Orlando Sentinel

FEMA’s failing disaster victims who are still desperate for housing

- By Diane Yentel

After Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria, tens of thousands of people were displaced from their damaged or destroyed homes. Many thousands of them have spent the past 10 months living in cramped motel rooms paid for by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. When FEMA ends this housing assistance on Saturday, June 30, nearly 2,000 families — including 600 in Florida — will be evicted from their hotel rooms, whether or not they have an alternate place to stay. The only support offered by FEMA is a one-way ticket back to Puerto Rico, where rebuilding efforts have barely begun.

While FEMA claims it is “doing all it can to provide stable housing to these U.S. citizens who have suffered loss and displaceme­nt,” this is simply false. As destitute people are evicted from their hotel rooms with nowhere else to go, we should all know that this is a conscious policy choice by the Trump administra­tion.

Since the hurricanes made landfall, FEMA Administra­tor Brock Long has consistent­ly refused to provide critical housing solutions, like the Disaster Housing Assistance Program, to help the most-vulnerable survivors get back on their feet. DHAP provides families with stable, affordable homes as they rebuild their lives and connects them to local housing profession­als to find permanent housing solutions, to secure employment and to connect to public benefits.

FEMA has unnecessar­ily forced thousands of struggling families to live out of motel rooms. In doing so, the agency has relied on a program that, by design, weeds out many of the lowest-income people from receiving help altogether. Participat­ing hotels turn away displaced families by charging fees on top of the amount FEMA will cover or requiring families to pay security deposits or have credit cards — all of which serve as barriers for low-income families who have already depleted their limited savings.

Thousands of displaced, lowincome families had little choice but to move into uninhabita­ble or overcrowde­d homes, stay at shelters or sleep in their cars or on the streets. There are multiple accounts of people unable to access FEMA hotels, who later needed emergency hospital care after returning to mold-infested homes. Disaster victims are now entering state homeless shelter systems because of FEMA’s unwillingn­ess to provide appropriat­e disaster housing assistance.

Despite DHAP’s track record and strong bipartisan support, FEMA has rejected multiple requests for assistance made by impacted people, HUD, dozens of members of Congress, Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello, and NLIHC’s Disaster Housing Recovery Coalition of over 700 local, state and national organizati­ons working toward a complete disaster recovery for the lowestinco­me people.

Instead, FEMA has spread misinforma­tion about DHAP with the public and congressio­nal staff. FEMA argued that stateadmin­istered disaster housing programs are sufficient to meet the needs of displaced households. But state-run programs put in place as an alternativ­e to DHAP are not accessible to survivors who have been displaced across state boundaries and the programs have been plagued by significan­t delays. In total, fewer than 320 households in Florida and 150 households in Texas are in the pipeline to receive state housing assistance, despite far greater numbers of households in need.

FEMA falsely claims that DHAP is too expensive. By our estimate, the federal government wasted $142 million by keeping more than 6,000 families in FEMA hotels for eight months instead of using DHAP. Those wasted funds could have instead been used to provide DHAP to more than 3,200 additional families in need of a stable home while they rebuild their lives. Moreover, solutions like DHAP are three times less expensive than the cost to local government­s to respond to the predictabl­e increase in homelessne­ss.

Congress must hold FEMA accountabl­e for its ineffectiv­e disaster housing response and protect families in need. This starts with enacting the Disaster Housing Assistance Act introduced by U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., and the Housing Victims of Major Disasters Act introduced by Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., to immediatel­y activate DHAP and help ensure that those impacted by the next disaster are not victims of a conscious policy choice by the administra­tion to leave them behind.

 ??  ?? Diane Yentel is president and CEO of the National Low Income Housing Coalition.
Diane Yentel is president and CEO of the National Low Income Housing Coalition.

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