News

Trump Administration Used $10 Million Of FEMA Money To Fund ICE Migrant Detentions

Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Oregon) released a document Tuesday showing the transfer of nearly $10 million from FEMA’s budget had been transferred to ICE, accusing President Donald Trump‘s administration of diverting funds from hurricane relief just as hurricane season was starting.

According to the document from the Department of Homeland Security, however, the money came from the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s budgets for travel, training, public engagement and information technology work. It will not affect the agency’s hurricane response and other disaster relief efforts.

“FEMA will curtail training, travel, public engagement sessions, IT security support and infrastructure maintenance, and IT investments in the legacy grants systems for transition to the Grants Management Modernization Program,” the document says.

SLIDESHOW: DONALD TRUMP’S 30 CRAZIEST TWEETS

Subscribe to our free weekly newsletter!

A week of political news in your in-box.
We find the news you need to know, so you don't have to.

FEMA spokesperson Jenny Burke slammed Merkley in a tweet on Wednesday, who appeared on cable news outlets to talk about the document, saying he ignores the facts.


Homeland Security press secretary Tyler Houlton also stated that DHS did not shift disaster relief funding away from FEMA, accusing Merkley of “a sorry attempt to push a false statement.”


The document also shows the amount transferred from FEMA to ICE is is less than 1% of FEMA’s overall budget. FEMA’s budget originally was $1.03 billion, and the amount transferred was about $9.755 million. The document confirms that the money would be spent on ICE’s detention facilities.

“Without the transfers and reprogramming identified in this notification, ICE will not be able to fulfill its adult detention requirements in (fiscal year) 2018,” the document says.

Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) told CNN following a meeting between DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus that each DHS department would be contributing toward ICE’s detention activities.

“As an overall, the meeting was long on excuses and on misrepresentations and short on information and solutions … one thing we do know, they are taking 1% of every DHS department and putting that towards family detention and family separation,” Gallego said.

Steven Abendroth

Recent Posts

Federal Trade Commission Votes To Ban Noncompete Agreements

On Tuesday, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) banned noncompete agreements in a 3-2 vote. The…

2 days ago

California Bill Would Prevent CLEAR Passengers From Line-Jumping At Airports

A proposed bill in California would prohibit security screening company CLEAR from skipping the general…

3 days ago

Supreme Court Seems Receptive To Laws That Allow Restrictions On Homeless

On Monday, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments over a challenge to a law allowing…

4 days ago

Arizona Republicans Block Bill To Repeal Abortion Ban On State House Floor

The Arizona House of Representatives failed to advance a repeal of the state's 160-year-old abortion…

5 days ago

After Oregon Recriminalizes Drug Possession, What’s Next For The State’s Drug Policy

Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek (D) signed a bill restoring criminal charges in cases of hard drug possession.…

1 week ago

Biden’s New Regulation Will Limit Toxic Chemicals In Drinking Water Across The Country

President Joe Biden's administration announced the first-ever national limits on toxic "forever chemicals" in drinking water. This…

1 week ago