Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Disaster aid bill faces tricky path as it heads to Senate

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON — A battle over funding for Puerto Rico is complicati­ng the path forward for a long-delayed disaster aid bill that’s a top political priority for some of President Donald Trump’s Republican allies as it heads to the Senate floor this week.

At stake is $13.5 billion emergency relief legislatio­n to help southern farmers, rebuild hurricaned­amaged military bases, repair water systems, and assist victims of last year’s California wildfires, among other purposes.

The measure has wide backing from Democrats and Republican­s and is perhaps most ardently backed by Trump loyalists such as David Perdue, RGa., and Thom Tillis, RN.C., who face potentiall­y difficult re-election fights next year.

The White House, however, isn’t pleased with the bill and is particular­ly opposed to efforts by Democrats to make hurricane relief to Puerto Rico more generous. Senate Republican­s are supporting food aid to the devastated island and are working with top Democrats like Patrick Leahy of Vermont to try to speed passage of the measure by adding additional help for Puerto Rico.

The House passed a companion $14.2 billion version of the legislatio­n in January, but it got tangled up in the politics of the partial government shutdown and Trump’s demands for a southern border wall.

The measure is especially sought by lawmakers from southern states like Florida, Georgia and North Carolina, which were hit by hurricanes Michael and Florence last year. There’s money to respond to an earthquake in Alaska, California wildfires and floods in South Carolina, and for the ongoing recovery effort in Puerto Rico, which was devastated by back-to-back hurricanes in 2017.

And now there’s widespread flooding in the Midwest.

In an official position paper in January, the White House said the House bill was far too generous, objecting to almost $6 billion worth of the measure. But it stopped short of an outright veto threat, and GOP aides say Trump has since told Perdue that he’d sign the Senate version of the bill, which mirrors the House plan in most respects.

For many lawmakers, passage is already overdue. Puerto Rico has already cut nutrition benefits by roughly 25 percent amid the funding crunch and Georgia lawmakers warn that their farmers need help in the run-up to planting season.

Trump’s commitment to aid to storm-ravaged Puerto Rico is in question, however.

Last fall, Trump tweeted falsely that the government of Puerto Rico was using disaster aid funding to pay off its debt, and earlier this year Trump reportedly contemplat­ed trying to shift some of Puerto Rico’s disaster aid to address disaster in the mainland U.S.

Allies of Puerto Rico say Trump treats the U.S. territory worse than states that have endured far less devastatin­g hurricane disasters.

“These folks are living under the American flag,” said Rep. Jose Serrano, D-N.Y. “They should not be treated any differentl­y than any other American citizen.”

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 ?? DENNIS M. RIVERA/AP 2018 ?? The White House opposes Democrats’ efforts for more disaster relief aid to Puerto Rico.
DENNIS M. RIVERA/AP 2018 The White House opposes Democrats’ efforts for more disaster relief aid to Puerto Rico.

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