vote for them this season,” Trump said.

Criticizing FEMA’s humanitarian work

The claim about migrants appears to have originated with America First Legal, a group headed by Stephen Miller, the longtime Trump adviser and prominent anti-immigration voice. The group has been harshly criticizing FEMA’s humanitarian work with migrants on social media since at least May 2023 and made another post on X on Sunday.

In a memo Friday, White House spokesman Andrew Bates criticized conservative officials and media outlets for amplifying the falsehood about migrants.


“Some Republican leaders — and their partners in right-wing media — are using Hurricane Helene to lie and divide us,” Bates wrote. “Their latest missive: baselessly claiming that FEMA is out of money to respond to Hurricane Helene because of an existing program that supports cities and towns sheltering migrants. This is FALSE.”

Does face a funding shortfall

While FEMA can meet immediate needs, it does face a funding shortfall. On Wednesday, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas told reporters the agency doesn’t have enough money to make it through the hurricane season, which ends in November.

President Joe Biden said Monday that he could call lawmakers back to Washington for an emergency session to approve more disaster relief funding. Congress is on recess until Nov. 12, after Election Day.

Separately, Donald Trump Jr., the former president’s eldest son, on Wednesday shared with his roughly 12.3 million followers on X a video clip of Vice President Kamala Harris discussing Helene. He criticized the vice president for appearing to suggest that FEMA was offering $750 to each storm survivor.


“$750 for Americans in desperate need, many of whom lost everything, including family,” Trump Jr. wrote. “$250 BILLION spent in Ukraine. … Enough of this madness!”

Harris did say in her speech in Augusta, Georgia, that FEMA was “providing $750 for folks who need immediate needs being met, such as food, baby formula and the like.” However, she went on to describe tens of thousands of additional federal dollars available, and FEMA has since clarified that the $750 represents only one type of federal assistance for hurricane victims.

“Rumor: FEMA will only provide $750 to disaster survivors to support their recovery. Fact: This is false,” FEMA states on a section of its website devoted to debunking misinformation.

The agency said it often quickly approves applications for $750 worth of Serious Needs Assistance, which helps pay for essential items such as food, water, baby formula, breastfeeding supplies and medication. Survivors can apply for other types of assistance that cover the costs of temporary housing, home repair, hotels and other needs, FEMA said.

In Deep Gap, North Carolina, Celise Vaughn has been hosting search-and-rescue volunteers at her home. She said she had heard the rumor about $750 FEMA payments.

“It would be very unfortunate if that was the case because not only is that such a small sum, it wouldn’t even really make a difference, and then you’d have another group of people who wouldn’t even qualify,” she said.

Conducting searches for survivors

Vaughn added that local residents are conducting searches for survivors. “You see people coming together doing their part. What we don’t see is resources,” she said.


“They are simply giving direction to residents to apply for assistance online,” she said of federal officials, “but that is a tough pill for citizens to swallow when you don’t have a house and your relatives are still missing.”

Sydney Wilson, 31, whose home and her husband’s welding shop flooded in the mountain town of Vilas, North Carolina, said she submitted an online application for federal disaster aid, and officials followed up by phone. But Wilson, a stay-at-home mother of three, said she hadn’t seen any FEMA personnel on the ground in the community.

“I haven’t seen any FEMA out here, no government type of help,” Wilson said. “I know they’re probably overwhelmed with the number of applications, and luckily we have what we need in terms of basic necessities. We’ve had a lot of volunteers here. But I know there are others who haven’t.”

However, local officials in places such as Buncombe County, which includes Asheville, said FEMA personnel and resources have flowed into the area in the days since the storm. The agency has sent roughly 500 staff to North Carolina, including 30 staff tasked with helping hurricane survivors apply for federal assistance, according to a news release.

“At the beginning, we will say the first 72 hours, it was hard to get any help in here, but they are here on the ground with us,” Buncombe County Manager Avril Pinder said during a Friday morning briefing. “I was told that we have over 1,000 responders coming in from across the country helping us. … We have lots of resources.”

While the county has set up food and water distribution sites, it is one of many areas in western North Carolina that remain without safe running water, with officials unable to provide clear timelines for when service might be restored.


