Disaster type page

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.

Declarations
6
Across all county pages
States affected
3
At least one county declaration
Counties affected
6
County pages on site
Tracked aid
$0
PA + assistance signals
Recent county events

Where this disaster type shows up

About this disaster type

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.