{ "id": "IN10978", "type": "CRS Insight", "typeId": "INSIGHTS", "number": "IN10978", "active": true, "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "versions": [ { "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "id": 587320, "date": "2018-11-05", "retrieved": "2018-11-08T03:28:17.517932", "title": "Hurricane Michael: Brief Overview of FEMA Programs and Resources", "summary": "Introduction\nThis Insight provides a brief overview of emergency and major disaster declarations relevant to Hurricane Michael, and selected federal resources and links to CRS products related to Stafford Act declarations, disaster response, and recovery. \nHurricane Michael made landfall on the panhandle of Florida as a category 4 on October 10, 2018 and affected parts of Georgia. In anticipation of the landfall, President Trump issued an emergency declaration to Florida on October 7, 2018. On October 11, 2018, the President issued an emergency declaration to Georgia, and issued a major disaster declaration to Florida. Authorized under the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act, emergency declarations may authorize direct federal assistance and grant assistance to affected state and local governments to protect property, ensure public health and safety, and other activities that lessen or avert an incident becoming a catastrophic incident. \nStafford Act Declaration Process\nHistorically, Congress has expressed interest in the declaration process and the types of assistance those declarations authorize following natural disasters. When considering whether to request an emergency or major disaster declaration under the Stafford Act, the governor/chief may first decide whether the incident is severe enough to warrant assembling a traditional Preliminary Damage Assessment team to survey the damaged area. This decision rests primarily with the governor\u2019s judgment on whether a situation is \u201cbeyond the capabilities of the state.\u201d Under the Stafford Act, the President is authorized to declare an emergency or major disaster to authorize federal supplemental assistance. \nTypes of FEMA Assistance Provided for Major Disasters\nA major disaster declaration can authorize assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) for different purposes, depending on the needs of the affected area. These purposes include the following:\nPublic Assistance (PA), which provides grants to tribal, state, and local governments and certain private nonprofit organizations to provide emergency protective services, conduct debris removal operations, and repair or replace damaged public infrastructure. Although certain nonprofit organizations may be eligible for these grants, for-profit businesses are not.\nIndividual Assistance (IA), which provides direct aid to affected households, can take the form of housing assistance, other needs assistance, crisis counseling, case management services, legal services, and disaster unemployment assistance. \nHazard Mitigation Assistance (HMA), which funds mitigation and resiliency projects and programs, typically across the entire state. Mitigation projects can include the construction of safe rooms, buyouts of frequently flooded properties, and retrofitting of facilities.\nThe decision concerning which types of assistance to provide is made either when the major disaster is declared or when the declaration is amended. For many major disasters, all of the assistance types outlined above are authorized. For others, some assistance types are not authorized. The President can also amend major disaster declarations to decrease the state cost-share requirements for some of FEMA\u2019s Public Assistance grants.\nFederal Funding for Disaster Response and Recovery\nTypically, Congress also expresses interest in funding following a disaster declaration. FEMA\u2019s Disaster Relief Fund (DRF) is the primary source of federal government resources for response and recovery activities. It is often used as an indicator of the overall availability of federal resources for response and recovery. \nAs a result of annual and supplemental appropriations provided in FY2017 and FY2018, the balance in the DRF stood at slightly more than $25.36 billion unobligated balances the day before Hurricane Michael made landfall, according to FEMA. These funds do not expire at the end of the fiscal year, and are to remain available until expended. To put these funding levels in perspective, in the three months after Hurricane Sandy struck, the DRF obligated roughly $3.4 billion. When Hurricane Harvey struck, the DRF balance was roughly $3.5 billion.\nOther appropriated sources of funding include the Small Business Administration Disaster Loan Program, and grants from the Department of Housing Urban Development\u2019s Community Development Fund. The Fund received a $1.68 billion supplemental appropriation in Division I of the FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018 (P.L. 115-254) for grants to states for disaster relief and recovery activities \u201cin the most impacted and distressed areas resulting from a major disaster declared in 2018.\u201d\nNational Flood Insurance Program\nThe National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) is the primary source of flood insurance coverage for residential properties. Homeowners and tenants with NFIP flood insurance can make flood damage claims using the normal NFIP claims process. FEMA may institute a claims process specific to Hurricane Michael at a later date; for example, FEMA extended the proof of loss deadline for Hurricane Florence from 60 days to 1 year.\nAs of September 27, 2018, the NFIP had $5.983 billion available ($5.273 billion in the National Flood Insurance Fund and $710 million in the reserve fund), as well as $9.9 billion of borrowing authority from the Treasury and up to $1.96 billion of reinsurance for a single flood event with losses over $4 billion.