Los Angeles weighs a disaster registry. Disability advocates warn against false assurances.
Source: CBS News
July 14, 2025 / 5:00 AM EDT
In the wake of January's deadly wildfires, Los Angeles County leaders are weighing a disaster registry intended to help disabled and senior residents get connected to emergency responders to bring them to safety during disasters. County supervisors approved a feasibility study this spring for such a voluntary database. Supporters applauded the effort to give more notice and assistance to the more than 1 million county residents with some type of disability, such as cognitive impairment or limited mobility.
"If we know that people perish in these situations, what are our answers?" said Hilary Norton, who runs FASTLinkDTLA, a nonprofit focused on mobility issues. "This is the time for people to really understand the magnitude for people in need when things like this happen." Amid the increasing frequency of natural disasters across the U.S. brought into sharp relief by the recent deadly floods in Texas state and local governments from Oregon to North Carolina have turned to disaster registries to prioritize help for vulnerable residents when fires, hurricanes, and other environmental catastrophes strike.
But while some politicians say these registries are a potential solution to a public health problem, many disability advocates see them as ineffective tools that give people a false sense of security because there is no guarantee of evacuation help. "They're described in a way that communicates that if you place your information in this registry and you will need assistance, they will be able to plan for it, so in a disaster you will be safer. And in reality, that is simply not the case," said Maria Town, president and CEO of the American Association of People with Disabilities.
Town, who has cerebral palsy, had been in Houston for six months when Hurricane Harvey hit in 2017. Texas makes a free registry called the State of Texas Emergency Assistance Registry available to cities and counties to help them identify needs in their communities, but how or if they use it is up to them. Fewer than 5% of people who registered were contacted during Harvey, and even fewer got evacuation assistance, according to a 2023 study by the National Council on Disability, a federal agency that advises on disability policies and programs. The hurricane took 89 lives.
Read more: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/los-angeles-weighs-disaster-registry-disability-advocates/

SickOfTheOnePct
(7,825 posts)But there also needs to be, IMO, plans and commitments made by nearby family, friends, neighbors, etc.
I realize thats not always possible, but if I know I have a neighbor with a disability that will require them to have assistance during an evacuation, then I want them to know that if I evacuate, theyre coming with me, absent other concrete plans.
James48
(4,874 posts)Stephen Miller will use the database to execute the disabled, just like Hitler did.
JoseBalow
(7,896 posts)But not anymore. Sadly, I presently would consider your concern as legitimate.
slightlv
(6,094 posts)Concerns with any kind of database in this admin. The intent may be good. But the actual use will be turned to evil.