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Rampant conspiracy theories are hindering hurricane relief efforts, say officials

A series of false claims and conspiracy theories have accompanied Hurricane Milton and Hurricane Helene, misinformationthat officials sayhas resultedin hampering the relief and recovery efforts.

'It is absolutely the worst I have ever seen,' says FEMA official

Conspiracy theories impacting hurricane response, disaster assistance agency says

11 days ago
Duration 1:57
In the midst of a deadly hurricane season, the Federal Emergency Management Agency says false conspiracy theories are preventing some people from getting help and taking a toll on responders. The statement came after Donald Trump falsely accused the current administration of diverting disaster money to immigrants.

As Hurricane Milton bears down on Florida, some of the dialogue on socialmedia includes baselesstheories that the storm has beengeo-engineered, that the government is involved in hurricane creationand thatsuch storms are being directed to hit predominantly Republican areas.

"Not only is that absurd, it's frustrating," said Amber Silver, an assistant professor at the University at Albany's Collegeof Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security and Cybersecurity.

It's just an example of the series of false claims and conspiracy theories that have accompanied Milton, which is expected tomakelandfall late Wednesday or early Thursday, and Hurricane Helene, which also hit Florida and other southeastern U.S. states two weeks ago.

And it'smisinformationand disinformationthat officials sayhave resultedin hampering the relief and recovery efforts.

"Itis absolutely the worst I have ever seen," FEMAadministrator Deanne Criswelltold reporters on a Tuesday morning call, as reported by Politico.

"It's creating distrust in the federal government, but also the state government, and we have so many first responders that have been working to go out and help these communities."

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In North Carolina, for example, afterHurricane Helene made landfall, social media was replete with conspiracy theoriesthat cautioned residentsnot to leave their homes, that iftheFederal Emergency Management Agency came to the door, they were really thereto bulldoze the house for the lithium deposits buried below, Silver said.

False information about relief funding

There has also been misinformation about funding for hurricane relief efforts, false claims that some areas, based on political demographics, arebeing purposefully neglected, or that relief funds are being diverted to migrants or to Ukraine.

Such misinformation is dissuading survivors from seeking help andhascreated a sense of fear and mistrust from residents against the thousands of FEMA employees and volunteers on the ground,Criswell said on ABC's This Week.

A person stands in the centre of the image, their hands pressed to their face and back to the camera. A white house is leaning on its side, collapsed, with rubble strewn around.
Gerardo Hernandez Juarez stares at what's left of his family's destroyed home on Oct. 1 in Hendersonville, N.C., in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene. False claims and conspiracy theories have accompanied Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton and are hampering relief efforts, officials say. (Brittany Peterson/The Associated Press)

Hurricane Helene killed more than 230 people across several states, including Floridians who didn't leave and then drowned in their homes.

Much of themisinformation is being repeated and emphasized by politicians, by people with large TikTok followings and social media followings, Criswell said.

That spread of conspiracy theoriesincludesformer U.S. president Donald Trump, who, officialssay, helped fuela frenzy of misinformation over the past week among the communities most devastated by Helene. Trumppromoteda number of false claims, including that Washington isintentionally withholding aidto people in Republican areas.

A politician in a blue suit and red tie stands at a podium in front of relief supplies.
Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. president Donald Trump, seen here last Friday in Evans, Ga., has campaigned in areas impacted by Hurricane Helene and spread false claims about federal aid. (Evan Vucci/The Associated Press)

False claims about creating hurricanes

But other rumours, including the suggestion the hurricanes are intentional,have alsogained steam. Crypto influencer Matt Walace tweeted out: "Don't worry guys, weather modification isn't real! It's just a coincidence that Hurricane Helene is one of the most devastating 'inland damage storms' in history and that hundreds of pro-Trump counties are being massively impacted during the most important election of our lifetimes."

Georgia Republican Rep.Marjorie Taylor Greene has also receiveda lot of attention for herfalse claim that "they control the weather."

