Human Cause declarations
This page gathers county-level declaration history for Human Cause disasters and points to the state and county pages where the pattern is most concentrated.
Where this disaster type shows up
EXPLOSION AT WORLD TRADE CENTER
UNDOCUMENTED ALIENS
UNDOCUMENTED ALIENS
UNDOCUMENTED ALIENS
UNDOCUMENTED ALIENS
Understanding human cause declarations
FEMA has issued 6 county-level disaster declarations classified as human cause, affecting 6 counties across 3 states.
The states with the highest concentration of human cause declarations are Florida, New York, and Oklahoma. Each state page links to county-level detail pages where the specific timeline and spending breakdowns for human cause events can be reviewed.
A disaster declaration is a formal determination by the President (or FEMA administrator for emergency declarations) that federal assistance is needed. Not every natural event results in a declaration — the state must request one, and FEMA evaluates the damage relative to state and local capacity. The declaration count on this page reflects the number of county-level records in the federal datasets, not the number of individual storms or events.