CHIMNEY ROCK, NORTH CAROLINA – OCTOBER 2: A civilian search and rescue team member, left, gives a hand to a member of NY Task Force One, a FEMA urban search and rescue team, as they hike along the Broad River in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene on October 2, 2024 near Chimney Rock, North Carolina. Also known as NY-TF1, the group is comprised of members of the New York City Fire Department and the New York City Police Department. (Photo by Sean Rayford/Getty Images)
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After a disaster, the first policy problem is often simple: people need money before the paperwork is complete.
They need somewhere to sleep. They need food, medicine, transportation, child care, repairs, and replacement documents. Local governments need cash to remove debris, restore power, repair roads, reopen public buildings, and protect water systems. The longer money takes to move, the longer recovery stalls.
The FEMA Review Council’s final report seeks to address that problem by proposing faster, more direct disaster aid. Its recommendations would replace parts of the current system with streamlined payments to survivors and formula-driven funding to states. The Council’s approach is built around speed, simplicity, and state control. Its risk is that speed can miss complexity.
The Council proposes converting Individual Assistance into a single direct payment program for survivors and transforming Public Assistance into a parametric, direct-funding model called RAPID. It also proposes replacing the Hazard Mitigation Grant Program with a faster, two-phase state-managed mitigation model. Together, the recommendations would move FEMA away from case-by-case grants and toward more direct, index-based funding.
The plan addresses a real problem. FEMA’s current assistance programs are difficult to navigate. Survivors often face multiple categories of aid, eligibility rules, documentation requirements, and appeal processes. Local governments often wait through long reimbursement cycles after they have already paid for emergency work and repairs. The Council’s proposed solution is to get money out faster and reduce administrative overhead.
Streamlining Aid with FAIR and RAPID
The National Association of Counties reported that the Council would replace the current Public Assistance reimbursement model with a parametric block grant called RAPID. Instead of reimbursing states and local governments after individual damage assessments, FEMA would send money to states within 30 days of a presidential disaster declaration based on pre-defined event criteria such as wind speed or flood depth. States would then distribute and manage funds locally.
The Council would also replace the current 15-category Individual Assistance system with a single payment called FAIR. Under that model, homeowners could receive up to $150,000, and renters could receive up to six months of rent at the HUD Fair Market Rate. Emergency sheltering responsibility would transfer from FEMA to states and territories, with counties expected to play a significant execution role.
Faster Money vs. Flexible Recovery: The Risk to Survivors
The appeal is obvious. A single payment is easier to understand than a maze of programs. A lump-sum public assistance model could help states and localities begin recovery work sooner. Faster mitigation funding could help communities rebuild with more protection instead of waiting months or years for resilience dollars.
A formula can be fast and still lack flexibility. Wind speed, flood depth, housing status, or event category may not capture household vulnerability. A family may be displaced even when a home is technically habitable. A renter may lose work, child care, transportation, or belongings without owning the damaged structure. An older adult may need accessible repairs. A family living in heirs’ property may struggle to prove title. A low-income household may lack savings to bridge even a short delay.
Noah Patton of the National Low Income Housing Coalition warned that limiting survivor aid this way “would dramatically increase” displacement and economic insecurity for low-income survivors. That concern should not be treated as an afterthought. Disasters are not equal-opportunity events. They strike across class and geography, but recovery often depends on income, insurance, and access to government systems.
PORT SULPHUR, LA – MAY 11: A man leans up against the Barthelemy family FEMA trailer May 11, 2009 in Port Sulphur, Louisiana. Seven children from the family are living in the trailer after their home was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina. Approximately 2,000 families in the New Orleans metropolitan area still live in FEMA trailers nearly four years after Hurricane Katrina. Eighty percent of those still in trailers are homeowners who haven’t been able to return to their storm damaged houses. May 1 marked the end of the Temporary Housing Program for Katrina victims as those still living in the trailers have been given a May 30 deadline to move out or face possible legal action. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)
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Ensuring That Recovery Is For Everyone
The Michigan Chronicle and Word In Black sharpened this point. Their reporting warned that FEMA instability and staffing cuts could disproportionately harm Black communities, especially in hurricane-prone parts of the Southeast. The article noted that Black residents in that region are nearly twice as likely to be affected by hurricanes as other residents in the same area, citing McKinsey. It also argued that lower-income Black residents often rely heavily on FEMA after disasters.
The article also connected the current FEMA debate to Hurricane Katrina. It discussed the “Katrina Declaration,” an open letter sent by FEMA employees to Congress on the 20th anniversary of Katrina, warning that the agency had drifted from post-Katrina reforms designed to prevent Black and low-income residents from being stranded after major disasters. That history matters. The post-Katrina reforms were not only about efficiency. They were about the federal government’s obligation to prevent abandonment during a catastrophe. If Congress considers direct-payment reforms, the Katrina lesson should be clear: faster aid cannot come at the expense of people who already face barriers to recovery.
The same issue applies to local governments. A RAPID model may get money to states faster, but counties and cities still have to receive, manage, and spend those funds. NACo warned that counties could gain speed and flexibility under RAPID but lose the federal project-by-project safety net, with limited recourse for cost overruns.
That is not a technical footnote. After a disaster, cost estimates can be wrong. A road repair can become a drainage project. A school reopening can require mold remediation, transportation adjustments, and temporary facilities. A lump-sum model may be efficient, but local governments will need a fair method to correct underestimates.
The Future of Mitigation: State Control and Local Influence
The Council’s proposal also changes mitigation. NACo reported that the Hazard Mitigation Grant Program would be replaced with a two-phase structure called R3P, with a rapid mitigation advance within 30 days and a strategic mitigation allocation within six months, both managed at the state level. Counties would access funds through their states rather than directly through FEMA. That could help communities move more quickly on resilience projects. It could also make local outcomes depend heavily on state priorities. A state-managed model may work well when governors and state agencies are aligned with local needs. It may work less well when rural towns, tribal communities, historically Black neighborhoods, or low-income coastal communities have less political influence.
Supporters of the Council’s approach will argue that the current system is already failing too many people. They are not wrong to identify delay as a harm. A slow system can leave survivors in hotels, informal housing, or damaged homes for months. It can push local governments into cash-flow problems. It can cause mitigation projects to arrive after communities have already rebuilt in risky ways.
A fast system must still be designed around real human conditions. It must include appeals. It must account for renters. It must address disability and access needs. It must recognize heirs’ property and informal housing arrangements. It must protect rural and tribal communities from being filtered out by state-level distribution choices. It must also give counties and cities a way to address cost overruns when initial formulas fail.

