r/EmergencyManagement 3d ago

IAEM releases official statement because of petition

TLDR: “What IAEM is not is the judge and jury of the emergency management community, nor should it aim to be. We do not exist to referee the profession or elevate one viewpoint over another. What we do stand for—unequivocally—is that emergency management exists to safeguard lives and property, protect communities, and foster resilience through thoughtful, evidence-based strategies.“

https://www.iaem.org/Groups/Councils-Global-Regions/IAEM-USA-Council/August-2025-President-Statement

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u/[deleted] 2d ago

please list other respected EM associations that have made a strong political stance on this issue

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u/CommanderAze Federal 2d ago

Take NEMA. They are absolutely a political powerhouse and are very effective. But their mandate is to be the voice of the state and territorial EM directors. They represent the interests of state government agencies. Their advocacy is top-down, focused on the architecture of federal policy, funding streams like the DRF, and how federal agencies interact with the states. They do their job well, but they are not, nor are they intended to be, the voice for the thousands of individual practitioners at the local, tribal, private sector, and non-profit levels. They represent the institution, not the professional.

Then you have vital, mission-driven groups like the Black Emergency Managers Association (BEMA), which does heroic work advocating for equity and vulnerable communities, or the big healthcare lobbies like the American Hospital Association, which are powerful advocates for their specific sectors. These groups are essential, but they are, by design, focused on a specific mission or industry. They aren't set up to be the guiding professional body for the entire field of emergency management.

This brings us back to the fundamental problem with IAEM. With over 6,000 members, it is positioned as the largest professional association for the individual practitioner. It's supposed to be our collective voice. But when the profession faces foundational threats—the devaluing of expertise, the politicization of our work, and policies that undermine our ability to protect our communities—IAEM retreats to a position of "neutrality."

While they do some necessary legislative work on things like EMPG funding, they consistently fail to take the strong, principled, ethical stands that define a true professional guiding body. They refuse to be the "judge and jury" at the very moment our profession needs a clear-eyed arbiter and a fierce defender.

its also important to note NEMA speaks for the states, not the practitioners of emergency management as a whole. Other groups speak for specific missions or industries. IAEM is supposed to speak for us, the professionals. Its failure to do so with a strong, ethical voice on the issues that threaten the integrity of our work leaves a massive void. We lack a true standard-bearer, and that's precisely why I am so critical of their inaction. The field is adrift without that leadership.

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u/[deleted] 2d ago

always the exception, and yet those who cast stones rarely do anything other than anonymously pound away at the keyboard. IAEM speaks for its paying members. full stop. understanding tax law is also essential before bashing organizations in which you clearly have very little knowledge. a quick google search of their IRS filings and articles of incorporation shows that they cannot make any political statements whatsoever. condemning the administration's use of FDEM (as the recent petition requests) is, in fact, a political statement. looking at their social media, iaem has been on capitol hill more than any other em association this year. and they also published 2 commercial-grade PSAs that clearly articulate what em is. but go ahead, you obviously hold the highest of virtues and we are all here as peons.

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u/CommanderAze Federal 1d ago

Resorting to ad hominem attacks is certainly a strategy to win people over... let's stick to discussion about the facts, in this case of nonprofit law.

Your central point is incorrect. The IRS explicitly allows 501(c)(3) organizations to lobby and engage in policy advocacy. The legal prohibition is on partisan campaigning—endorsing or opposing candidates for office.

So for example condemning the administration's use of FDEM is absolutely within the legal abilities of a 501(c)(3) organization.

Taking a stance on how a government agency is being used or whether a policy undermines the profession is policy advocacy, not partisan campaigning. It is a legally protected and essential function of many nonprofits. My argument isn't about virtues; it's about the strategic and ethical choices of a professional association that is specifically designed to be a voice for emergency managers.

But what would I know about promoting voices of the people in our field? I only built a community here on reddit that is now more than triple the size of IAEM.

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u/[deleted] 1d ago

a community largely made up of people who troll anonymously? so proud!