Earlier this week I was listening to the Charlie Kirk show and Christy Noem was being interviewed by Charly and the topic came up of eliminating FEMA from the federal government. She told Charly that president trump had directed her to effectively shut down FEMA.
FEMA is a Highly politicized government agency as we saw in the Hurricanes that
hit northern Carolina where local FEMA agents had the discretionary authority
of not serving people with trump signs in their yard. That's almost criminal
activity.
And of course, there's always a concern about FEMA camps in
the event national repression of conservatives in this country.
I don't know if that's actually a thing, but I don't like it.
There was a time in this country when we got along just fine without FEMA, and
I wanted to describe a time like that to you that I was personally involved in.
I joined the Air Force in 1972 and after being trained in Biloxi Ms, I was stationed in Sumter SC, which is about 40 minutes east of Columbia SC. It’s a large base and at the time there were squadrons of F4s stationed there. They were the most advanced fighters in the world.
I was in a radio outfit that was assigned to give forward air control to these
F4s so it was not unusual for us to have two and a half ton trucks and jeeps in
our squadron assigned to us. Now I want to tell you about The Great
Southeastern Snowstorm of February 1973.
This was a historic event for South Carolina, bringing 1 to
2 feet of snow to many areas and setting new snowfall records that remain
unbroken in some locations. Notable snowfall amounts include 24 inches in
Rimini, 17–18 inches in Florence, and 7.1 inches in Charleston!
The storm caused widespread travel chaos, school closures,
and significant damage, roof collapses, leading to the deployment of the
National Guard to clear roads. The storm was preceded by abnormally warm
weather, with temperatures near 70°F just days before the cold front arrived,
making the event a surprising and impactful one to say the least.
My roommate and I drove into town to get a burger and fries after
work and the town was shut down except for the Burger King.
We returned to the base and a number of us gathered in
my room to drink beer and listen to my
stereo.
The door was closed and we heard a knock on the door.
That was weird since most guys would just walk in. So, we
expected, and saw, the First Seargent, telling us to get our parkas on (we had
them in case we ever got sent to the arctic) and head to the motor pool, pick
up a deuce and a half and we would convoy into Sumpter and martial at the
courthouse.
I got to my truck and,
after warming up the injector heaters, started the engine.
It was amazing how many southern boys in our outfit did not
know about the necessity of warming up the manifold in cold weather. My
roommate was a mechanic in the motor pool and ended up dragging a battery
charger through drifts from truck to truck to start them after the batteries
had been worn down.
When we got to the courthouse, having seen a number of cars
in ditches, we were given orders as to where to go.
I and a guy from a sister squadron were tasked to head to a
rural village called Pineville, about 20 miles away.
We were also tasked to drop off some jail trustees at the
county road yards to pick up some graders to clear roads.
As soon as we left, the trustees let us know that we were
going to drop them off at Rosie’s and they’d find their way to the yard after
that. We were not going to argue with these guys.
So, after dropping them off at Rosie’s, we headed to
Pineville. Halfway there, as I was lead truck, we went into an intersection in
the middle of the night, and in the middle of the intersection, I saw a car
antenna sticking out of a snow drift and I swerved to avoid it, ending up in a
ditch.
I was stuck. The guy in the other truck pulled up and we
tried to get his winch to attach to my truck to pull it out.
It would not work. I later asked my roommate about that, and
he said that he and his partner had disconnected them so no one would burn them
up. Thanks a lot.
After a couple of hours I managed to rock the truck out of
the ditch. I am from Michigan after all.
The other guy said he’d take lead. I outranked him by two
weeks, time in grade, but I acquiesced and we took off.
As we got within a few miles of Pineville he started to slow
down. He was dragging snow with his axles.
He would stop, back up and then ram through the drift he had
built.
After he did this a few times, as he stopped, I hit my air
horn and kept going, ramming him from behind to break him free.
The next time I did that, I just stayed on his bumper and we
drove through the snow with 20 wheel drive till we got into town as dawn was
breaking about 7 am.
We drove to the police station and found the local chief.
He took us to the school down the road that was being set up
as a civil defense center.
Leading that effort was a retired Chief Master Sergeant.
He was about to give us directions when the mayor took me
aside.
