With thousands still in shelters, FEMA's caution about temporary housing hinders hurricane recovery
Source: Washington Post
With thousands still in shelters, FEMAs caution about temporary housing hinders hurricane recovery
By Kimberly Kindy and Aaron C. Davis October 28 at 6:33 PM
As Hurricane Harvey flooded Houston in late August, Federal Emergency Management Agency Director William Brock Long said he wanted to avoid a repeat of Katrina-style temporary housing that shattered New Orleans communities.
The last resort is to bring in manufactured homes and travel trailers, Long said.
But less than a week later, FEMA went on a mobile home-buying binge, spending nearly $300 million on 4,500 units, the largest purchase of the homes since the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, federal contracting records show. Another 1,700 mobile homes in FEMAs inventory were also readied.
Yet most of those homes remain warehoused. FEMA has made the hunt for permanent rental housing its top priority and is reluctant to deploy the notorious homes and trailers. The structures were sharply criticized after Katrina for emitting toxic fumes, displacing residents far from their communities and later becoming eyesores while stored in massive outdoor facilities.
That decision is crippling recovery efforts in states where thousands of people remain in shelters and hotels more than six weeks after massive hurricanes destroyed their homes. Now in Texas and Florida where rental stock is inadequate state officials are cranking up the pressure on FEMA to release the mobile units.
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Read more: https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/with-thousands-still-in-shelters-femas-caution-about-temporary-housing-hinders-hurricane-recovery/2017/10/28/58bd2ae0-acdf-11e7-be94-fabb0f1e9ffb_story.html
ghostsinthemachine
(3,569 posts)With both hands.
Hortensis
(58,785 posts)But so would be the costs. And right now GOP legislators have chosen a target $trillion figure for their tax cuts and transfers upward and are taking a knife to the budget, hacking and gutting almost indiscriminately. The criterion for where and how much they can cut and gut is will it cause voters to revolt and cost them their cushy positions, not duty or critical need.
Voter revolt over trailers for Puerto Rico anyone? When do we pour into the streets?