FEMA Review Council: Final Report

FEMA Review Council: Final Report
May 15, 2026 (IN12693)

On Thursday, May 7, 2026, the FEMA Review Council (FRC), established by President Donald J. Trump to undertake a "full-scale review" of the agency, held its final meeting and voted to approve its final report of findings and recommendations.

Establishment of FEMA Review Council (FRC)

Executive Order (EO) 14180 established the FRC in January 2025 to evaluate FEMA's operations, staffing levels, alleged political bias, and role in federal emergency management. At approximately the same time, President Trump dismissed all members of the National Advisory Council, which Congress established to advise the Administrator on all aspects of emergency management.

Under the terms of the E.O., the Secretaries of Homeland Security and Defense co-chaired the FRC; broader membership included FEMA and nonfederal representatives. In past meetings, then-Co-Chair Kristi Noem echoed the President's calls to eliminate FEMA as it currently exists; other members advocated narrower reforms, including reducing FEMA assistance for smaller disasters.

The FRC was to publish a report with findings and recommendations in late 2025; subsequent EOs extended this deadline to no later than May 29, 2026. News reports described draft FRC reports and conflicts over proposed reforms, particularly a proposed 50% staffing cut.

FRC Requests for Information

The FRC solicited information from the public in March 2025 and received more than 11,700 comments. According one outside group's analysis, most comments were "overwhelmingly supportive ... of maintaining FEMA's capacity, and of making good-faith reforms." The FRC summarized the feedback and cited as common problems "bureaucratic inefficiencies, delays in funding, inconsistent program administration, workforce constraints, and insufficient engagement with local governments."

Additionally, the FRC reported receiving 1,387 survey responses (from nonfederal and non-governmental partners); engaging 50 states, territories, and at least 20 tribal nations; and conducting 17 listening sessions, including in the District of Columbia.

Selected FRC Report Recommendations

A summary of selected FRC final approved recommendations and stakeholder perspectives are below.

Implementation of Recommendations

Executive actions may implement several recommendations including changing FEMA's criteria to evaluate the need for a major disaster declaration. Other recommendations would more likely require legislation, including many proposed changes to the structure of disaster grants programs. The FRC indicated that it is "imperative" to implement recommendations in a phased approach over two to three years.

Relationship to Proposed Legislative Reforms

Several bills introduced within the 119th Congress (for example, H.R. 3251, H.R. 2247, H.R. 3347, H.R. 316) would fundamentally revise FEMA's authorities to deliver disaster relief. One bill incorporating fundamental reforms, H.R. 4669, the Fixing Emergency Management for Americans (FEMA) Act of 2025, was ordered to be reported as amended by the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure in September 2025. News reports indicated that Committee leadership planned to advance the FEMA Act of 2025 irrespective of FRC recommendations. No companion legislation has been introduced to date in the Senate; one report indicates that formal Senate action on the bill was likely on hold until the release of the FRC's findings.