Tens of thousands of people across the mountain region are also without power, Bill Norton, a spokesperson with Duke Energy, said during the Friday morning briefing. Norton said crews are continuing to work on restoring power, but noted that about 105,000 customers live in “areas where catastrophic damage exists.”
JD Vance praises Marjorie Taylor Greene hours after she suggested Hurricane Helene was man-made

Graig Graziosi
Fri, October 4, 2024

Marjorie Taylor Greene, the controversial Republican Congresswoman, was mentioned by JD Vance as he toured the damage left by Hurricane Helene (Associated Press)

Senator JD Vance had kind words for Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene — just hours after she suggested that a mysterious “they” can control the weather and inflicted Hurricane Helene on Republican voters in Georgia and North Carolina.

Greene is well known for repeating nonsense conspiracy theories. She’s voiced her belief in “Jewish space lasers”and has been cozy with QAnon ideas both before and during her time in office.

She made her latest bizarre claim on X, this time concerning the weather.




“Yes, they can control the weather. It’s ridiculous for anyone to lie and say it can’t be done,” Greene wrote.

Before making the claim that the weather can be controlled, she shared an image of the areas most affected by Hurricane Helene overlayed with an electoral map.

She wasn’t clear who “they” were but the map’s implication is that Democrats were somehow responsible for a hurricane to hurt Republican voters.

Those affected by Hurricane Helene are still recovering from the deadly storm.

Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, and his wife Usha Vance, center front, visits areas impacted by Hurricane Helene in Damascus, Va., Thursday Oct. 3, 2024 (AP)

Despite her absurd claim, Vance heaped praise on Greene during a recent campaign rally in Greene’s district.

“We have got another great, strong, woman leader in Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene,” he said. “Now you may not know this, but one of the very first endorsements … I got when I was running in the Republican Senate primary in Ohio a few years ago was from Marjorie Taylor Greene, so she’s been a great friend of mine.”

He went on call Greene a “loyal person” and a “hell of a Congresswoman.”

Democrats were quick to condemn Vance for praising Greene. In a statement sent on Friday, DNC Rapid Response Director Alex Floyd called Greene a “wildly out-of-touch conspiracy theorist and election-denying extremist who is as toxic to voters as the Trump-Vance Project 2025 agenda.”

“JD Vance took time in Georgia today to shout out his ‘great friend’ right after she finished spreading fresh conspiracy theories about how ‘they’ can control the weather while Georgia is still recovering from Hurricane Helene,” he wrote. “And that’s just another reason why we’re sure that Vance will have plenty more free time to spend with his ‘great friend’ after this November.”

Opinion


Marjore Taylor Greene Pushes Dumbest Hurricane Helene Conspiracy Yet

Edith Olmsted
Fri, October 4, 2024 

Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene pushed a preposterous conspiracy theory Thursday that someone at the very top created Hurricane Helene.

While many Republicans, like Donald Trump, have been quick to criticize the federal response to Hurricane Helene, Greene has started pointing fingers as to who could possibly be behind the weather event, which most normal people would understand to be caused by hot air and cold air.


“Yes they can control the weather,” Greene wrote in a post on X. “It’s ridiculous for anyone to lie and say it can’t be done.”

Many online were disturbed by Greene’s vague use of “they,” because outlandish accusations about controlling the climate are typically antisemitic conspiracy theories—to which Greene is no stranger.

Earlier that evening, Greene posted a photograph in an attempt to further push conspiracy theories about the area impacted by the deadly Category 4 storm.


“This is a map of hurricane affected areas with an overlay of electoral map by political party shows how hurricane devastation could affect the election,” she wrote.



Twitter screenshot Marjorie Taylor Greene ���� @mtgreenee: This is a map of hurricane affected areas with an overlay of electoral map by political party shows how hurricane devastation could affect the election. (with map highlighting blue and red portions of the southeast)

It seems that Greene believes that Democrats somehow created the storm to try and harm Republican voters. This is a significant, and grotesque escalation from Trump’s already wild theory that the Biden administration purposefully neglected Republican areas in its federal response to the storm.


