Consequences
FEMA Treating WV Differently
It was not only state officials who noticed a difference in the way the Federal Emergency Management Agency treated West Virginia in June, as opposed to previous interactions. Mountain State residents didn’t just notice it, they felt the consequences.
Doug Buffington, acting secretary of the state Department of Homeland Security and a senior advisor to Gov. Patrick Morrisey, covered his bases when he declared “I have nothing bad to say about FEMA,” while he spoke to lawmakers earlier this week.
But with that out of the way, he talked to them about his interaction with the FEMA Review Council that seems to be working toward moving the agency away from the lead role in helping states and territories hit by disaster.
Buffington was among those who spoke to the review council, and says he argued that West Virginia is unique. (It is.) And noted the state averages two federal disaster declarations per year but lacks the resources available in larger states. Therefore, it requires a per-capita or proportional view of disaster impacts.
His interaction with the review council left Buffington feeling it was necessary to warn lawmakers, “We, as a state, are going to have to look at how we address flooding and natural disasters in the future, and what that looks like.”
West Virginia regularly sits in the top five of rankings of states’ dependence on the federal government. But we have incredible communities, nonprofits — even a top-notch National Guard when its members are not being sent to deliver aid elsewhere. (Hundreds of them are cleaning up graffiti and litter in Washington, D.C., right now.)
We are resourceful, resilient and have been through disasters and recovery so many times it is simply part of the routine in some parts of the state.
But until very recently we were able to be resilient partly because we knew we could depend on help from FEMA, and that the West Virginia National Guard would be close at hand to leap into action.
If Buffington felt the need to toss out a warning to state lawmakers, they had better have been paying attention. We know Mountaineers are always free. We’ll have to think a little harder about how to handle things if we know we may also be alone.