Bad news ... FEMA does what I'm describing after every major hurricane.
Not news to anyone, bu the news for you is: it's not part of their authorizing statute, and is relatively new, and takes risky behavior and puts it on the taxpayer. To paraphrase an old protest t-shirt,
"Risk shifting is not healthy for an economy and other living things."
I'm guessing there are a lot of hurricane survivors, both individuals and businesses, who would take exception to your views on the importance and value of FEMA.
Whattttt?!?!? You mean those who had their shore-front homes (un/under-insured and then over-valued by the discount) wiped out and then rebuilt by taxpayer dollars might object to having to insure their own damn property and choices over that property??? No way!
It is patently *stupid* to erect a 3000sf "beach house" in a place where the next big wave may wipe it out, and then expect anyone but YOU to pay for it. But it is *beyond* stupid for taxpayers to repeat the idiocy -- taking from those who have no part in the ownership, consumption, or disposition of the good, to *fund* the good -- is NOT respectful of property. SOMEONE (and it's you, sweetheart) is getting thieved.
FEMA's core mission is a line one, not a staff one. They are to be facilitators and organizers of existing resources, not demanders of new resources. You can understand that, or not, but mission creep to insure society from every bad turn is not healthy. Taking responsibility away from individual citizens removes those citizens attentions from where it needs to be -- build a next egg? Why?
The Gummint will take care of us. Insure the home? Why?
The Gummint will look out for us. Live below your means and save the difference for a Rainy Day Fund? Why?
The Gummint has our backs. Certainly, every time Gummint interposed itself as smarter than individual citizens has worked out swimmingly, eh?
Errrr, no. Never. Not once.