The mayor was a Republican who had just gotten elected the
previous November by organizing the black vote against the democrat candidate.
The Police Chief was a Democrat, as was the retired Master Sergeant. They
wanted me to start making deliveries to their friends’ local farms and
businesses. Cattle need feed and fuel.
The mayor had a different plan and wanted me to support his
electorate. Humans.
I decided to follow the mayor, he was 1) the top politically
elected official and 2) I actually agreed with him.
I told the retired Chief Master Sergeant that I was going to
listen to the mayor.
He then asked me who my commanding officer was and told me
to wait while he called him.
I told him the name of my Colonel, and he placed the call.
He talked to the Colonel for a while and then turned to me and held out the
phone and said your commanding officer would like to talk to you son. I took
the phone with some trepidation and put it to my ear whereupon the Colonel said
“Son, martial law has been declared and you are the ranking military person in
that Township. Make your decisions wisely and please let me talk to the retired
chief master Sergeant.”
I did as I was told, and the Sergeant relented, and we began
to make food and fuel deliveries to people under the direction of the mayor. I
felt pretty good about what we were doing.
At one point we were driving down the main highway and we saw a caravan of cars
that were stranded on the side of the road. We pulled up and found out that
they were tourists from Quebec, headed to Florida. I told them to abandon their
cars and get in the back of our trucks
and we would take them to a warm place. They argued at first but then got in.
Later when I came back to the school again, I found out that they had taken up
cooking and were preparing meals for anybody who needed them including us first
responders. It was wonderful French cooking.
After a bit, around noon, I was back at the school standing
outside when I saw a tall thin black man high stepping through the snow
approaching the grocery store (built in the 1920’s I imagine) across the street
from me. The mayor saw him too and slapped his head and said “Oh my God I
totally forgot about these guys!”
He recognized the man as being from an outlying community and we started to
deliver food and fuel to tar paper shanties. With no insulation.
One of the tasks we could not complete was to drive to a nursing home, pick up
the doctor and his nurse there, and take them into town to get pharmaceuticals
for the nursing home.
Sometime later in the afternoon I got a call from the base
that said that relief drivers could not drive in (where we had driven) to take
our trucks over. So they were going to fly the relief drivers in by helicopter.
I directed one of the local farmers who had a tractor and a front end bucket to
clear a section of road for the helicopter to land on and he did so. A short
while later a large helicopter landed in the field across the street from the
clearing we had made. Of all things it
was Marine One, president Nixon’s helicopter. It had been forced down at our
base by the storm while it was on its way to key Biscayne Florida where the
president wintered.
I asked the pilot why
he landed in the field instead of the clearing and he pointed to the telephone
lines right alongside the road where we had cleared the snow away.
I greeted the new drivers who were older NCOs from our squadron, showed them
the trucks, told them what we were doing and got on the chopper.
The next thing we did was fly to that nursing home that we could not get to by
truck to pick up the doctor and his nurse.
The helicopter landed there but nobody came out. I was exhausted and had slept
much of the flight but the sensation of taking off by being shoved down into my
seat as we took off (or up) woke me and I looked out the window and saw the
doctor dragging his nurse through the snow. I got the steward's attention, and
he talked to the pilot and we turned around and landed and picked them up.
Next, we flew to a parking lot in a shopping mall in Sumter
SC where a pharmacist was opening up for the doctor and the nurse. It was
pretty surreal.
We went in and got a candy bar and a couple of snacks got
back on the helicopter and it flew us to our base. From there we walked about a
mile back to our barracks and crashed.
Later when I woke up, I was told to grab another truck and
head back to Pineville to continue operations. I drove with a friend of mine,
Sgt Darryll Gheen, and when we got back to Pineville, we continued to drive
those missions of mercy. We even picked up a dog along the way that was stuck
in the truck ruts ahead of us that it couldn't get out of.
It was funny watching Darryl chase the dog down the ruts
while I followed in the big truck.
We took the dog back to the barracks with us until we could
get him back to its owner.
That was our adventure in that snowstorm as we gave relief
to the town that needed it without any FEMA being involved. I would add
that at one point, Darryll and I were at the school in the evening when the
National Guard finally arrived in their armored personnel vehicles.
