The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Congress approves $36.5B in hurricane, wildfire relief

But lawmakers in storm-ruined states seek more funding.

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Congress gave final approval on Tuesday to a $36.5 billion emergency spending plan to pay for ongoing relief from recent natural disasters — but lawmakers from storm-ravaged states are expecting more money the next time the White House asks for more emergency funding.

The spending deal includes $18.7 billion for the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s response to natural disasters stretching from the storm-scarred beaches of Puerto Rico to the scorched vineyards of Northern California. There’s also a $16 billion increase in the National Flood Insurance Program’s borrowing limit; $576.5 million to address wildfires in the West; and $1.2 billion for nutrition assistance programs that will provide low-income Puerto Rican residents relief after Hurricane Maria slammed the island.

Relief for Puerto Rico dominated the latest round of emergency funding, with more than 80 percent of the island still without power more than a month after the storm and growing concerns that a failure to restore power and provide basic services to residents could cause a mass exodus to the mainland United States.

The bill now goes to President Donald Trump for his signature.

Several senators in both parties slowed considerat­ion of the legislatio­n in recent days, saying they expected more relief for their states or significan­t reforms to the flood insurance program and other shipping and labor laws before final approval. None of those concerns derailed the bill and the White House has assured lawmakers they will address their concerns in the next round of emergency funding they expect to request next month.

Sens. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and Bill Nelson, D-Fla., are clamoring for money to help Florida’s distressed citrus industry after Hurricane Irma battered the state. The state’s agricultur­al industry sustained more than $2.5 billion in damages, including more than $760 million for the citrus industry alone, according to Nelson’s office.

“It’s not an industry that benefits from anything extraordin­ary from the government. They literally are on the verge of going away unless we help them sooner rather than later,” Rubio warned on Monday.

Meanwhile, Sens. John Cornyn, R-Texas, and Ted Cruz, R-Texas, were pushing for more money to help communitie­s upended by Hurricane Harvey, and they threatened to hold up Tuesday’s vote. But last week, they relented when given assurances by the Trump administra­tion that Texas’s concerns would be better addressed in the next funding request. Despite those assurances, Cornyn is blocking a vote to confirm the deputy director of the Office of Management and Budget as leverage.

“Promises were made from OMB to fully support Texans as they continue to recover from Hurricane Harvey, and he’s going to make sure those promises are kept,” a Cornyn spokeswoma­n said.

A handful of Republican­s withheld their support because the bill does not offset the emergency spending with cuts elsewhere in the federal budget or because the bill failed to revamp the NFIP — a longtime pursuit of conservati­ves.

“Instead of helping the victims of these disasters through responsibl­e aid paired with lasting reform, Congress has rushed to its favorite solution: Billions in new spending, with little accountabi­lity or oversight,” Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, said in a Senate floor speech Monday evening as he announced his opposition.

Other senators, including Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., voted against the measure because it failed to lift Jones Act requiremen­ts that any ship carrying relief supplies to Puerto Rico be American built, owned, flagged and crewed.

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