[Congressional Bills 119th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 1035 Introduced in House (IH)]

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119th CONGRESS
  2d Session
H. RES. 1035

 Condemning Federal workforce reductions that undermine preparedness, 
   response, and recovery, and expressing concern regarding proposed 
    future staffing cuts to the Federal Emergency Management Agency.


_______________________________________________________________________


                    IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

                            February 3, 2026

Mr. Thompson of Mississippi (for himself, Mr. Kennedy of New York, Mr. 
   Swalwell, Mr. Correa, Mr. Thanedar, Mr. Goldman of New York, Mrs. 
 McIver, Ms. Johnson of Texas, Mr. Hernandez, Ms. Pou, Mr. Walkinshaw, 
Mr. Carter of Louisiana, Mr. Green of Texas, Ms. Norton, Ms. Velazquez, 
Ms. Moore of Wisconsin, Mr. Cleaver, Ms. Clarke of New York, Ms. Titus, 
 Mr. Beyer, Mrs. Watson Coleman, Mr. Case, Mr. Mfume, Mr. Mullin, Ms. 
  Salinas, Mr. Menendez, Mr. Bell, and Mr. Subramanyam) submitted the 
     following resolution; which was referred to the Committee on 
Transportation and Infrastructure, and in addition to the Committee on 
 Homeland Security, for a period to be subsequently determined by the 
  Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall 
           within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned

_______________________________________________________________________

                               RESOLUTION


 
 Condemning Federal workforce reductions that undermine preparedness, 
   response, and recovery, and expressing concern regarding proposed 
    future staffing cuts to the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

Whereas, in 1979, President Jimmy Carter signed Executive Order 12127, which 
        established the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA);
Whereas FEMA's mission is to serve the American public by helping people before, 
        during, and after disasters;
Whereas FEMA's ability to fulfill its mission depends on a stable, efficiently 
        managed, and adequately resourced workforce across disaster 
        preparedness, response, recovery, mitigation, and support functions;
Whereas the Government Accountability Office (GAO) has repeatedly reported that 
        for many years FEMA has operated with chronic staffing shortages, 
        relying on sustained overtime, temporary staff surges, and extended 
        deployments to fulfill its mission;
Whereas GAO has reported that staffing shortages have at times compromised 
        FEMA's ability to respond to disasters, such as during the aftermath of 
        Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria, and the wildfires in California, 
        that occurred concurrently in 2017;
Whereas major disasters, such as Hurricanes Andrew, Katrina, Rita, Sandy, 
        Harvey, Irma, and Maria, revealed severe deficiencies in Federal 
        disaster staffing, prompting reforms to strengthen FEMA's hiring, 
        deployment, and workforce capacity;
Whereas the Nation faces increasingly frequent and severe disasters, placing 
        unprecedented demands on FEMA personnel;
Whereas for several years FEMA had been incrementally increasing its workforce 
        to address the increase in disasters and existing staffing gaps, but 
        those efforts were reversed in 2025 when the Trump Administration caused 
        a steep drop in staffing levels;
Whereas recent workforce reductions and firings carried out by the Trump 
        Administration have resulted in at least 2,000 permanent staff leaving 
        FEMA and exacerbated the impacts of FEMA's longstanding staffing 
        shortages;
Whereas GAO added Federal delivery of disaster assistance to its high-risk list 
        in 2025--in part due to a 35 percent staffing shortage at FEMA--
        indicating that increasing FEMA's staffing levels should be one of the 
        Federal Government's highest priorities;
Whereas recently reported internal planning and discussions led by the 
        Department of Homeland Security and FEMA officials have created 
        significant instability by contemplating substantially deeper workforce 
        reductions at FEMA;
Whereas such workforce reductions, if implemented, would significantly delay 
        disaster response, slow recovery, and reduce assistance to communities 
        following disasters, including impacting ongoing recovery operations 
        relating to Hurricane Helene, flooding in Central Texas, and wildfires 
        in California;
Whereas FEMA employees perform essential public service under demanding and 
        often hazardous conditions, and workforce instability undermines morale 
        and retention;
Whereas the loss of experienced personnel and institutional knowledge at FEMA 
        weakens long-term preparedness, continuity of operations, and emergency 
        management expertise across the Federal Government;
Whereas effective disaster response and recovery require strong coordination 
        among Federal, State, local, Tribal, and territorial governments, and is 
        dependent on a fully staffed FEMA;
Whereas rural communities, coastal States, wildfire-prone regions, and small 
        towns often depend most heavily on timely Federal disaster response and 
        recovery assistance;
Whereas delays in disaster response and recovery increase overall Federal costs, 
        prolong displacement, and raise long-term rebuilding expenses for 
        taxpayers, undermining efficient and responsible use of Federal funds;
Whereas FEMA administers the National Flood Insurance Program, which depends on 
        experienced Federal staff to ensure that families whose homes have been 
        damaged by floods are paid fairly and that communities can reduce future 
        flood risk;
Whereas in addition to leading the Nation's natural disaster response, FEMA 
        employees support critical programs that were established in the wake of 
        the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks;
Whereas FEMA employees play a key role in ensuring that first responders, State, 
        local, Tribal, and territorial governments, and nonprofit organizations 
        can build and sustain capabilities related to mitigating, preventing, 
        and responding to acts of terrorism;
Whereas FEMA employees provide indispensable technical expertise and 
        administration of counterterrorism grants, such as the Urban Area 
        Security Initiative, State Homeland Security Program, and the Nonprofit 
        Security Grant Program, which protect and support lifesaving frontline 
        responders, such as emergency medical services, firefighters, and law 
        enforcement personnel;
Whereas these counterterrorism grants strategically allocate Federal resources 
        to enable State, local, Tribal, and territorial governments to increase 
        the resilience of such governments against natural and man-made threats, 
        including acts of terrorism, thereby enabling the Department of Homeland 
        Security to carry out its mission to safeguard the American people; and
Whereas Congress has a responsibility to ensure that FEMA has the personnel and 
        resources necessary to carry out its mission in service of communities: 
        Now, therefore, be it
    Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
            (1) condemns the current and future proposed workforce 
        reductions at FEMA, which will endanger the Nation's capacity 
        to prepare for, respond to, and recover from disasters, both 
        natural and manmade;
            (2) expresses grave concern that such workforce reductions 
        blatantly disregard the lessons of deadly storms, such as 
        Hurricanes Andrew, Katrina, Sandy, Harvey, Maria, and Helene, 
        and Winter Storm Elliott, and will compromise the ability of 
        State, local, Tribal, and territorial governments to protect 
        lives and property during future disasters;
            (3) denounces any such workforce reductions that will 
        dangerously weaken the Nation's ability to prevent, prepare 
        for, and respond to acts of terrorism, including by undermining 
        counterterrorism grant programs that protect and support 
        lifesaving frontline responders, such as emergency medical 
        services, firefighters, and law enforcement personnel, 
        nonprofit organizations, and high-risk communities;
            (4) disapproves of any reckless cuts to FEMA's workforce by 
        the Trump Administration that would result in compromising 
        FEMA's ability to maintain sufficient staffing, surge capacity, 
        and institutional expertise to effectively respond to disasters 
        and support survivors; and
            (5) commits to supporting a stable, adequately resourced 
        FEMA workforce to ensure timely and effective disaster 
        preparedness, response, and recovery for communities across the 
        Nation.
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