We asked them what had kept them, and they told us that they
had driven from Fort Jackson in Colombia about 40 miles away and they knew that
their vehicles only had a certain amount of “mean time before breakdown” and
that's what happened after 35 miles. So they had to fix their APV's before they
could get out to relieve us.
So, Darryl and I drove back to the Courthouse to debrief.
There were a lot of
guys standing around drinking coffee and talking about their adventures. Among
them a number of farmers and truckers who had volunteered. The heroes of
their community. One of the farmers was telling us that he had come across
a Cadillac stuck in a ditch on I95 and that he offered to pull him out of the
ditch. The owner of the Cadillac was incensed and told the farmer that there
was no way he was going to let this farmer attach that tractor to his $9000 Cadillac. The farmer
laughed and said that he told the guy “Yeah you're right, I'd hate to damage my
$15,000 tractor trying to pull your Cadillac out of the ditch” and left him
there. There were a lot of other good stories about good works that had been
done and people's lives who had been changed by what we did for them there.
Later that year in August, Darryll and I were at the Kresge’s in Sumter SC looking through the record bins. I had learned to enjoy some country music and certainly bluegrass from listening to records with Darryll. I preferred rock'n'roll myself, stuff like Electric Light Orchestra, Chicago Blues band and an eclectic mix of records, and while we were standing there we heard someone call out our names. It turned out that it was the mayor of Pineville. He told us that he was glad he found us because he didn't know how to get a hold of us and he wanted to thank us for what we did during the storm for his town.
We said it was no big deal and that it was just part of our job but he said the town
was very appreciative of everything we did and the effort we put out and that
there was going to be a Labor Day picnic and they wanted to present us with a
token of appreciation for everything we did.
Later, Darryll and I talked about it and we thought that it
just didn't seem right to take honor for something like that that we were just
expected to do. In retrospect I wish we had done it because I feel that we insulted
the townspeople by not agreeing to their request.
________________
A few years ago, Scherie and I stopped in Pineville on our
way back from Florida.
I wanted her to see the town.
I expected to see a bustling community, having grown over the years.
Actually, it had declined. The school looked upgraded, the grocery store was
gone.
I went to a diner and asked about the mayor.\ or anyone who had been involved
in the events of the time.
Nobody knew anything about it.
Do We Need FEMA?
ReplyDeleteLocal responders, the National Guard, churches, neighbors, and volunteers will always be the first line of defense in any disaster. That community spirit is irreplaceable, and history is full of examples where people stepped up without waiting for Uncle Sam.
But today’s reality is different from decades past. Disasters are larger, more frequent, and more destructive. A hurricane that floods entire regions, a wildfire that wipes out a town, or a winter storm that collapses a power grid — these ripple far beyond one community, one state, or one region. Supply chains, energy markets, agriculture, and even global trade can be take a big hit. In that world, no single mayor or governor has the resources to rebuild alone. That’s where FEMA comes in — not to replace local heroes, but to back them up with national resources when the scale of destruction demands it.
Politically, however, we’ve seen an interesting pattern. Some lawmakers rail against FEMA as bloated or unnecessary — and even vote to deny disaster aid to “other” parts of the country — until the moment their own state gets hit. Then suddenly FEMA is essential, and they demand emergency funds. Disasters don’t care about politics, and neither should disaster response.
The truth is simple: FEMA isn’t a partisan luxury. It’s a national insurance policy. We all pay in, because at some point, any one of us may need it. Pulling back on FEMA in the name of ideology might score political points in the short term, but it leaves communities — red and blue alike — more vulnerable when the next storm, fire, or flood arrives.
Disasters are not larger, they are just reported larger.
DeleteIn the incident I wrote about, we had no idea about the larger scope.
I actually did not realize the scope until 40 years later.
You must have missed the part of the overwhelming failure of FEMA in North Carolina and other areas in the last hurricane season.
I interviewed first responders who spoke to this.
And when they did show up, they acted in a partisan manner.
Screw that.
While you make good points, the Leftists will always make claims that advance their agenda hiding behind those points. And how does that happen? Because nobody ever knows when the next BIG ONE will come along, and the bureaucracy will pad its larder, and its pockets, preparing for it. "It's for the children!" It would be far better to toughen up the citizen so they can prepare better than they do now waiting for "the experts" to bail them out. But those who make hay working for the government hate self-sufficiency, and they run the schools.
