Having weathered nearly two years of unprecedented disasters and unrelenting public criticism, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is the most indispensableand most distrustedpillar of the nation's emergency management infrastructure. A constellation of well-documented failures, mostly in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, has created an image of an agency adrift. Yet FEMA's role in the Gulf Coast recovery effort has only intensified; the agency is now responsible for sheltering over a million disaster survivors. Section 408 of the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act ("Stafford Act")' forms the core of the federal government's emergency housing regime. The provision guarantees up to eighteen months of housing benefits for all disaster survivors-regardless of their means-who can demonstrate substantial damage to their primary residence. 2 As the agency charged with administering this program, FEMA has earned stinging rebukes from survivors and lawmakers for erroneously denying thousands of meritorious housing requests while paying out millions of dollars in fraudulent claims.' FEMA's mistakes are in part the product of two mutually reinforcing 1. 42 U.S.C. § 5121-5206 (2000). a. This eighteen-month deadline can, however, be extended at FEMA's discretion if "due to extraordinary circumstances an extension would be in the public interest." Federal Assistance to Individuals and Households, 44 C.F.R. § 2o6.no(e) (2006). Indeed, FEMA recently bowed to public pressure and extended the duration of housing benefits for Katrina survivors. See, e.g., Spencer S. Hsu, Housing Aid Extended for 'o5 Storm Victims, WASH. POST,
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