Oscar winners receive luxury disaster recovery subscriptions

In a stark reflection of escalating disaster risks, 2025 Academy Award attendees were gifted yearlong subscriptions to Bright Harbor, a premium service aiding wildfire victims in Los Angeles. The service assists with FEMA applications and recovery logistics amid federal funding cuts. Company executives acknowledge its high costs exclude many affected individuals.

The 2025 Oscars highlighted a growing trend in disaster recovery as celebrities departed with elaborate gift bags including a subscription to Bright Harbor, launched in 2024. This service emerged in response to the January wildfires that ravaged Los Angeles, offering white-glove support for those whose homes were destroyed.

Bright Harbor's chief growth officer, Emily Bush, described the process as overwhelming: navigating FEMA's requirements feels like "a full-time job." The company helps clients freeze mortgage payments, apply for aid, handle paperwork, and secure loans. Services begin at $300 per month for individuals, though Bright Harbor now partners with companies to cover employees. Bush emphasized, "I think the government should pay for this," pointing to strained public resources.

Federal support has weakened under the current administration, which is slashing FEMA budgets and shifting burdens to states. Nonprofits funded by FEMA struggle with insufficient case managers, exacerbating delays for victims deciding whether to rebuild or relocate.

This privatization echoes historical patterns, such as post-Hurricane Katrina reforms in New Orleans, where public services like schools and housing were overhauled through private means. In Puerto Rico, after Hurricane Maria in 2017, the power grid's privatization to LUMA in 2021 has led to frequent blackouts and doubled bills, despite promises of reliability and renewables.

Experts warn that such services benefit urban or affluent areas but neglect remote communities, where private investment is scarce. As climate disasters intensify, the reliance on costly private options raises questions about equitable access to recovery aid.

संबंधित लेख

President Trump signs executive order overriding LA local permits for wildfire rebuilds and auditing California FEMA grants, with burn area imagery.
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Trump order seeks to preempt local permitting for Los Angeles wildfire rebuilds and triggers FEMA audit of California grants

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President Donald Trump has signed an executive order directing FEMA and the Small Business Administration to consider rules that would override state and local pre-approval permitting steps for federally funded rebuilding in the Pacific Palisades and Eaton Canyon burn areas, while ordering an audit of California’s unspent Hazard Mitigation Grant Program funds.

One year after devastating wildfires destroyed 13,000 homes in Los Angeles County, only seven have been rebuilt. The 2025 blazes, fueled by strong Santa Ana winds, killed at least 31 people and caused up to $275 billion in economic damage. Despite efforts to speed up permitting, challenges like toxic cleanup, labor shortages, and regulatory hurdles continue to slow recovery.

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Angela Frederick's new book 'Disabled Power' explores the severe challenges faced by disabled individuals during the 2021 Winter Storm Uri in Texas. It highlights how policy failures and grid deregulation left many without essential power, exacerbating health risks. Frederick calls for centering disability in disaster planning to prevent future tragedies.

Following flash floods that killed over 1,000 people in Aceh, North Sumatra, and West Sumatra, authorities are assessing poverty impacts and supporting community recovery. Refugee numbers are declining as aid distribution continues, including mosque cleanups for the first post-disaster prayers.

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PT Pos Indonesia continues distributing Temporary Direct Cash Assistance for People's Welfare in disaster-hit areas of Aceh Timur, Langsa, and Aceh Tamiang despite infrastructure challenges. Meanwhile, Bank Mandiri collaborates with other state firms to build 600 temporary housing units in Aceh Tamiang, inspected by President Prabowo Subianto on January 1, 2026.

Floods and landslides in Aceh, North Sumatra, and West Sumatra have killed 867 people as of December 5, 2025, displacing thousands. Finance Minister Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa says additional funds are ready pending BNPB's proposal. Response efforts involve TNI, Polri, and private aid for evacuation and logistics.

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As recovery from the late November 2025 Aceh floods and landslides continues—with over 21,000 homes damaged and thousands still displaced—PT Tiara Marga Trakindo (TMT) donated Rp2.5 billion to support residents in Aceh Tamiang and Aceh Utara facing shortages of food, water, and sanitation.

 

 

 

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