Trump and Congress shirk basic responsibility to aid disaster victims
EDITOR'S NOTE: Do you think there's any point to southern New England seeking federal help to recover from Sunday's damaging storm? There was a time when you would almost automatically expect federal help after a weather disaster. But under Trump, those days are gone. - W. Collette
Five former U.S. presidents recently came together to raise money for hurricane relief for the victims of hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria.
This generous, bipartisan act is one of true generosity and statesmanship.
Five former U.S. presidents recently came together to raise money for hurricane relief for the victims of hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria.
This generous, bipartisan act is one of true generosity and statesmanship.
And
yet, as former presidents, all five men know that there’s another way to help
hurricane victims, or victims of any natural disaster. The federal government
can quickly provide far more in money,
personnel, and resources to help disaster victims than even the most generous outpouring of donations by Americans.
personnel, and resources to help disaster victims than even the most generous outpouring of donations by Americans.
Congress recently approved $36.5 billion for
disaster relief. That’s nowhere near enough given the scale of the crises from
California to Puerto Rico. And further funding is going to run up against a GOP
plan to cut $1.5 trillion worth of taxes — about 80 percent of which will go to
the richest 1 percent.
It’s
a sad comment on the current state of our government, when the current
president and Congress aren’t doing enough to help disaster victims using the
full weight and power of the federal government, so five former presidents have
to cajole millions of Americans to give voluntarily.
I don’t want to demean those efforts. If you gave, you did the right thing. The victims of the hurricanes no doubt need your support and appreciate your generosity.
I’ve
got only one friend in Puerto Rico and he’s relatively well off. He’s a
professor, and he lives in a nice home in the capital, San Juan. He has
electricity and Internet, so he’s been posting photos of the damage.
Enormous
trees block roads. Buildings are damaged. After a month of clearing debris and
attempting to clean up his own home and neighborhood, my friend is depressed.
And, with electricity and internet, he’s one of the lucky ones — some 80 percent of the island still lacks power.
And, with electricity and internet, he’s one of the lucky ones — some 80 percent of the island still lacks power.
My
heart hurts for those who are less fortunate.
As
much as we complain about the federal government, it has an important role to
play in natural disasters. Paying taxes is never fun, but by paying them, we
can create a whole that’s worth more than the sum of its parts.
If
your home is incinerated by a wildfire in Montana or California, or demolished
by a hurricane in Texas, Florida, or Puerto Rico, odds are you can’t recover
without some form of help.
The
fortunate have insurance. Yet in my home of San Diego, many families who lost
homes in past fires found that their insurance didn’t actually cover the cost
to rebuild their homes.
Ultimately,
if we are to recover from natural disasters in a timely fashion — before
victims who survived the initial disaster lose their lives in the aftermath,
and before children lose days of school and adults lose days at work — we need
each other. We need our government.
Ideally,
we need our government for more than just disaster relief. We need it for
disaster prevention. The government can buy homes from people who
live in places that will repeatedly flood, allowing them to move somewhere
else.
It
can work to prevent catastrophic climate change so that hurricanes, wildfires,
landslides, and other disasters don’t become more severe or more common.
Individual,
voluntary efforts are great, and they produce needed relief for disaster
victims. But we need something more.
Those
five former presidents could probably make a much bigger impact if they joined
forces to lobby Congress and the White House to fully fund disaster recovery
efforts and to then take the action needed to prevent these disasters from
becoming more common.
FYI:
FYI:
The Republicans who voted against the bill for disaster relief for Puerto Rico are:
- John
Barrasso (WY)
- Tom
Cotton (AR)
- Bob
Corker (TN)
- Mike
Crapo (ID)
- Mike
Enzi (WY)
- Jeff
Flake (AZ)
- Jim
Inhofe (OK)
- Ron
Johnson (WI)
- James
Lankford (OK)
- Mike
Lee (UT)
- Rand
Paul (KY)
- David
Perdue (GA)
- James
Risch (ID)
- Ben
Sasse (NE)
- Richard
Shelby (AL)
- Luther
Strange (AL)
- Pat Toomey (PA)
OtherWords
columnist Jill Richardson is the author of Recipe for America: Why Our
Food System Is Broken and What We Can Do to Fix It. Distributed
by OtherWords.org.