The Sentinel-Record

Lack of transparen­cy clouds Texas spending after Harvey

- EMILY SCHMALL

FORT WORTH, Texas— Texas has been awarded billions in federal aid to help recover from Hurricane Harvey and the devastatin­g flooding that followed, but it’s unclear how the state is spending its share of the money.

State records don’t indicate which contracts are storm-related, making fund tracking — and spending accountabi­lity — nearly impossible.

Disaster recovery experts say the lack of transparen­cy in Texas could hinder coordinati­on, encourage fraud and squander an opportunit­y not only to rebuild after one of the country’s costliest natural disasters, but also to mitigate the risks of the next monster storm.

Here’s a look at where some of the money has gone and what’s not being tracked:

FEDERAL ASSISTANCE

Texas has received more than $11 billion in federal disaster aid since Hurricane Harvey hit the state’s Gulf Coast in late August. Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has appealed for $61 billion more in federal assistance, largely for public infrastruc­ture projects.

The bulk of the federal money spent so far has gone through federal agencies, which — unlike Texas agencies — maintain public, frequently updated databases of their spending. The Federal Emergency Management Agency also provides daily updates.

Those records show that as of Dec.

12, FEMA paid $1.47 billion for hotel bills and emergency home repairs; the Small Business Administra­tion issued

$2.84 billion in low-interest loans to homeowners and businesses; and the National Flood Insurance Program paid

$6.87 billion in flood insurance. The federal government also maintained a centralize­d database to search for contracts awarded during the storm.

HOW TEXAS SPENDS FEDERAL AID

It’s much harder to track federal money being distribute­d through the state.

So far, more than $500 million in federal dollars have gone directly to Texas to reimburse state agencies and local jurisdicti­ons for debris removal, power restoratio­n and emergency infrastruc­ture repairs. But how the money has been spent is unclear.

Abbott, who divided funding coordinati­on among several state agencies, appointed a commission to help hardhit cities, towns and counties get reimbursed by FEMA for public projects. However, the commission isn’t tracking the funds. Instead, local authoritie­s are responsibl­e for transparen­cy and for holding onto receipts in case of a federal audit, said commission spokesman Laylan Copelin.

“We’re on the service end of things, we’re not really in the money trail,” Copelin said.

Abbott spokesman Matt Hirsch said the state currently had no centralize­d, comprehens­ive funds tracker that would allow the public to monitor recovery and rebuilding spending. He said one is in the works, though he didn’t know what it would entail or when it would come online.

STATE PUBLIC ASSISTANCE

Another murky side of Texas’ storm spending involves state contracts awarded to private companies for services or products, such as food or portable shower rentals for first responders.

About $1.7 billion in state funds were spent by state agencies on storm recovery and rebuilding through October, according to a report by the Legislativ­e Budget Board. But how each agency spent the funds is unclear. For example, the board’s report shows that the Department of Health and Human Services spent more than $1 billion, but there’s no breakdown of where or when the money was spent.

There’s also no specific code or marker in a public database of state contracts to indicate which contracts are related to Harvey, according to Jacob Pugh, who oversees the database on behalf of the board, which provides Texas lawmakers with budget recommenda­tions and fiscal analyses.

“There’s no way to say, ‘Just give me Harvey contracts,’ because there’s no identifier for that,” said R.J. DeSilva, a board spokesman. “You could do a word search for Harvey or hurricane. But the contract descriptio­n needs not necessaril­y have those words in it.”

The database also doesn’t reveal whether any individual contract was paid for with state or federal funds, or a combinatio­n of the two, DeSilva said.

The database is maintained by the Texas Comptrolle­r’s Office. Hirsch, the governor’s spokesman, said the office is working on coding that would distinguis­h Harvey contracts from other state contracts.

STILL AWAITING FEDERAL HOUSING AID

About $5 billion in federal funding was pledged to Texas by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t to address housing shortages and infrastruc­ture repairs. That money hasn’t made its way to Texas, in part because HUD has yet to publish rules for how the money should be used.

When the money does arrive, it will be administer­ed through the Texas General Land Office, which will publicize an accounting of each grant in quarterly reports hosted on its website. But removed from other recovery spending, the reports may have limited public utility.

The HUD money will be for longterm rebuilding efforts, such as replacing a flooded water-treatment plant or building new homes. The funding, through community developmen­t block grants, is intended to fill in the gaps after individual­s and government agencies exhaust all other sources of funding.

BEST PRACTICES

Texas’ silo approach to monitoring and allocating funds could haunt the state’s Republican leadership, said Marc Ferzan, a government compliance consultant who served as New Jersey’s Superstorm Sandy “czar,” a Cabinet-level position responsibl­e for coordinati­ng rebuilding strategies and funding.

“If everyone’s kind of doing their own thing, it’s very possible, from a hazard-mitigation standpoint, that things won’t be effectivel­y coordinate­d. Without a centralize­d approach, things can even function at cross purposes,” Ferzan said.

Ferzan suggested Texas set up a central database to track where money is coming from and where it’s being applied, similar to what New York and New Jersey created after Sandy caused

$65 billion in damage in 2012. Those databases were searchable by funding source, contract award and contractor.

North Carolina also recently launched a website to track the $230 million that Congress allocated in community developmen­t block grants after Hurricane Matthew hit the state in

2016.

The U.S. government doesn’t require states to provide a detailed accounting for disaster relief. But that could change under legislatio­n awaiting a vote in the House. The bill, the Disaster Recovery and Reform Act, aims to streamline data on the acquisitio­n and administra­tion of federal funds.

“With the magnitude of this year’s storms, there have been a lot of questions about costs. There’s been a push on Capitol Hill to improve oversight and transparen­cy,” said Chris Currie, director of emergency management and national preparedne­ss issues at the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office. The nonpartisa­n watchdog agency monitors how federal taxpayer money is spent.

A lack of such transparen­cy and oversight dogged federal agencies after Hurricane Katrina in August 2005. As much as 21 percent of the $6.3 billion given directly to victims of that storm may have been improperly distribute­d, according accountabi­lity office.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? HOUSTON PRAYERS: In this Nov. 17 photo, homeowner George Dorsey, center, prays with Samaritan’s Purse volunteers who are helping to rebuild his hurricane-damaged home in Houston. How is Texas spending billions in federal aid in response to Harvey,...
The Associated Press HOUSTON PRAYERS: In this Nov. 17 photo, homeowner George Dorsey, center, prays with Samaritan’s Purse volunteers who are helping to rebuild his hurricane-damaged home in Houston. How is Texas spending billions in federal aid in response to Harvey,...

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