Orlando Sentinel

Legal aid group gets grant to help hurricane victims

- By Kate Santich

Florida nonprofit organizati­ons have been awarded nearly $3 million in grants to help low-income residents resolve legal issues from hurricanes Irma and Maria, officials announced this week.

The 2017 storms, separated by just two weeks, left a trail of destructio­n across the state and caused thousands of displaced Puerto Ricans to evacuate here from the island. A year later, residents are still facing foreclosur­es, bankruptci­es, FEMA and insurance disputes, the aftermath of contractor scams and problems.

The new disaster-relief funding comes from the Legal Services Corporatio­n, an independen­t nonprofit establishe­d by Congress in 1974. Community Legal Services of Mid-Florida, one of four organizati­ons in the state to receive the grant money, will be able to help hundreds of additional clients in Orange, Osceola, Lake, Seminole, Brevard, Citrus, Flagler, Hernando, Marion, Putnam, Sumter and Volusia as a result.

To qualify for help, residents generally cannot earn more than 125 percent of the federal poverty threshold, other though there may be exceptions for victims of domestic violence and the elderly. To see if you qualify or for other questions, contact the mid-Florida helpline at 1-800-405-1417.

Community Legal Services of Mid-Florida is a fullservic­e nonprofit law firm specializi­ng in cases of consumer protection, family law, domestic violence, elder abuse and neglect, health and income-related benefits, housing and veterans’ benefits.

 ?? RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? This home in Apopka was made uninhabita­ble by Hurricane Irma.
RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL This home in Apopka was made uninhabita­ble by Hurricane Irma.

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