FEMA cancels $1 billion for flood prevention projects in Chesapeake Bay region.
As Crisfield Mayor Darlene Taylor sees it, the low-lying Maryland town has no future unless it can hold back rising water. Computer models suggest that the adjacent Chesapeake Bay could get high enough by 2050 to trigger daily floods that are deep enough to stall cars on roads.
Hope arrived in the form of a federal grant program under the Federal Emergency Management Agency, created during the first Trump administration. The Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) program helped rural communities like hers to invest in massive projects to fight disaster threats, ranging from wildfires to floods.
Crisfield officially got word from FEMA last July that it had secured $36 million from the program to launch the first phase of its massive flood-protection initiative. Everything had lined up and everything was in place for this to be a highly successful project, Taylor said.
A lot has changed since then. Trump returned to office in January, vowing to drastically shrink the size of the federal government. In a terse April 4 press statement, FEMA announced it was pulling the plug on the disaster-preparedness funding, not just for Crisfield but for all applicants and grantees, calling it wasteful and ineffective, though without citing evidence to support those claims.
https://www.bayjournal.com/news/climate_change/fema-cancels-1-billion-for-flood-prevention-projects-in-chesapeake-bay-region/article_43c10739-9b02-4a27-a39c-2a66ffc6a19a.html?