Federal News
FEMA Faces HURREVAC Contract Lapse
March 24, 2026
The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is at risk of losing access to the critical hurricane evacuation planning tool HURREVAC due to a lapse in the federal contract and interagency agreement with the Army Corps of Engineers. This disruption threatens emergency planners and meteorologists nationwide by potentially limiting access to vital evacuation decision support and storm surge modeling ahead of the 2026 Atlantic hurricane season. The contract lapse underscores an urgent need for procurement action to restore or replace this capability to maintain national hurricane preparedness and response effectiveness.
- FEMA and the Army Corps of Engineers are the primary agencies involved in administering and providing access to HURREVAC.
- Emergency management professionals and meteorologists rely on HURREVAC for evacuation planning and storm surge modeling, making uninterrupted access critical.
- Procurement professionals should anticipate potential solicitations or contract renewals to sustain or enhance hurricane evacuation tools.
- Contractors specializing in emergency management software and meteorological modeling may find opportunities to support FEMA and related agencies in addressing this capability gap.
Agencies
Federal Emergency Management Agency, Army Corps of Engineers, National Weather Service, International Association of Emergency Managers