FEMA Is Almost Out of Money and Hurricane Irma Is Approaching
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Agency’s
Disaster Relief Fund down to its last $1 billion
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Fund has burned through half its money since Thursday morning
16
September, 2017
With
Texas still reeling from Hurricane Harvey and another storm barreling
toward Florida, the Federal
Emergency Management Agency is expected to run
out of money by Friday, according to a Senate aide, putting pressure
on Congress to provide more funding this week.
As
of 10 a.m. Tuesday morning, FEMA’s Disaster Relief Fund, which pays
for the agency’s disaster response and recovery activity, had just
$1.01 billion on hand. And of that, just $541 million was
"immediately available" for response and recovery efforts
related to Hurricane Harvey, according to a spokeswoman for FEMA who
asked not to be identified by name.
The
$1.01 billion in the fund Tuesday morning is less than half of the
$2.14 billion that was there at 9 a.m. last Thursday morning -- a
spend rate of $9.3 million every hour, or about $155,000 a minute.
The
agency would be out of funds just as Irma, a category 5 hurricane,
might start thrashing the coast of Florida.
"If
it’s down to $1 billion or less, then I would say there’s a great
concern," said Elizabeth Zimmerman, who until January was FEMA’s
associate administrator for the office of response and recovery.
"Congress needs to take action very quickly."
President
Donald Trump’s administration has asked Congress for an injection
of almost $8 billion in additional funds.
The
House is voting Wednesday on funding for Harvey. The Senate, which is
expected to act this week as well, is considering whether to add a
suspension of the federal debt limit to the measure. The legislation
would then go back to the House.
In
the meantime, FEMA has restricted spending to what it calls
"immediate needs" -- what it calls "lifesaving,
life-sustaining response efforts" for Harvey and Irma. Zimmerman
said the agency can also start pulling money from other projects.
But
without more money, Zimmerman said, the agency will be hard-pressed
to deal with what’s coming. "We’re not even at peak
hurricane season," she said.
Irma
comes after Hurricane Harvey, which smashed ashore in Texas Aug. 25
causing widespread damage, power outages and flooding and taking
almost a fifth of U.S. oil refining capacity offline.
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