Of course, the only person who had ever done something like that is Trump himself, who reportedly withheld aid to California after the deadly wildfires in 2018, until his team could provide polling that people there had in fact voted for him.




MTG Implies Dems Created Hurricane Helene: ‘They Can Control the Weather’

Nikki McCann Ramirez
Fri, October 4, 2024


Some things in this world that are inevitable: death, sunrise, and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) responding to tragedies with pure insanity.

At least 215 people have been killed by Hurricane Helene, a Category 4 storm that tore through Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia last weekend. Thousands remain without power and access to critical necessities as the federal government works to provide relief in the aftermath of the deadliest storm in the mainland United States since Hurricane Katrina. But in the wastelands of social media, some are attempting to use the tragedy as fodder for political conspiracy theories.

“Yes they can control the weather,” Greene wrote on X Thursday night. “It’s ridiculous for anyone to lie and say it can’t be done.”

It’s unclear who the “they” are that Greene is referring to in this scenario. If one of her posts earlier on Thursday is any indication, she’s talking about Democrats. Greene shared a map of the states affected by Helene with an overlay of their political leanings by county. “This is a map of hurricane affected areas with an overlay of electoral map by political party shows how hurricane devastation could affect the election,” she wrote.



In case you missed middle school science class, hurricanes are large, powerful storms formed over warm tropical waters when evaporation rises into the atmosphere — condensing into storm systems — and creating a low-pressure zone that wind rushes into. As water continues to evaporate from the ocean surface, the cycle can create a large spinning vortex of powerful rains and strong winds known as a tropical cyclone. If this phenomenon forms in the Atlantic (and becomes powerful enough) it is referred to as a hurricane.

Hurricanes can be incredibly devastating, but they are not a man-made phenomenon, or something that can be plausibly controlled through human intervention. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which conducted research on various ways to divert or dispel tropical cyclones in the 1960s, potential methods “fall short of the mark because they fail to appreciate the size and power of tropical cyclones.”

In the wake of Hurricane Helene’s destruction, there has been a large-scale federal and state-level mobilization to provide aid to communities affected by the storm. The effort has been bipartisan and widely lauded by the governors of affected states. MAGA land, however, has rushed to politicize the tragedy in service of former President Donald Trump’s campaign.

Earlier this week, Trump baselessly claimed that “the Federal Government, and the Democrat Governor of [North Carolina are] going out of their way to not help people in Republican areas,” ahead of a visit to a disaster zone in Valdosta, Georgia.

Sandy Hook conspiracy theorist Alex Jones — who has claimed the government has “weather weapons” that can engineer floods, tornados, and hurricanes — falsely asserted on Thursday that “Biden has ordered a stand-down of over a thousand military helicopter crews in the south.”

“The hurricane conveniently destroyed the reddest areas in four southern states so that votes cannot be cast by Trump voters in the upcoming election! Now the Democrats don’t want the rural areas of the state brought back on line to ensure the blue city’s can steal it again,” Jones wrote.

Other conspiracy theories have circulated on TikTok, with some users claiming that the hurricane was intentionally engineered to level out the area in order to bolster lithium mining operations. “Let’s be clear, Hurricane Helene was a weather modified storm to displace the residents of western N. Carolina so a land grab can take place,” one video with over 100,000 views claims.

Natural disasters are traumatic events that often force mankind to reckon with how — despite centuries of technological advance and societal development — we are often powerless in the face of nature. They are the perfect breeding ground for conspiracies that attempt to ascribe a human cause to an inhuman tragedy, and Helene is by no means the first instance.

Greene, ever the shit-stirrer, has been a prolific voice in spreading such conspiracies. Who among us can forget when she blamed Jewish space lasers for the deadly 2018 California Camp wildfire?

Rolling Stone




People Truly Can't Believe Marjorie Taylor Greene's Latest Conspiracy Theory, And They Are Absolutely Roasting Her Over It

Matt Stopera
Fri, October 4, 2024 

As you all know, Hurricane Helene devastated parts of the south last week.

Melissa Sue Gerrits / Getty Images

Marjorie Taylor Greene shared a map showing an overlay of an electoral map by political party compared to hurricane-affected areas.