The Biden-era programs were a self-service scheduling app that Trump shut down on Monday, and an initiative that let in some migrants fleeing Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela and Haiti. They had allowed more than a million people to enter the country temporarily.
Shifting positions: Trump administration officials continued to reverse or revise the government’s stance on multiple fronts, including active Supreme Court cases, Jan. 6 prosecutions, school book bans, foreign aid programs and gender definitions. Mr. Trump also reinstated a Republican anti-abortion policy known as the “Mexico City Rule.”
Trump, in a visit to an area devastated by Hurricane Helene in North Carolina, said states should instead “take care of” disaster response.
Almost 15 years after Hurricane Sandy devastated New York City, the Brooklyn Navy Yard hasn't totally recovered. But millions of federal dollars, secured this
President Donald Trump says he wants to reshape the Federal Emergency Management Agency as the U.S. faces the formidable task of rebuilding after Hurricane Helene storm damage in the southeast and devastating wildfires in California.
New York (CNN) — More than $100 million has been ... would be available through the Federal Emergency Management Agency. FEMA can provide financial assistance for those who lost homes, vehicles ...
That didn't happen.” Adams explained that California’s request for aid through the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) specified personnel certified to fight forest fires, which New York City doesn’t have. But, Adams said, the city offered to ...
President Donald Trump suggested that he may "get rid" of FEMA and delegate its responsibilities to the states.
The Senate has confirmed Kristi Noem as Homeland Security secretary, putting the South Dakota governor in charge of a sprawling agency that is essential to national security and President Donald Trump's plans to clamp down on illegal immigration.
President Donald Trump surveyed disaster zones in California and North Carolina on Friday and said he was considering ''getting rid of'' the Federal Emergency Management Agency, offering the latest sign of how he is weighing sweeping changes to the nation's central organization for responding to disasters.
The president said he prefers each state handles disaster response, with funding coming from the federal government.