Florida Republican Rep. Carlos Giminezslammed her on X, formerly Twitter, Wednesday, replying "Humans cannot create or control hurricanes. Anyone who thinks they can, needs to have their head examined."

Scientists have attempted to manipulate the weather somewhat through "cloud seeding" the process ofmaking tiny drops of water vapour and ice crystals in clouds stick together into larger, heavier droplets or pellets that fall as rain or snow.

Often, this is done by spraying particles of salts such as silver iodide or table salt using special flares carried by airplanesor projectiles such as rockets, cannons or missiles. The results,however, have been mixed.

But scientists so far have no ability to manipulate or create huge storms like hurricanes.

"If meteorologists could stop hurricanes, we would stop hurricanes," Kristen Corbosiero, a professor of atmospheric and environmental sciences at the University at Albany, told The Associated Press.

"If we could control the weather, we would not want the kind of death and destruction that's happened."

Abbie Richards, a misinformation researcher and climate activist with more than 500 thousand followers on TikTok, said in a post Tuesday that it's understandable conspiracy theories are raging in the face of dangerous and rapidly intensifying storms made worse by warmer waters in the Gulf of Mexico.

"The more we are faced with things that make us feel uncertain, scared, powerless, the more we will rely on things like conspiracy theories that give us a false sense of control."

Bill Gentry,director ofCommunity Preparedness and Disaster Management Certificate Program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said this type of misinformation is unprecedented and fairly new in this particular phase of a disaster event.

Misinformation used to mostly consist of state and local officials potentially contradicting one another about relief efforts.

But he says there's been a lot of effort to get all officials to co-ordinate and get on the same page. That means that misinformation has fundamentally changed, with some people now fuelling false claims about the event itself, and recovery efforts.

For Helene, there have been examples of people downgrading the importanceof registering for disaster relief benefits, while spreading falsehoods that there are no benefits, that the benefits aren't worth it or that benefits are more for one particular demographic region than another, Gentry said.

"If youlayer on top of that social media requests and misinformation about what's needed, what's not neededthat, then it just creates a lot of redundancy, a lot of resource scarcity and it convolutes thesystem," hesaid.

The proliferation of such false claims and rumours have got to the point thatFEMAand the North Carolina Department of Public Safetyhavebeen forced to create their own websites devoted to debunking some of the theories circulating.

WATCH |Hurricane Milton barrels toward a battered Florida:

Hurricane Milton barrels toward a battered Florida

12 days ago
Duration 2:07
Less than two weeks after Hurricane Helene hammered Florida, the state is bracing for what could be an even more powerful storm. Hurricane Milton rapidly intensified to a Category 5 hurricane and is expected to make landfall sometime Wednesday.

But the false rumours havealso led to a bipartisan effort from local officials to dismiss such claims, including pushback from some Republican politicians.

"The last thing that the victims of Helene need right now is political posturing, finger-pointing, or conspiracy theories that only hurt the response effort," North Carolina Republican SenatorThom Tillissaidin a letter to constituents on Sunday, the Washington Post reported.

'Real public safety ramifications'

Silver agreed that there havebeen some really concerted efforts to manage the misinformation on both sides of the political spectrum.

"The problem is that the volume and the vitriol of misinformation [related to]Hurricane Helene and Miltonis just so far beyond anything that's easy to manage, that it's becoming a challenge," she said.

"What's different with Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton, I would say, is the type of misinformation that's being shared. So this is misinformation that has very real public safety ramifications."

That also includes foreign actors and botssharing misinformation for the purpose of "stirring the pot," she said.

Part of the problem with Helene in terms of misinformation, Silversaid,is that it was aonce-in-a-lifetime type of stormthatimpacted traditionally red, Republican states and it happenedaround the same time as a heated, polarized,presidential election.

"Tragically, I think in many ways, in terms of misinformation, Helene was a perfect storm."

With files from Emily Chung, The Associated Press and Reuters