HR-8695-119
Referred to the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure.
Sponsored by Julia Letlow (R-LA)
What it does
This bill would require the FEMA Administrator to establish a process for appointing an Acting Regional Administrator whenever a Regional Administrator position has been vacant for at least 90 days. It would ensure that Acting Regional Administrators have full authority to make grant decisions and disburse federal disaster assistance funds to states and local governments. The bill would also require FEMA to submit a report to Congress within 180 days detailing implementation steps, vacancy data, grant processing timelines, and recommendations for further improvements.
Who benefits
State and local governments in regions with FEMA leadership vacancies, who would gain a designated point of authority for grant approvals and fund disbursements. Disaster-affected residents and communities who depend on timely federal assistance for recovery. Emergency management professionals at the state and local level who need a functioning federal counterpart to process requests. Nonprofit and community organizations that receive FEMA-administered grants. Indirectly, taxpayers who benefit from more efficient and accountable administration of already-appropriated disaster funds.
Who is hurt
FEMA's central leadership, which may face reduced flexibility in how it manages regional vacancies and staffing decisions. Senior FEMA career staff who might otherwise informally absorb regional duties without a formal acting designation process. To a lesser extent, the bill imposes an administrative reporting burden on FEMA, which must compile and submit a detailed implementation report within 180 days. There are no direct financial costs imposed on any private party.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that FEMA regional vacancies have left disaster-affected communities waiting for grant approvals and fund disbursements, with no clear authority to act in the interim. They contend that disasters do not pause for bureaucratic vacancies, and that requiring a formal acting appointment within 90 days ensures accountability and continuity of operations. The mandatory congressional report would create transparency and a measurable record of whether the change actually speeds up disaster relief delivery.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill addresses a procedural gap that FEMA's existing administrative authority already allows it to fill, making the legislation potentially redundant. They contend that mandating a specific 90-day timeline and formal appointment process could create rigidity that interferes with FEMA's operational flexibility, particularly during active disaster responses when staffing decisions are complex. Critics may also note that the bill does not address the underlying causes of regional vacancies — such as funding, pay, or political appointment delays — and therefore may not meaningfully improve disaster relief outcomes.