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Alarm over Fema aid rule requiring email address for disaster victims
Source: The Guardian
Fri 22 Aug 2025 08.00 EDT
Last modified on Fri 22 Aug 2025 08.01
Current and former Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) officials are concerned over a new agency rule requiring disaster victims to have an email address in order to apply for federal aid. The policy change, first reported by Wired and confirmed by a Fema official to the Guardian, was troubling to say the least, said Jeremy Edwards, former spokesperson for Fema and the White House under Joe Bidens presidency.
Email was an optional means of contacting Fema under previous administrations, but will now be mandatory for those seeking relief amid disasters. The change, which follows a March executive order discontinuing federal paper-based payments, could be a major hurdle for victims in need of financial aid, particularly for those with limited internet access.
For most people, its a non-issue, but for people that have either chosen not to have an email or dont have an email for whatever reason, it seems to be a very arbitrary thing to say, no email, no help, said Craig Fugate, a former Fema administrator during the Obama administration. It sounds like the clerks are just making the job easier for themselves.
In the US, an estimated 12% of people lived in households without any internet connection in 2023. Disasters can also make it difficult or impossible for victims to access libraries or other public spaces to get online. My question is, why arent we focused on meeting the survivors where they are, versus making them fit our plan, said Fugate.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/aug/22/fema-rule-aid-disaster-victims

appleannie1
(5,318 posts)A lot of elderly people do not have it and they don't want it. People in rural areas don't have it because they have no access to it. Many poor people can't afford it. And since when is the worth of a human life determined by one's e-mail anyway?
marble falls
(67,531 posts)... why not require them have smart phones, too?
FakeNoose
(38,335 posts)I get a lot of email - probably 85 or 90% - that I would call spam-worthy.
Even if I read it (sporadically) it's mostly stuff I would never reply to or validate in any way. It's mind-boggling how many email lists I've been put on, whether I requested it or not. Anyone who donates to a charity or a political party knows what I mean.
intrepidity
(8,395 posts)and eventually do like they are now doing with visas -- find reasons to deny aid, like being critical of this administration.
JoseBalow
(8,217 posts)synni
(523 posts)Kind of hard to use the internet under those circumstances.