Wednesday, August 30, 2017

5 points, FEMA information on natural disasters, loans, grants, insurance and disaster relief organizations

Two very closely related subjects I have been thinking about while the disastrous Hurricane Harvey has made landfall and is raising havoc in Texas and Louisiana.
Harvey, 3 days ago. 
. I also live in a flood zone, not a 100-year floodplain but one of those that is in danger all of the time. We pay for flood insurance, the federal government mandates flood insurance for homes that are in an under 500-year occurrence event. As I understand it if your house is in a 500-year zone, you are not required to insure your home, if you live in a 400-year zone you are. In fact, most localities do not even plan for a 500-year event due partly because of the impossible task of predicting how bad it will be. I don't know about you, but it doesn't make much sense to me to not have insurance, so let's take a look at it. If the Federal Government did not mandate you to have flood insurance and your home is in a 500-year zone would you purchase it anyway or take your chances? Let's make a list and go through it:
  1)  Who is eligible for Federal Disaster assistance? You must first off be in a Federally designated disaster area, most go by county. The first item to take place is the disaster, second if it is bad enough the State will declare it a disaster area and allocate some funding. Then the Governor will request the President of the United States to declare the area (s) a "Federal Disaster" area, FEMA is then allowed to begin their operations, nothing can happen until the Feds declare it an emergency. That cannot happen until the State declares it an emergency. Then cannot happen until after the catastrophic event occurs and the damage is assessed. These are the basic pieces of a Federal Disaster. Renters and Home owners who have sustained damage to homes, vehicles or personal property as a result of the storm should apply, on line: www.DisasterAssistance.gov or 1-800-621-3362. Then what happens?
  2) There are two types of assistance, Grants, and loans. Grants are a "Gift" and do not need to be paid back, a Grant is meant to assist people to help pay for temporary housing, emergency repairs to their home, uninsured (and under insured) personal property losses plus funeral expenses, dental, medical and any other serious incidences caused by the disaster. After the registration is submitted FEMA will contact you for an appointment, at that time they will look at the damages, the appointment will be a few days after the application is submitted. The inspector will not approve or disapprove the application, they are there to gather pieces of information, the decision will be made after that. FEMA inspectors do not ask for money, or make recommendations for contractors if one does it is a scam. You are eligible for reimbursement even if cleanup and repairs have been made. Take a mountain of pictures, before and after, label, date, location, time and weather conditions should be noted, the more information we have the better off we are, and the faster the decision will be made. If we have flood insurance we still have to apply with FEMA, after we contact our insurance company, in some cases the insurance company will notify them. Check with your carrier. Click here for the FEMA application and information.
Huge storm, New Orleans and Houston always seem be right in the middle of these things, oh yes, Mississippi is too. 
  3)  I understand the grant, what happens if I don't qualify for a grant, or even if I do qualify can I get a loan? Where does the loan come from? Do I have I to have been denied by my bank first? The Small Business Administration offers loans to home owners and renters, they must be paid back at low interest rates. It makes me wonder about the areas that flood every year such as, the Red River of the North, the entire Mississippi River Valley, and Florida, how can these people afford it year upon year. None the less, the SBA is the main source of funding financial help after a disaster. Renters, as well as home owners, qualify for grants, renters may also qualify for emergency loans from the Small Business Administration. The SBA loan will also be made for assistance to home owners to pay uncovered damages.
  4)  If a house is not covered by insurance will FEMA pay to restore that home to its pre-disaster condition? The answer is No, this is the question I had from the beginning, no insurance, then yes grants, and loans are available, FEMA will not rebuild the house. This is the same question I had during the Anderson Dam incident in San Jose, many people did not have insurance. (At least the ones interviewed on the evening news did not). The people in that city have a lot of lawsuits attempting to place responsibility on any one they are able to. I must say many people did have flood insurance, many more did not. The lawsuit will be in the courts for many years most likely. This flood insurance thing is going to become front page news at some point depending on how many and how severe the future storms are. My insurance is subsidized by the Federal Government, and Congress has had a major problem with it for the past 10 years that I know of, it doesn't pay for itself, or even close to it. My flood insurance is $2000.00 a year, I think that is reasonable, there is a debate in Congress to raise it, at one time mine would have reached around $20,000.00 a year, recently Congress said they may cap it at $10,000.00 yearly. All I can say is "We'll see." If you want to know more about the Federal flood insurance program click here.
  5) A myth circulating is that if a person is not a US citizen there is no assistance available. That is false, FEMA may provide eligible immigrants who are undocumented, with short-term non-cash assistance. I personally believe that is a good thing, knock down all the barriers during a disaster and help everyone.
  To check the status of a claim we may go online www.DisasterAssistance.gov or contact FEMA 1-800-621-3362.
 
From one disaster to  
to another.

Wow, what a terrible disaster, to observe from bone dry California is quite a contrast, How can I help, what disaster relief organizations can I rely on, to be honest with my donations? The only natural disaster relief organizations that I would be anywhere close to being qualified to recommend are outfits like the Red Cross, I suspect the best non-profits to donate to would be local long established organizations, before making a donation perform due diligence and find a trust worthy one. I am sure we all remember the scam stories we hear after every catastrophe.
  It is estimated that 1/3 of the population will be prepared to the maximum for a disaster, Preppers, homesteaders and the like. 1/3 of us plan to do something to at least have some basic survival supplies on hand, then there is the 1/3 of us that have no interest, or desire and believe the threat of a natural or man made disaster will never happen. This terrible disaster can be a valuable lesson for some of us to get off of top dead center, create an emergency plan, prepare a 3-5 day survival kit, either put together yourself or a pre-packaged kit (check it out here). Make sure in your plan to have a telephone number for a contact out of your area, I will go on about that in my next blog, it is absolutely a must to have a contact away from your location.
  Thank you for reading, please leave a comment I would really like to hear what you have to say, share this blog, they may need it. Thanks.
jacquesandkate  emergencykitsplus.com

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