ReplyDeleteFEMA should be a bare bones facilitator/coordinator, if anything.
DeleteNot a parking spot for leftist idealogues.
This was my favorite part! "....organizing the black vote against the democrat candidate" GOD BLESS THAT MAYOR! And yes, disasters are NOT worse today; Everyone here in LA keeps warning about HOW HOT IT IS! HOT? In high school (which wasn't yesterday for me, i assure you!) it could be 104 degrees ...we were used to it. Now it hits 100 and our news people are blaming it on climate change! rubbish....and, by the way, one thing communities have done without FEMA is reduce SMOG (believe me!)....Interesting story, ED, thanks!
ReplyDeleteThank you Z!
DeleteYour post prompted me to do a little research (very little). FEMA was created by EO by Carter in 1979. It merged she by Civil Defense and other agencies and, as always happens, instead of streamlining, created a larger, slower bureaucracy.
ReplyDeleteJoe
Imagine that!
DeleteRashida Tlaib, a sitting Congresswoman representing Michigan’s 12th Congressional District which covers Detroit, Dearborn, Southfield, and surrounding communities speaking at the People’s Conference for Palestine in Detroit, Michigan, stands on American soil, While she enjoys the nation’s freedoms and prosperity, even as she tears into the very country that made her success possible. She still hates this country, and Jews.
ReplyDeleteDo you still remember what these people did on October 7, 2023? The Killing, the Raps, the murdering of Babies, and the taking over 200 Hostages that they have starved to death, murdered over half of them!
Thses people thought they could kill us, rape us, imprison us, violently uproot us from our American Way of Life take awy our farms, starve our children to death, and we would just disappear. Well, guess what? Now we’re in Congress, and we’re every corner of the United States. Y’all, they just don’t get it.
They just don’t get it. They will never EVER truly comprehend, even after seven decades, that we aren’t going anywhere. We are just getting started. We Americans just don’t go away! We Fight for what is ours, and we Win!
Every genocide enabler, look at this! Listen to me you Rag-Heads. We ain’t going anywhere. Just growing and growing and growing.
Our forefathers have shown us how to fight for civil rights and justice and against oppression. As an American, and a New Yorker I have been taught that the political structures that I have to work in, that we are surrounded by, was built on slavery and genocide and rape and oppression in Isreal.
This great Country has taught me that America will remind me constantly, the community of Brave people, that it’s not the weenies in Congress or the Lefties in the Senote that will free our people. It is only us.
It can only be us. This is the least we can do is show up. The least we can do to try to save lives.
Enabling the genocide in Isreal and dismantling our friendship that oppresses Palestinians. Unify so many different struggles. You all seen it for freedom and justice at home and abroad.
What’s been tested on the killing fields of Gaza is already being deployed right here in the streets of America. What our government is willing to do to Palestinians, they are willing to do to all of you. It is no surprise to me as the daughter of Terrirists that I see our government that has supplied the bombs and excuses Israel from destroying literally every single day hospitals, communities.
And because the manufacturing mass starvation is also the same government that’s defunding health care and food assistance programs here in our country. It is no surprise
she is speaking on behalf of residents of Gaza, the embodiment of evil in political form — a lawless enclave where self-anointed terrorists crown themselves rulers. It masquerades as governance, but thrives only on bloodshed, intimidation, and oppression. Devoid of justice, compassion, or accountability, Gaga is not a state but a black hole of terror.”
Never once did Rashida Tlaib
suggest that Hamas—the terrorists who rule Gaza with an iron fist—return the live Israeli hostages they captured, or the bodies of the dead Israelis they brutally tortured and murdered.
Never once did Rashida Tlaib demand that Hamas lay down their arms and stop firing rockets indiscriminately into Israeli civilian areas, or cease perpetrating the wanton terrorist attacks that compel Israel to respond in self-defense.
Never once did Rashida Tlaib call on Hamas to renounce terrorism
Well I agree with everything you've said, I'm waiting for you to tie it into the context of my post. I think it's rather rude when you just use somebody else's comment section because you're too lazy to blog yourself. You could at least predicate it with " off topic ".
ReplyDelete