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HR-5652House2025-09-30Emergency Management

Wildfire Recovery Act

YourVoice.Now Summary

After a major wildfire, the federal government would pick up at least 75% of the cost of fire management assistance — the emergency help that FEMA provides to states and local governments while a fire is still burning. Right now, the federal share can vary, and communities often struggle with their portion of the tab. The bill also directs FEMA to write new rules, within three years, spelling out exactly when the President can bump the federal share even higher based on the financial hit a state or local government has taken. On top of that, it makes an important policy change: states, local governments, and tribal governments that pre-position firefighting assets before a fire reaches them could get reimbursed for that cost, the same way they would for an official disaster declaration.

Congressional Summary

Wildfire Recovery ActThis bill provides flexibility to increase the federal cost share for the Fire Management Assistance Grant (FMAG) program of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). It also requires updates to FMAG policy to remove limitations on reimbursement for predeployment of firefighting assets.Under current law, FEMA’s regulations require a 75% federal cost share for FMAG assistance and do not permit adjustments. The bill establishes FMAG’s 75% federal cost share as a minimum, providing flexibility for such percentage to be increased in certain instances. It also requires FEMA to establish by regulation criteria through which FEMA may recommend the President increase FMAG’s federal cost share above 75%. Such criteria must include a financial threshold, relating to the costs of state or local government response to a fire triggering FMAG assistance, above which FEMA may recommend the President increase the federal cost share. Also, currently, FMAG may reimburse costs for pre-positioning firefighting resources into areas of higher fire danger up to 21 days before a declared fire. However, under current FMAG policy, costs for pre-positioning state or local government-owned resources within their own state are ineligible. The bill requires FEMA to update FMAG grants policy to allow reimbursement for predeployment of domestic assets by state, local, or Indian tribal governments in a manner consistent with other FEMA programs.

Details

Congress
119th
Chamber
House
Status
summarized
Action
Introduced in House
Action Date
2025-09-30
Date Added
2026-03-30