FEMA administrators warned on Sunday that some hurricane victims may soon lose access to their temporary housing.
FEMA administrator Deanne Criswell explained why some Hurricane Helene victims received a notification that their temporary ...
The following is the full transcript of an interview with FEMA administrator Deanne Criswell on "Face the Nation with ...
FEMA Director Deanne Criswell addressed reports that the agency has canceled temporary housing for thousands of families in ...
FEMA has extended hotel vouchers for an additional 48 hours, and the move-out date has been pushed to Tuesday, Jan. 14.
As wildfires ravage southern California, President-elect Donald Trump has attacked Democratic officials, continuing a pattern ...
FEMA has extended hotel stays for thousands of Western North Carolina residents displaced by Tropical Storm Helene, the ...
FEMA will extend temporary shelter assistance to North Carolina residents impacted by Hurricane Helene as winter storms sweep ...
FEMA called out over closed offices and ending housing for hurricane victims in NC as a winter storm brought subfreezing temps to area.
SPRUCE PINE, N.C. (WBTV) - Ahead of a storm expected to bring inches of snow across parts of western North Carolina’s mountains, fear of power outages and bitter cold was at the forefront.
FEMA has extended the move-out date for its first round of eligibility review from Sunday, Jan. 12, to Tuesday, Jan. 14.
Approximately 2,000 North Carolina households that survived Hurricane Helene will have to move out of their FEMA-expensed hotel rooms on Saturday amid a winter storm.