Wednesday, April 2, 2014

March 31, 2014 The FEMA and State Public Assistance Funding Process

Release date: 
MARCH 31, 2014
Release Number: 
NR-117
DENVER — FEMA’s Public Assistance program provides assistance to state agencies, local governments and certain private nonprofits.
When flooding struck Colorado in September 2013, emergency life-saving measures and debris cleanup were the most immediate needs. This emergency work is usually the first to be reimbursed.
Later, in the recovery phase, more permanent repair work gets underway. Roads and bridges are repaired or replaced; major utilities and other infrastructure are brought back on line.
FEMA determines eligibility, conducts environmental and historic preservation review, approves projects and obligates the federal share or 75 percent of the project cost. FEMA obligates funds to the state, which reviews receipts and other documentation to make sure the job is done well and taxpayer money is well spent.
In Colorado, local governments and the state each pay 12.5 percent of the remaining project costs but private nonprofits pay all of the remaining 25 percent. For state agencies, the cost share depends on the category of work.
www.fema.gov

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