Addressing State and Local Failures To Rebuild Los Angeles After Wildfire Disasters
Published Date: 1/29/2026
Presidential Document
Summary
Los Angeles families and businesses hit by wildfires are still stuck waiting because state and local leaders dropped the ball on cleanup and rebuilding. The federal government stepped in to clear debris fast, but now new rules will make sure California and LA speed up rebuilding and fix emergency systems. These changes kick in right away and aim to get people back in their homes without wasting time or money.
Analyzed Economic Effects
3 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 0 costs, 1 mixed.
Federal Preemption of Local Permits
If you are rebuilding a home, business, or house of worship in the Pacific Palisades or Eaton Canyon using Federal emergency-relief funds, Federal agencies (FEMA and SBA) will consider preempting State or local permitting that has delayed rebuilding and allow builders to self-certify to a Federal designee that they met applicable health and safety standards. FEMA and the SBA must publish proposed regulations within 30 days of January 23, 2026 and final regulations within 90 days of January 23, 2026 to advance this policy.
Audit and Possible Recovery of HMGP Funds
The Secretary (through FEMA) must determine within 30 days of January 23, 2026 what amount, if any, of the nearly $3 billion in unspent Hazard Mitigation Grant Program (HMGP) funding granted to California was awarded arbitrarily or contrary to law, and must conduct a Federal audit within 60 days of January 23, 2026 of California's use of HMGP funds. Within 30 days after that audit is completed, FEMA will make administrative determinations and may impose future grant conditions, initiate recoupment or recovery actions, or deploy oversight and technical assistance to expedite use of HMGP funds for individuals, families, and small businesses.
Federal Fast-Track Environmental Waivers
If you plan to rebuild with Federal emergency-relief funds, Federal agencies will use authorities under laws such as NEPA, the Endangered Species Act, and the National Historic Preservation Act to expedite waivers, permits, reviews, consultations, or approvals that are needed to facilitate rebuilding. Agencies must limit such actions to the minimum scope and duration required and designate senior officials to ensure timely execution.
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