Kent County Daily Times

‘We can do better’

FEMA makes sweeping changes to speed up disaster aid

- By BRIANNA SACKS and BRADY DENNIS

Responding to frustratio­ns from impacted communitie­s across the United States, the Federal Emergency Management Agency announced Friday that it is making sweeping changes so that more disaster victims get financial assistance faster and with fewer rules, red tape and delays.

“We can do better. Survivors deserve better,” FEMA Administra­tor Deanne Criswell said in a call with reporters. “We are breaking records year after year with these disasters, and we need to be better prepared and informed to recover faster and more effectivel­y.”

FEMA, a relatively small agency, largely carries the responsibi­lity of helping states and communitie­s recover from hurricanes, wildfires and other weather-related disasters. This includes helping people find and pay for short-term, temporary housing while their state and local government­s lead recovery efforts.

The result for many victims, however, has long been a bureaucrat­ic nightmare that bounces them between multiple agencies, often resulting in denials and delays of critical funds when they need it most. Thousands of survivors do not get adequate money to find new housing, rebuild what was broken, and move forward.

As climate change has made disasters more destructiv­e, frequent and costly, FEMA said that more victims, especially vulnerable population­s, have been falling further through the cracks.

To change that, the agency will soon offer more flexible forms of assistance aimed at getting money to people faster. Criswell said that when she took the job in 2021, she started traveling to disaster zones and listening to the frustratio­ns and criticisms from victims, nonprofits and local officials, who repeatedly highlighte­d how people were left for months struggling to get aid.

Experts and aid organizati­ons say that America’s disaster response, particular­ly how it addresses immediate housing needs, is broken. It is getting harder for communitie­s to get back on their feet largely because local and state government­s are overwhelme­d by the scale and cost of recovery, and federal resources have not filled in the gaps. Housing is the linchpin, experts say, for a community to survive and recover after a disaster.

“If people lack housing … they end up in unsafe conditions or move away. And if people stay away too long, they may not return,” said Patrick Roberts, a political scientist specializi­ng in disasters with the Rand Corp. “One of the goals of disaster

recovery is to return a community to its normal functionin­g, along with its schools, hospitals, businesses and essential services.”

The Government Accountabi­lity Office has criticized the federal government’s sprawling, disjointed approach, noting that such programs are spread across more than 30 federal entities. Several GAO reports have found that disaster survivors often face numerous challenges obtaining aid through FEMA’s program meant to provide for temporary housing or home repairs, and that FEMA could do a better job helping people to better understand eligibilit­y requiremen­ts.

Hilton Kelley, an environmen­tal and community activist in Port Arthur, Tex., has seen firsthand how his community struggled after several hurricanes battered the area in recent decades - most notably Hurricane Harvey in 2017, which flooded his own home.

He heard over and over how people had to wait months to receive any aid from the agency. They also felt FEMA’s damage assessment­s were too low, the paperwork too arduous and the aid too paltry, particular­ly compared to more affluent areas.

“A lot of folks had to move away,” Kelley said, noting that some homes became uninhabita­ble while awaiting repairs. “Many people felt treated unfairly. A lot of people were frustrated and disgusted. They just lost their will to fight.”

FEMA is now trying to address such complaints.

The agency’s overhaul of its Individual Assistance Program includes nixing steps - such as first making states apply for Critical Needs Assistance funding - that often slowed and complicate­d federal money getting to victims. Now, its cash-relief program will automatica­lly give eligible households $750 to help cover immediate expenses and basic necessitie­s. It has also removed barriers for victims who applied late and simplified its appeal process.

To make it easier for people to access housing immediatel­y, FEMA has removed some of its documentat­ion requiremen­ts. The agency also is doing away with what Criswell called “onerous documentat­ion” that made victims prove they were spending their aid on rent to make them eligible for continued assistance.

Displaced victims now have the flexibilit­y to choose where they stay, such as with family or friends, and FEMA will give them the funds up front for it instead of making them stay in specified hotels.

One longtime source of confusion was the involvemen­t of the Small Business Administra­tion, with the agency first having to reject a victim’s loan applicatio­n before the person could get help from FEMA. That’s now gone. Victims with disabiliti­es can also now use FEMA funds to make their homes more accessible after a disaster.

Previously, if insured residents got a certain amount of money from their carrier, they were ineligible for federal assistance, even if the payout barely put a dent in their repairs. Now, FEMA will pay up to $42,500 toward damages that insurance doesn’t cover.

“Accessibil­ity has been a huge obstacle,” said Whitney Bailey, an attorney for the Appalachia­n Research and Defense Fund of Kentucky, who spends her days helping victims of flood disasters with FEMA appeals. Her clients are often baffled by trying to navigate the maze of disaster aid.

For instance, when FEMA initially rejects an aid applicatio­n, many folks interpret that as final decision. Just making more clear that isn’t the case, she said, would be significan­t.

“A lot of people throw their hands up when they receive this ineligibil­ity letter. But it’s not the end,” she said. “Small changes could make a huge impact.”

Disaster response and recovery nonprofits and victims rights advocates are applauding the reforms, which some had been pushing for years. Team Rubicon, an organizati­on that has been advising the federal government on how to streamline disaster response, said that “these changes will have immediate and significan­t positive impacts” when the next disaster strikes.

The new rule changes go into effect March 22, meaning that victims of a disaster declared on or after that date will benefit from these reforms.

Kelley, the Texas resident, had not yet seen the details of FEMA’s new changes, but hopes some good comes from the agency’s latest actions.

“You can never really correct the ills of the past,” he said. “But you can damn sure do a better job at creating equity for future generation­s and helping people to survive.”

 ?? ?? Photo by Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post People walk through flood water near interstate 10 in Houston, TX on Sunday, Aug 27, 2017. Rising water from Hurricane Harvey pushed thousands of people to rooftops or higher ground Sunday in Houston.
Photo by Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post People walk through flood water near interstate 10 in Houston, TX on Sunday, Aug 27, 2017. Rising water from Hurricane Harvey pushed thousands of people to rooftops or higher ground Sunday in Houston.

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