FEMA, Texas
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David Richardson, acting director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) testified before the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Wednesday morning on ways to improve
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News Nation on MSNFuture of FEMA uncertain as lawmakers question agency leadershipFEMA's acting director, David Richardson, testified before the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee on Wednesday morning
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Mediaite on MSNHouse Democrat Grills Trump’s FEMA Boss About Deadly Texas Flood: Do the Victims ‘Deserve an Apology?’"You seem uninterested in learning what went wrong and how to respond better. Do the victims and survivors in Texas deserve an apology?"
Testifying before the House Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee on Emergency Management, acting FEMA chief David Richardson was asked by Democrats point blank whether FEMA will continue to exist. President Donald Trump has suggested repeatedly that the agency could be eliminated as part of his government-shrinking measures.
In the wake of deadly flooding in Texas, we don’t know where the current FEMA chief is, or whether he’s doing the job. That’s not ideal.
During a House Homeland Security Committee hearing on Wednesday, Rep. Al Green (D-TX) spoke about Acting FEMA Administrator David Richardson's response to deadly flooding in Texas.
More than two months after a bicameral, bipartisan request led by two North Carolina Republican congressmen, states with 19 Democratic governors and one Republican are suing
After shuttering a multi-billion-dollar natural disaster mitigation grant program in the spring, the Trump administration is being sued. Twenty states have joined a lawsuit to