I will start out with full disclosure: I am not a fan of Lexington Herald-Leader columnist Linda Blackford. She’s a liberal writer among a seemingly all-liberal editorial staff at what my best friend used to call the Herald-Liberal. But I have to laugh when a supporter of more government action winds up complaining about the inefficiency of government!
FEMA knows disasters. Why aren’t they doing a better job in Eastern Kentucky?
by Linda Blackford | Friday, August 12, 2022 | 10:48 AM EDT
There’s probably not a lot that Sen. Brandon Smith, R-Hazard, and Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear agree on, politically or otherwise.
But they are united on this — flood victims in Eastern Kentucky are not getting the help they so desperately need from the federal government in the wake of catastrophic flooding on July 28.As Tessa Duvall wrote in a story on Thursday, “State Sen. Brandon Smith, R-Hazard, said in news release, he has received ‘countless phone calls from desperate eastern Kentucky residents’ outlining FEMA’s ‘alleged inaction, denials and an indication of surprisingly inadequate financial assistance to rebuild their homes and lives.’ “
Beshear has heard the same stories and concluded, “it’s not right.”
Sen. Mitch McConnell also announced Friday that he “spoke personally with President Biden, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Mayorkas, and Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA) Administrator Criswell to advocate for increased aid. After hearing concerns from Eastern Kentucky residents and local officials during this week’s visits, Senator McConnell contacted FEMA Administrator Criswell again to encourage expedited assistance for Kentuckians impacted by flooding.”
Sometimes, it’s good to have one of the most powerful politicians in Washington on your side.
LOL! That won’t be good enough for Mrs Blackford and the Herald-Leader not to endorse former state Representative Charles Booker in the November election! The Lexington newspaper always endorses Democrats, and if Mr Booker is running against incumbent Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) rather than Mr McConnell, they also endorsed Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes in 1984, and Amy McGrath Henderson, in 2000, over Senator McConnell. Both lost in huge landslides.
But if we are all on the same side here, what is the problem? FEMA administrators surely have enough experience — many decades — with catastrophic flooding to know that if someone’s house is completely flooded, they aren’t necessarily going to have the documents they need to prove they own it. They must know that people need help immediately, and lots of it. They must understand that $37,900 — the total cap for housing reimbursement — will no longer go very far in rebuilding a house from scratch these days.
And they must understand that if that help is not forthcoming in rebuilding, people will have to leave, further hurting the region.
Surely she can’t be surprised that bureaucrats act like bureaucrats.
Mrs Blackford noted that there’s a hard cap of $37,900 in disaster assistance money, and while that certainly won’t rebuild a house, it doesn’t matter: FEMA agents cannot authorize more money than the law allows. Checking the website for Clayton Mobile Homes in Richmond, $37,900 won’t even buy a decent house trailer. Earlier today I found one mobile home for $50,000, two bedrooms and two bathrooms, and a whopping 820 ft², but now that one is gone.
If you didn’t have good flood insurance, too bad, so sad, but you are stuck to another object by an inclined plane, wrapped helically around an axis. And flood insurance, if you can even get it, is extremely expensive, beyond the means of many of the poorer people living in eastern Kentucky. A lady I know in Irvine had flood insurance, because it was required for her to get a mortgage on the home she bought. Trouble is that the only flood insurance she could afford had a $10,000 deductible, and the March 2021 flood did $6,500 in damage to her home. She spent all of that money for flood insurance, and it did her no good at all. Really, flood insurance is only good if your home is a total loss.
But, most importantly, she mentioned that we have sent billions of dollars in money and equipment to Ukraine, a country surely in need, but a country that is not the United States! The United States has sent Ukraine roughly $9.1 billion so far, and $9.1 billion could provide $100,000 in housing aid to each of 91,000 families in eastern Kentucky, far more than were unhoused by the flooding.
Don’t worry about Ukraine; we need to take care of Americans first!
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