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TexasTowelie

(112,167 posts)
Sun Feb 26, 2017, 11:12 AM Feb 2017

Here's how Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards administration seeks to streamline flood recovery

A federal law could delay the start of repairs to homes damaged in the 2016 floods – even stop those already underway – if the rehabilitations are being paid for by much of that recovery money Louisiana officials are hustling around Washington to get.

Gov. John Bel Edwards is coming up with wording that could exempt Louisiana homeowners from the long-held federal policy. Failing that, the state is developing procedures that could circumvent the delay.

Once a flood victim applies for the federal dollars being administered by the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development, an environmental inspection is required before work can begin and that can take up to 45 days. Failure to wait for the inspection could cost the homeowner the HUD money.

“We want homeowners to rebuild,” Patrick Forbes, executive director of the Louisiana Office of Community Development told The Advocate Friday.

Read more: http://www.theadvocate.com/louisiana_flood_2016/article_c5af0880-faab-11e6-84dc-5b5412cf0284.html

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Here's how Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards administration seeks to streamline flood recovery (Original Post) TexasTowelie Feb 2017 OP
We were in Baton Rouge just a couple of week ago visiting my wife's family Docreed2003 Feb 2017 #1

Docreed2003

(16,858 posts)
1. We were in Baton Rouge just a couple of week ago visiting my wife's family
Sun Feb 26, 2017, 11:28 AM
Feb 2017

Her folks live in one of the hardest hit areas and have just recently returned to their home. They're lucky, they had flood insurance even though the house wasn't in the 100 flood plain. Their house took on four feet of water and they lost nearly everything, but they were able to move forward with essentially rebuilding the interior of their house because of flood insurance.

Everywhere you go in the area, the community of littered with FEMA trailers. Debris is still stacked up in mounds in places. The entire community has a dingy gray haze.

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