NEW ORLEANS (AP) – The last of the once-ubiquitous FEMA trailers has been removed from New Orleans more than six years after floodwalls and levees broke during Hurricane Katrina and caused the city to ...
WASHINGTON -- After resisting for years, the Federal Emergency Management Agency is setting strict new limits on formaldehyde levels in the mobile homes it buys for disaster victims. Responding to ...
NEW ORLEANS -- While the Federal Emergency Management Agency rushes to move thousands of Gulf Coast storm victims out of government-issued trailers, scientists are tearing the units apart to learn why ...
What should be done with the nearly 100,000 travel trailers sitting idly at sites around the country, at a cost of $130 million a year to the... Trailer Graveyards Haunt FEMA, Neighbors After high ...
NEW ORLEANS (AP) – A federal judge gave his final approval Thursday to a $42.6 million class-action settlement between companies that made and installed government-issued trailers after hurricanes in ...
Thousands of Hurricane Katrina victims were left homeless and now lingering health problems may be blamed on the toxic trailers that were brought in for emergency shelter. Those toxic trailers are at ...
In Mississippi, Katrina victims may get to keep their emergency cottages. Found this in my hometown paper today. After Hurricane Katrina, the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency got a $280 million ...
Arkansas Attorney General Dustin McDaniel has warned consumers that 100,000 FEMA surplus manufactured homes and travel trailers will soon flood the market — complete with their formaldehyde vapor ...
Officials on the Pine Ridge and Rosebud reservations in South Dakota say their communities urgently need mobile homes that could be available under a new federal law. Sen. Tim Johnson's office ...
The federal government auctioned off disaster-response trailers at fire-sale prices even as Harvey devastated southeast Texas, reducing an already diminished supply of mobile homes ahead of what could ...
In a giant auction, the federal government has agreed to sell for pennies on the dollar most of the 120,000 formaldehyde-tainted trailers it bought nearly five years ago for Hurricane Katrina victims.