FEMA will resume major grant program after yearlong hiatus, following a court order

FEMA is reopening applications for its major resilience grant program after a judge ordered the program restored

FEMA will resume major grant program after yearlong hiatus, following a court order
FEMA will resume major grant program after yearlong hiatus, following a court order Photo: The Independent

FEMA is reopening applications for its major resilience grant program after a judge ordered the program restored
The Federal Emergency Management Agency on Wednesday opened applications for a major resilience grant program that the agency canceled last year, less than three weeks after a federal judge ordered FEMA to make the funding available.

FEMA will make $1 billion available for the Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities program, which helps states, local governments, territories and tribes take on preparedness projects to harden against natural hazards like fires, floods, earthquakes and hurricanes.

While the resumed funding restores access to badly needed assistance for some areas, FEMA imposed new rules that are in line with the Trump administration's attempt to push more responsibility for disaster management on states.

The new rules, which include the cessation of funding for hazard mitigation planning and non-financial direct technical assistance, could impact smaller communities with fewer resources and expertise.

“The program now maximizes state and local responsibility for resilience and risk reduction rather than federal investing in a wide range of activities,” a FEMA statement said.

The Trump administration has slashed disaster preparedness dollars across multiple FEMA programs.

It’s been one year since President Donald Trump approved any state or tribe’s request for hazard mitigation funding, a typical add on to major disaster declarations.

A federal judge last December ruled that FEMA could not eliminate BRIC and ordered FEMA to reverse course after a coalition of 22 Democratic-led states and the District of Columbia sued the Trump administration over the cancellation.

After the agency failed to release funding, U.S.

District Judge Richard G.

Stearns again ordered FEMA this month to take steps toward restoring the program.

Last week, FEMA announced it would resume program support for BRIC awards when the DHS shutdown ended, saying that it had finished evaluating the program that was originally signed into law during Trump's first term.

Under former President Joe Biden , BRIC became too bureaucratic and “focused on ‘climate change’ initiatives,” FEMA said in a statement.

States will have 120 days to apply for the new funding opportunity, which covers fiscal years 2024 and 2025, since FEMA rescinded last year's opportunity.

Meanwhile, it's still unclear how quickly they can expect resumption of the grants they were already awarded.

“Communities across the country rely on BRIC funding to prepare for ever-increasing and severe natural disasters,” Rep.

Rick Larsen, Democrat from Washington and House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee ranking member, said in a statement Wednesday.

BRIC's cancellation held up construction of a flood wall in his district, Larsen said.

“Slowing states’ ability to prepare for disasters was shortsighted, and communities like Aberdeen paid the price.”
In the last decade, there have been almost as many weather- and climate-related disasters causing $1 billion in damages or more as there were in the 35 years preceding that, according to a Climate Central database.

Source: This article was originally published by The Independent

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