January 16, 2026
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FEMA Plans to Let Thousands of CORE Disaster‑Recovery Jobs Expire in 2026

NPR reports that FEMA supervisors have begun telling staff that thousands of Cadre of On‑Call Response/Recovery Employees (CORE) on two‑ to four‑year contracts will not be renewed in 2026, even for workers embedded in communities still rebuilding from recent hurricanes, floods and wildfires. People who attended internal meetings say some divisions could lose around half their staff, and former senior officials estimate CORE workers account for roughly 40% of FEMA’s workforce—about 9,000 people as of 2022—handling everything from initial survivor assistance to years‑long reconstruction with state and local governments. The Trump administration, which has repeatedly derided FEMA as ineffective and floated eliminating it in its current form, has not publicly explained the cuts or released its promised reform blueprint, and the agency declined NPR’s questions about how response capacity will be affected. Former FEMA leaders Michael Coen, Deanne Criswell and ex‑press secretary Jeremy Edwards warn the non‑renewals will slow recovery in hard‑hit areas such as western North Carolina, Kentucky and multiple fire‑scarred parts of California, and say there appears to be no systematic plan to preserve critical chains of command or seasonal readiness for upcoming hurricane seasons. The move effectively shrinks frontline federal disaster staffing nationwide at a time when climate‑driven extremes are making recovery more complex and protracted, raising the risk that survivors wait longer for help the next time a major storm, fire or flood hits.

Disaster Response and FEMA Trump Administration Personnel and Budget Cuts

📌 Key Facts

  • FEMA supervisors have told employees that multiyear CORE contracts expiring in 2026 will not be renewed, affecting thousands of workers across the agency.
  • Former FEMA chief of staff Michael Coen says CORE employees constitute about 40% of FEMA’s workforce—nearly 9,000 workers in 2022—many of whom are first on the ground after disasters and stay for years to manage recovery.
  • Internal briefings described some FEMA divisions losing roughly 50% of their staff if the current plan holds, including personnel actively working on recent disaster recoveries.
  • President Trump has repeatedly called FEMA ineffective and suggested it should be eliminated in its current form, but the White House has not released a detailed reform report or publicly justified the workforce cuts.
  • Former FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell and other ex‑officials say the reductions will extend recovery timelines nationwide and leave hurricane‑ and flood‑prone regions less prepared.

📊 Relevant Data

In 2025, the United States experienced 23 confirmed billion-dollar weather and climate disasters, resulting in $115 billion in damages and 276 fatalities.

Extreme Weather Disasters Cost the U.S. $115 Billion in 2025 — TIME

From 1980 to 2024, the U.S. has sustained 403 weather and climate disasters each costing at least $1 billion (CPI-adjusted), with total costs exceeding $2.915 trillion.

Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters — NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information

Black Americans receive less Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) relief funding on average than their White counterparts following disasters.

Racial Disparity in Disaster Response in the United States: A Case Study of Aid Under FEMA — Harvard Kennedy School Student Policy Review

Social vulnerability, including factors like income and race, influences the pace of post-disaster recovery, with poorer and more socially vulnerable communities experiencing slower rebuilding and higher long-term economic losses.

Assessing distributive inequities in FEMA's Disaster recovery assistance: A nationwide study — ScienceDirect

FEMA staffing shortages have nearly exhausted the agency's capabilities during back-to-back disasters, potentially leading to delays in future response efforts.

FEMA Staffing Shortages Could Mean Disaster for Future Response Efforts — U.S. Government Accountability Office

Western North Carolina counties affected by Hurricane Helene in 2024 are expected to experience population losses of 5% to 35% among displaced residents due to loss of homes and jobs.

Population loss in Western NC after Helene expected — Carolina Public Press

Native Americans face disproportionately higher risks from future heavy rainfall and floods due to climate change and demographic factors, with many living in flood-prone areas.

Future Heavy Rainfall and Flood Risks for Native Americans under Climate and Demographic Changes — American Meteorological Society

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