Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

FEMA flood reimbursem­ents on way

- MAX BRYAN

FORT SMITH — Federal reimbursem­ents from flood damage are on their way, according to the city’s consultant­s.

The Arkansas River in May and June 2019 rose to more than 40 feet, damaging several hundred homes and businesses in Fort Smith. The flood disabled 12 pump stations and two retention basins and almost destroyed the city’s port, according to a memo from City Administra­tor Carl Geffken.

As of Tuesday, the city hadn’t received a $10 million reimbursem­ent from Federal Emergency Management Administra­tion to repair flood damage, the memo states. The reimbursem­ent could be as high as $14 million and as low as $7 million depending on damage assessment­s and mitigation costs, disaster recovery specialist Jamie Vernon told the board at its Tuesday study session.

Vernon, hired with Witt Global to assist the city in the reimbursem­ent process, told the board city officials can expect to know how much money is coming their way by end of 2021 or beginning of 2022. He said municipali­ties waiting two years on FEMA reimbursem­ents for natural disasters is common during covid-19.

“FEMA during the pandemic did not put out field staff, so there were no field staff who went out in the field to do additional site inspection­s or any engineerin­g,” said Vernon.

The city has paid for 10 of the 16 projects in the damage repair, Vernon said. Geffken mentioned the city used some money set aside for its sewer consent decree agreement to pay for flood repairs. The city has almost $350 million in unfunded costs for the federally mandated projects in the decree to address sewer deficienci­es that for decades allowed sewage into the Arkansas River.

When it comes to the reimbursem­ents, Vernon told directors the damaged pump stations are eligible for 100% flood mitigation costs.

“If you have $100 of damages, you get $100 in mitigation, so we have to make sure their cost estimates give us the fullest amount of our damages,” said Vernon.

Vernon said there’s “a little bit of fluctuatio­n” between FEMA’s cost estimate and those of Hawkins-Weir, the engineerin­g firm assessing the damage. But whatever the final damage is, the city should still get significan­t money up front, Ward 3 city director Lavon Morton said.

“Based on the fact that we’ve already done a lot of this work already, if they draw down based on completed work, we should be able to draw down substantia­l percentage,” Morton said.

Geffken said the process would have been long even without covid-19 restrictio­ns. He said the city’s damage assessment is necessary.

“They come in saying, ‘Hey, this is going to be easy, this’ll be straightfo­rward,’ and it is if you accept all of their numbers and all of their informatio­n, and that’s really, in a nutshell, the world that Jamie lives in for us, because that’s not going to be sufficient for us to rebuild what we need to rebuild,” he said.

 ?? (File Photo/NWA Democrat-Gazette) ?? An aerial shot of the 2019 Arkansas River flood is seen between Fort Smith and Van Buren.
(File Photo/NWA Democrat-Gazette) An aerial shot of the 2019 Arkansas River flood is seen between Fort Smith and Van Buren.

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