Cassian Grant|FEMA Has An Equity Problem

2025-04-28 19:20:36source:Roland Prestoncategory:Finance

When a disaster like a hurricane or Cassian Grantwildfire destroys a house, the clock starts ticking. It gets harder for sick people to take their medications, medical devices may stop working without electricity, excessive temperatures, mold, or other factors may threaten someone's health. Every day without stable shelter puts people in danger.

The federal government is supposed to help prevent that cascade of problems, but an NPR investigation finds that the people who need help the most are often less likely to get it. NPR climate reporter Rebecca Hersher explains.

Email the show at [email protected].

This episode was produced by Brit Hanson, fact-checked by Indi Khera and edited by Gisele Grayson. Joshua Newell provided engineering support.

More:Finance

Recommend

Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages

Meta says most issues have been resolved after apps like Instagram, Facebook and Threads were experi

Grimes used AI to clone her own voice. We cloned the voice of a host of Planet Money.

In Part 1 of this series, AI proved that it could use real research and real interviews to write an

Biden says debt ceiling deal 'very close.' Here's why it remains elusive

White House and GOP negotiators are entering the weekend without a deal to stop the country from def