\nFEMA Resources\nA list of emergency and major disaster declarations can be found at https://www.fema.gov/disasters. Declarations can be searched by state, incident type, and declaration type. For other FEMA public information see\nFEMA news releases: http://www.fema.gov/news-releases\nFEMA Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FEMA/\nFEMA Twitter: https://twitter.com/fema\nAdditional Online Resources\nHow citizens can prepare for disasters: http://www.ready.gov/\nNOAA National Hurricane Center: http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/\nCurrent flood and drought maps: http://waterwatch.usgs.gov/new/\nCurrent severe weather warnings, including tornados, thunderstorms, and flooding: http://www.spc.noaa.gov/products/wwa/\nCRS Resources\nCRS has numerous written products available on various aspects of federal emergency management policy. The following materials provide more detailed information on policies, programs, and processes for disaster declarations and assistance.\nCRS Report R41981, Congressional Primer on Responding to Major Disasters and Emergencies\nCRS Report R44977, Preliminary Damage Assessments for Major Disasters: Overview, Analysis, and Policy Observations\nCRS Report R43784, FEMA\u2019s Disaster Declaration Process: A Primer\nCRS Report R43990, FEMA\u2019s Public Assistance Grant Program: Background and Considerations for Congress\nCRS Report R44593, Introduction to the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP)\nCRS Report R43560, Deployable Federal Assets Supporting Domestic Disaster Response Operations: Summary and Considerations for Congress\nCRS Report RL31734, Federal Disaster Assistance Response and Recovery Programs: Brief Summaries\nCRS Report R44412, SBA Disaster Loan Program: Frequently Asked Questions\nCRS Report R45238, FEMA and SBA Disaster Assistance for Individuals and Households: Application Process, Determinations, and Appeals\nCRS Report R45085, FEMA Individual Assistance Programs: In Brief\nIn addition, numerous CRS experts are available to assist Congress by request. See\nCRS Report R40881, Hurricane Events: CRS Experts\nCRS Report R43519, Natural Disasters and Hazards: CRS Experts\nCRS Report R40882, Flooding Events: CRS Experts", "type": "CRS Insight", "typeId": "INSIGHTS", "active": true, "formats": [ { "format": "HTML", "encoding": "utf-8", "url": "http://www.crs.gov/Reports/IN10978", "sha1": "3de07c62094c10e0835c93a2579de5ab12c9d50f", "filename": "files/20181105_IN10978_3de07c62094c10e0835c93a2579de5ab12c9d50f.html", "images": {} }, { "format": "PDF", "encoding": null, "url": "http://www.crs.gov/Reports/pdf/IN10978", "sha1": "8ce739c99f888048959d4f9b7ee1dd09e38db57e", "filename": "files/20181105_IN10978_8ce739c99f888048959d4f9b7ee1dd09e38db57e.pdf", "images": {} } ], "topics": [] }, { "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "id": 586257, "date": "2018-10-11", "retrieved": "2018-10-12T13:16:29.833484", "title": "Hurricane Michael: Brief Overview of FEMA Programs and Resources", "summary": "Introduction\nThis Insight provides a brief overview of emergency and major disaster declarations relevant to Hurricane Michael, and selected federal resources and links to CRS products related to Stafford Act declarations, disaster response, and recovery. \nHurricane Michael made landfall on the panhandle of Florida as a category 4 on October 10, 2018 and affected parts of Georgia. In anticipation of the landfall, President Trump issued an emergency declaration to Florida on October 7, 2018. On October 11, 2018, the President issued an emergency declaration to Georgia, and issued a major disaster declaration to Florida. Authorized under the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act, emergency declarations may authorize direct federal assistance and grant assistance to affected state and local governments to protect property, ensure public health and safety, and other activities that lessen or avert an incident becoming a catastrophic incident. \nStafford Act Declaration Process\nHistorically, Congress has expressed interest in the declaration process and the types of assistance those declarations authorize following natural disasters. When considering whether to request an emergency or major disaster declaration under the Stafford Act, the governor/chief may first decide whether the incident is severe enough to warrant assembling a traditional Preliminary Damage Assessment team to survey the damaged area. This decision rests primarily with the governor\u2019s judgment on whether a situation is \u201cbeyond the capabilities of the state.\u201d Under the Stafford Act, the President is authorized to declare an emergency or major disaster to authorize federal supplemental assistance. \nTypes of FEMA Assistance Provided for Major Disasters\nA major disaster declaration can authorize assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) for different purposes, depending on the needs of the affected area. These purposes include the following:\nPublic Assistance (PA), which provides grants to tribal, state, and local governments and certain private nonprofit organizations to provide emergency protective services, conduct debris removal operations, and repair or replace damaged public infrastructure. Although certain nonprofit organizations may be eligible for these grants, for-profit businesses are not.\nIndividual Assistance (IA), which provides direct aid to affected households, can take the form of housing assistance, other needs assistance, crisis counseling, case management services, legal services, and disaster unemployment assistance. \nHazard Mitigation Assistance (HMA), which funds mitigation and resiliency projects and programs, typically across the entire state. Mitigation projects can include the construction of safe rooms, buyouts of frequently flooded properties, and retrofitting of facilities.