Dayton Daily News

Hurricane victims from2017 still awaiting aid

- ByJuanA. Lozano

HOUSTON— Some Houston residents say they endured difficult, often hazardous living conditions while waiting months, even years for help from the city to fix flood- damaged homes after Hurricane Harvey.

Sleeping in a closet because itwas the only space that didn’t reek of mold. Dealing with rodents and roaches that would come in through warped or rotted flooring. Couch surfing at 67 years old until patchwork repairsmad­e a home temporaril­y habitable.

Those were just some of the things people dealt with as theywaited for help they say never came, despite submitting — and resubmitti­ng — paperwork.

Three years after Harvey, some Houston residents feel angry and abandoned as their repair efforts were bogged down by a city program they described as slow and bureaucrat­ic. The program has finished rebuilding less than 70 homes since it started January 2019.

Some residents, like 70-year- old Doris Brown, turned to nonprofits and the state. They also formed a group — the Harvey Forgotten Survivors Caucus — to bring attention to their plight.

“We have a right to be angry. We past angry now. Wemadashel­l,” saidBrown, whose home had to be rebuilt because of mold.

City officials admit the repair program’s progress

has been slowbut blame this partly on the Texas General Land Office, or GLO, which oversees the funding. The city accused the land office of providingm­uddled guidance, resulting in rejection of homeowners’ applicatio­ns.

“The state GLO has not been a good partner with us,” said Mayor Sylvester Turner.

The land office said the city was unprepared to run the program and rejected help.

“The city of Houston’s lack of progress is unaccept

able,” said GLO spokespers­on Brittany Eck.

The city sued the GLO to stop it from taking over the funding. The GLO also began its own repair program in Houston, adding to residents’ confusion.

“The government is bickering over funding as far as who it belongs to, but it really belongs to the residents and the residents are still herewaitin­g with hands empty,” said Julia Orduña, with Texas Housers, a nonprofit that works on housing issues.

Harvey dumped up to 50

inches of rain in the Houston area after making landfall on Aug. 25, 2017. It killed 68 people and caused about $ 125 billion in damage in Texas.

The city received nearly $1.3 billion in federal funding to repair and rebuild homes, provide rental assistance and create newafforda­ble housing.

A third of the funding — nearly $428 million — went to aprogramfo­rhome repair and reconstruc­tion.

As of the end of July, the programhad fixed 68homes and reimbursed 73 people who did their own repairs. The land office had fixed nearly 1,800 homes across Texas as of Aug. 13.

In the Houston area, Harvey flooded more than 150,000 homes, with more than 16,000 residents identified as potentiall­y needing repair help.

About 50% of Houston households impacted by Harveywere low- and moderate- income, according to the city. Community advocates say many damaged homes were in Black and Latino neighborho­ods that have lacked economic investment­and proper infrastruc­ture to keep them from flooding.

“They’re still in the double digits of homes repaired. No matter how you slice it, that’s a failure,” said Ben Hirsch, with West Street Recovery, a local nonprofit that rebuilt Brown’s home and that of 59-year-old Lawrence Hester.

For nearly 2½ years after Harvey, Hester lived with three relatives inahometha­t became overrun by black mold, rodents, roaches and sometimes snakes. He used buckets bought at a dollar store to collect water leaking from the Harvey- damaged roof.

“Living in those conditions for so long, I felt like itwas normal,” Hester said.

Hester’ s home has mostly been rebuilt with a few minor repairs on hold becauseWes­t Street Recovery stopped constructi­on due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. The pandemic also forced theHarvey Forgotten

Survivors Caucus to move its advocacy efforts online.

Unable to get help from the city, Lloyd Nelms, 41, accepted an offer from the GLO. Every morning during the 17-day constructi­on process, Nelmstrave­led fromhis hotel to watch and reassure himself it wasn’t a dream. On June 2, he got the keys to his rebuilt home.

“I lost hope in the city, but I didn’t lose hope in God,” said Nelms.

Houston officials say critics are focusing only on the number of finished home repairs and ignoring their other projects, including developing over 3,500 new affordable rental homes and so far helping 136 families through a homebuyer assistance program.

TomMcCasla­nd, director of Houston’s Housing and Community Developmen­t Department, which runs the repair program, declined an interview request, citing the lawsuit. In a statement, he said his agency’s focus remains on helping residents recover.

Residents and advocates saywhile the GLO has been more responsive than the city, they still have concerns. The biggest one is a rule limiting the number of bedroomsin a rebuilthom­e. The GLO says this allows more homes to be fixed.

Brown said she and the caucus will continue pushing for change in howdisaste­r victims get help.

She’s been inspired in part by recent protests for racial justice. “We are resilient people,” Brown said.

 ?? AP ?? Houston resident LawrenceHe­ster looks at a hole in the ceiling of his daughter’s bedroomtha­twas caused by a leaky roof damaged during Hurricane Harvey in 2017. Hester said hewas unable to get help froma city programcre­ated to fix homes.
AP Houston resident LawrenceHe­ster looks at a hole in the ceiling of his daughter’s bedroomtha­twas caused by a leaky roof damaged during Hurricane Harvey in 2017. Hester said hewas unable to get help froma city programcre­ated to fix homes.

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