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US orders restrictions on new FEMA disaster deployments during DHS shutdown

Internal messages obtained by showed that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, which is under the administration of President Donald Trump, has ordered the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to suspend the deployment of hundreds of relief workers in disaster-affected regions around the country. FEMA, which is a part of DHS, has been operating largely despite the partial shutdown. The shutdown occurred after Republicans and Democrats were unable to reach an agreement?on immigration reforms.

DHS has issued an order to stop all DHS-funded travel as of 2/18/26. This will last until the end of the budget lapse. According to an internal email from Kurt Weirich a FEMA chief of staff, this DOES include travel for disasters.

CNN reported that more than 300 FEMA disaster response workers were preparing for future assignments, but they were told to stop. This included some who are currently in a training facility. Trump announced on Monday that the federal government would step in to help protect the Potomac River after a major sewer line collapsed in Washington, D.C., last month. On January 19, a sewer line in Montgomery County Maryland collapsed, causing an overflow into the Potomac River of more than 240,000,000 gallons (909,000,000 liters).

Trump stated that FEMA will coordinate the response, as it has experienced a'significant reduction in staff since Trump took office, January 2025. CNN reported that FEMA had only deployed a few resources, if any at all, to help with the sewage leak.

CNN was told by a FEMA spokesperson that restrictions on travel were "not an option, but necessary to comply with federal laws." CNN cites a statement that states "FEMA travel related to active disasters are not cancelled."

FEMA has a mission to help people in disasters such as hurricanes, tornadoes earthquakes, and floods. It provides emergency personnel, equipment and supplies to the affected areas. (Reporting and editing by Ted Hesson in Washington, Kanishka Singh at the Associated Press)

(source: Reuters)