\nThe decision concerning which types of assistance to provide is made either when the major disaster is declared or when the declaration is amended. For many major disasters, all of the assistance types outlined above are authorized. For others, some assistance types are not authorized. The President can also amend major disaster declarations to decrease the state cost-share requirements for some of FEMA\u2019s Public Assistance grants.\nFederal Funding for Disaster Response and Recovery\nTypically, Congress also expresses interest in funding following a disaster declaration. FEMA\u2019s Disaster Relief Fund (DRF) is the primary source of federal government resources for response and recovery activities. It is often used as an indicator of the overall availability of federal resources for response and recovery. \nAs a result of annual and supplemental appropriations provided in FY2017 and FY2018, the balance in the DRF stood at slightly more than $25.36 billion unobligated balances the day before Hurricane Michael made landfall, according to FEMA. These funds do not expire at the end of the fiscal year, and are to remain available until expended. To put these funding levels in perspective, in the three months after Hurricane Sandy struck, the DRF obligated roughly $3.4 billion. When Hurricane Harvey struck, the DRF balance was roughly $3.5 billion.\nOther appropriated sources of funding include the Small Business Administration Disaster Loan Program, and grants from the Department of Housing Urban Development\u2019s Community Development Fund. The Fund received a $1.68 billion supplemental appropriation in Division I of the FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018 (P.L. 115-254) for grants to states for disaster relief and recovery activities \u201cin the most impacted and distressed areas resulting from a major disaster declared in 2018.\u201d\nNational Flood Insurance Program\nThe National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) is the primary source of flood insurance coverage for residential properties. Homeowners and tenants with NFIP flood insurance can make flood damage claims using the normal NFIP claims process. FEMA may institute a claims process specific to Hurricane Michael at a later date; for example, FEMA extended the proof of loss deadline for Hurricane Florence from 60 days to one year.\nAs of September 27, 2018, the NFIP had $5.983 billion available ($5.273 billion in the National Flood Insurance Fund and $710 million in the reserve fund), as well as $9.9 billion of borrowing authority from the Treasury and up to $1.96 billion of reinsurance for a single flood event with losses over $4 billion.\nFEMA Resources\nA list of emergency and major disaster declarations can be found at https://www.fema.gov/disasters. Declarations can be searched by state, incident type, and declaration type. For other FEMA public information see\nFEMA news releases: http://www.fema.gov/news-releases\nFEMA Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FEMA/\nFEMA Twitter: https://twitter.com/fema\nAdditional Online Resources\nHow citizens can prepare for disasters: http://www.ready.gov/\nNOAA National Hurricane Center: http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/\nHurricane Michael interactive storm track: https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/refresh/graphics_at4+shtml/233118.shtml?gm_track \nCurrent flood and drought maps: http://waterwatch.usgs.gov/new/\nCurrent severe weather warnings, including tornados, thunderstorms, and flooding: http://www.spc.noaa.gov/products/wwa/\nCRS Resources\nCRS has numerous written products available on various aspects of federal emergency management policy. The following materials provide more detailed information on policies, programs, and processes for disaster declarations and assistance.\nCRS Report R41981, Congressional Primer on Responding to Major Disasters and Emergencies\nCRS Report R44977, Preliminary Damage Assessments for Major Disasters: Overview, Analysis, and Policy Observations\nCRS Report R43784, FEMA\u2019s Disaster Declaration Process: A Primer\nCRS Report R43990, FEMA\u2019s Public Assistance Grant Program: Background and Considerations for Congress\nCRS Report R44593, Introduction to the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP)\nCRS Report R43560, Deployable Federal Assets Supporting Domestic Disaster Response Operations: Summary and Considerations for Congress\nCRS Report RL31734, Federal Disaster Assistance Response and Recovery Programs: Brief Summaries\nCRS Report R44412, SBA Disaster Loan Program: Frequently Asked Questions\nCRS Report R45238, FEMA and SBA Disaster Assistance for Individuals and Households: Application Process, Determinations, and Appeals\nCRS Report R45085, FEMA Individual Assistance Programs: In Brief\nIn addition, numerous CRS experts are available to assist Congress by request. See\nCRS Report R40881, Hurricane Events: CRS Experts\nCRS Report R43519, Natural Disasters and Hazards: CRS Experts\nCRS Report R40882, Flooding Events: CRS Experts", "type": "CRS Insight", "typeId": "INSIGHTS", "active": true, "formats": [ { "format": "HTML", "encoding": "utf-8", "url": "http://www.crs.gov/Reports/IN10978", "sha1": "12b09e543b4981dab940d62bcb2d3406e00a8d6f", "filename": "files/20181011_IN10978_12b09e543b4981dab940d62bcb2d3406e00a8d6f.html", "images": {} }, { "format": "PDF", "encoding": null, "url": "http://www.crs.gov/Reports/pdf/IN10978", "sha1": "8bd7d2a7a8ee492b592db553346cf89b311c635a", "filename": "files/20181011_IN10978_8bd7d2a7a8ee492b592db553346cf89b311c635a.pdf", "images": {} } ], "topics": [] } ], "topics": [ "Appropriations", "CRS Insights" ] }