In the wake of the Trump administration’s announced plans to cut back on federal disaster spending, South
Padre Island officials are concerned their beaches will be left vulnerable should a storm hit this hurricane season.
City staff alerted City Council this month that efforts by the Federa
l Emergency Management Agency to cut disaster assistance would limit
the city’s ability to receive funding for beach replenishment if a storm hits.
South Padre Island, a resort town at the state’s most southern
point, is home to about 2,000 people year-round. Tourists from around
the world flock to its beaches, and it is particularly popular with college students during spring break.
The Trump administration has made known it wishes to roll bac
k the federal government’s role in disaster recovery and shift more responsibility to states.
The proposed changes were outlined in an April memo from FEMA’s acting administrator Cameron Hamilton t
o Brian Cavanaugh, associate director for Homeland Security Offi
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ce of Management and Budget. Hamilton has since been replaced.
Among the short-term changes proposed is limiting the type of recreational facilities that are eligible for public as
sistance funding, such as b
eaches, boat docks, parks and athletic facilities for which FEMA spent $2.5 billion over the last 10 years.
Of that amount, FEMA spent $541,792,230 on 727 beach-related projects.
Instead, funds would be limited to facilities considered critical, such as mass transit, ports and harbors, facilitie
s critical to Tribal Nations’ economies and food sovereignty, among others.




































