Office for Emergency Management

The Office for Emergency Management (OEM) was an office within the Executive Office of the United States President. It was established by administrative order, May 25, 1940, in accordance with executive order EO 8248, September 8, 1939.

Office for Emergency Management
Agency overview
FormedMay 25, 1940 (1940-05-25)
Preceding
DissolvedNovember 30, 1944 (1944-11-30)
Superseding agencies
JurisdictionUnited States Government
HeadquartersWashington, D.C.
Parent agencyExecutive Office of the President
Child agencies

The office functioned to assist the President in clearing information on defense measures. It maintained liaison with national defense agencies and coordinated the national defense program.

The office was abolished progressively, with the Division of Information terminated by EO 9182, June 13, 1942; liaison functions terminated with resignation of Liaison Officer for Emergency Management (the OEM director), November 3, 1943; and Division of Central Administrative Affairs abolished, effective November 30, 1944, by EO 9471, August 25, 1944, with the Department of the Treasury named as liquidator.

Successor agencies

  • United States Civil Service Commission
  • Office of War Information (nonspecific functions of OEM's Division of Information)
  • Procurement Division of the United States Treasury Department
  • Public Buildings Administration (nonspecific functions of OEM's Division of Central Administrative Services)
Agency-specific functions of OEM-coordinated agencies reverted to those agencies.
gollark: Apparently the first mention of coronavirus in my journal (it's computerized so I can search it very easily) was from January, and me mentioning that some teacher had been mentioning it at school.
gollark: It probably wouldn't have done me much good to have taken it seriously earlier, inasmuch as I'm not in a position to do anything about it/convince anyone else to, and the worst of the supply chain disruption everyone was hyping up was me having to have somewhat different pasta for a few days.
gollark: I think I was mostly just ignoring it and treating it as random bad background event #9372628 until march or so.
gollark: In general I mean.
gollark: > If you can see yourself needing something, and recognize the inevitability of wide scale spread, it’s preparation.I would assume that a lot of panic buyers assume they're just rationally preparing too.

See also

References

  1. "The Papers of (Albert) Wayne Coy". FDR Presidential Library and Museum.
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