WASHINGTON â The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has fired three more supervisors following an internal probe into claims a crew of disaster relief workers were told to avoid Trump-supporting homes hit by Hurricane Milton in Florida, The Post can exclusively reveal.
Cameron Hamilton, the current acting administrator of the agency, announced in a Tuesday letter to Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) that an âexhaustive investigationâ had concluded the supervisors failed to âmeet our standards of conductâ or reign in their partisan underlingsâ behavior.
â[I]t is essential that the entire workforce understand that this incident was reprehensible, and this type of behavior will not be tolerated at FEMA,â Hamilton wrote.
âFurther, in accordance with my commitment, and that of President Trump and [Homeland Security] Secretary [Kristi] Noem, to ensure that Americans receive impartial assistance from FEMA, I have directed a comprehensive additional training for FEMA staff to reinforce that political affiliation should never be a consideration in the rendering of assistance.â
Blackburn had demanded answers about the snub from now-departed FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell in a letter last November, expressing her âdisgust with the blatant display of bias.â
âIâm pleased to see that FEMA has terminated four individuals as a result of the agencyâs disgusting discrimination against Trump supporters in the aftermath of Hurricanes Helene and Milton last year,â she told The Post on Thursday.
âThis unjustifiable behavior should never be allowed to fester or run rampant in any organization â let alone a federal agency that is designed to serve the needs of the American people.â
Hamilton added that the investigation also âfound no evidence this was a systemic problem, nor that it was directed by agency or field leadershipâ â directly contradicting claims by ex-FEMA supervisor Marnâi Washington.
In October, Washington instructed her crew canvassing hurricane-ravaged areas of Lake Placid, Fla., to âavoid homes advertising Trump,â according to a âbest practicesâ memo first reported by the Daily Wire.
The agency fired Washington the following month, with Criswell calling her directive âa clear violation of FEMAâs core values and principles to help people regardless of their political affiliation.â
The following month, Washington broke her silence in a November interview with YouTube podcaster Roland Martin, accusing FEMA team leaders of ordering workers to ignore supporters of the 47th presidentâs campaign ânot just in the state of Floridaâ but âin the Carolinas.â
âSenior leadership will lie to you and tell you that they do not know, but if you ask the [Disaster Survivor Assistance] crew leads and specialists what theyâre experiencing in the field, they will tell you,â she said.
At the time, one FEMA employee confirmed to The Post that crews working in Western North Carolina following Hurricane Helene were given âclear guidanceâ to be âmindfulâ of affected regions that are âlargely Republicanâ or âvery conservative.â
The worker indicated that the agencyâs focus on âequityâ had motivated that guidance as it sought to distribute more than $1.2 billion in direct disaster assistance to residents ravaged by the storm.
House committees subsequently launched probes into potential âsystemic biasâ in the provision of disaster relief to Trump-supporting victims of Hurricanes Milton and Helene across the Southeast.
The independent US Office of Special Counsel and the Department of Homeland Security Office of the Inspector General also investigated the incident, as did several state attorneys general.
Amid those probes, Criswell testified to House lawmakers in November, after Trumpâs election victory, that no evidence had emerged showing Washingtonâs actions were a widespread issue.
âIt has not gone beyond what this one employee did,â she told members of the House Oversight Committee, adding that there was no agency-wide guidance to ignore so-called âpolitically hostileâ homes.
The Office of Special Counsel âconfirmedâ that assessment â and slapped Washington with a Hatch Act complaint last month.
By â[e]ngaging in political activity while on duty and using her official authority or influence to interfere with or affect the results of an election,â the special counselâs office said, Washington had violated the 1939 law, opening her up to possible civil penalties and debarment from future federal employment.
The Merit Systems Protection Board, a federal-worker appeals panel, is now considering her case.