Watchdog: FEMA still lacks housing plan
Published: July 8, 2009
WASHINGTON — The government could end up repeating mistakes seen after Hurricane Katrina without a better plan for housing people after major disasters, FEMA’s internal watchdog told lawmakers Wednesday.
Richard Skinner, the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s inspector general, said at a House Homeland Security hearing that the agency still relies far too heavily on temporary mobile homes and it doesn’t have a coordinated plan for more quickly getting people into permanent housing.
Craig Fugate, who became FEMA’s director in May, acknowledged that the agency’s system is flawed but said it is designed by law to be a temporary ``bridge’‘ to a more permanent solution. He said FEMA needs guidance from Congress and state legislatures to fix it.
``It’s not a long-term solution,‘’ he said of using trailers and mobile homes as a last resort after widespread displacement. ``Our business is sheltering ... we do not have the solution for how we re-establish housing stock.‘’
Skinner said FEMA’s trailers and mobile homes are fine for small-scale disasters but inadequate to handle the kind of widespread destruction seen after hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005. Not only do they leave communities unsettled — thousands of families have been living in limbo along the Gulf Coast for several years — but they are wasteful, he said.
FEMA, for example, sometimes spent more than $100,000 after Katrina to keep a family in a temporary trailer for 18 months and has paid rent for thousands of families for more than three years. But it is restricted from spending significant amounts to repair permanent housing.
Skinner said FEMA is hamstrung by federal laws limiting its role in the broader rebuilding effort. He recommended that FEMA be given more leeway in facilitating permanent housing and that the Housing and Urban Development agency take over responsibility for housing assistance at some point after FEMA’s initial response.
``FEMA needs better alternatives that quickly restore housing stocks,‘’ Skinner said.
Nearly four years after hurricanes Katrina and Rita, about 3,000 households remain in federally supplied trailers and mobile homes in Louisiana and Mississippi. That’s down from a high of 143,000 along the Gulf Coast after the storms.
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