Dayton Daily News

$29B sought for flood insurance, disaster aid

White House says flood program not fiscally sustainabl­e.

- By Andrew Taylor

The Trump WASHINGTON — administra­tion on Wednesday asked Congress for $29 billion in disaster aid to cover ongoing hurricane relief and recovery efforts and to pay federal flood insurance claims.

The request comes as the government is spending almost $200 million a day for emergency hurricane response and faces a surge in flood claims for federally insured homes and businesses slammed by hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria.

White House budget director Mick Mulvaney told lawmakers in officially submitting the request that the federal flood insurance program “is not designed to handle catastroph­ic losses like those caused by Harvey, Irma, and Maria. The NFIP is simply not fiscally sustainabl­e in its current form.”

Mulvaney proposed a package of changes to the flood insurance program that would protect low-income policyhold­ers from big rate hikes and allow the government to drop from the program properties that have been repeatedly flooded.

In the meantime, Wednesday’s request proposal would provide $16 billion to pay

those flood claims, along with $13 billion for Federal Emergency Management Agency disaster relief efforts. Federal firefighti­ng accounts would receive $577 million as well to replenish them after a disastrous season of Western wildfires.

Congress last month approved a $15.3 billion aid package that combined

community developmen­t block grant rebuilding funds with emergency money for cleanup, repair and housing.

The federal flood insurance program is on track to run out of money to pay claims during the week of Oct. 23. Mulvaney said more than 20,000 federal workers have been deployed by various agencies to help in the hurricane recovery effort.

The “burn rate” of almost $200 million a day is requiring an infusion of cash into FEMA coffers.

The request would bring the price tag for this year’s costly hurricane season to

about $44 billion — and that’s before rebuilding efforts get under way in earnest. A final estimate is a ways away since damage assess

ments of Puerto Rico may take some time, but Mulvaney said the administra

tion will submit assessment­s in time for a hoped-for budget agreement later this year.

The year-end package would rebuild infrastruc­ture, help people without insurance restore their homes,

and, perhaps, help Puerto Rico reconstitu­te its shattered electrical grid.

“The hundreds of thousands of people affected by Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria have suffered enough. Congress must provide whatever is necessary to get these families back on their feet and to rebuild their communitie­s,” said House Appropriat­ions Committee

Chairman Rodney Frelinghuy­sen, R-N.J. “This will be a long process, and this next round of funds certainly won’t be all that is needed.”

Congress is in the midst of an effort to reauthoriz­e the flood insurance program, which critics say makes taxpayers subsidize properties that have repeatedly flooded. A bipartisan effort to reform the program was enacted in 2012. It was significan­tly watered down just two years later after complaints of huge premium increases and resulting disruption­s in coastal real estate markets.

Trump raised eyebrows in a Tuesday interview with Fox News when he said the Puerto Rican government’s debt would have to be “wiped out.”

 ?? ELIZABETH CONLEY / HOUSTON CHRONICLE ?? The federal government is spending almost $200 million a day on its hurricane relief efforts in Texas, Florida and Puerto Rico, and the White House is seeking another $29 billion.
ELIZABETH CONLEY / HOUSTON CHRONICLE The federal government is spending almost $200 million a day on its hurricane relief efforts in Texas, Florida and Puerto Rico, and the White House is seeking another $29 billion.

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