- May 14, 2026
Defunding, Dismantling, and Disarray
How the Trump Administration’s Changes to FEMA in 2025 Made Appalachian Communities More Vulnerable to Disaster
Flooding continues to threaten communities across Appalachia with increasing frequency and severity. This new report from ReImagine Appalachia examines how the Trump administration’s drastic restructuring of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and cuts to disaster resilience programs weakened support systems that Appalachian communities rely on before, during, and after disasters.
The report documents a pattern of declining federal support consistent with ReImagine Appalachia’s previous Federal Funding Flatline reports. While FEMA investments and resilience funding expanded in previous years, the report finds that funding sharply declined in 2025 following intentional administrative cutbacks, policy changes, and legal battles.
The report includes:
- A detailed timeline of FEMA administrative, legislative, and legal setbacks throughout 2025
- Analysis of declining FEMA investments across Ohio, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia
- A case study on the cancellation and reinstatement of the Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) program
- Data on delayed disaster responses, reduced agency staffing, and increasing barriers to resilience funding
- Examples of how Appalachian communities were impacted by flood mitigation funding disruptions
The release of this report comes shortly after a federal judge ordered FEMA to restart the BRIC program on March 6, 2026. FEMA has since announced a new $1 billion funding opportunity to support proactive hazard mitigation and community resilience projects.
The accompanying webinar will provide additional updates on the BRIC program, funding eligibility, and what these changes mean for Appalachian communities working to prepare for future flooding and extreme weather events.