Biden administration requests $100B for disaster relief after hurricanes


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The Biden administration is calling for bipartisan action and urging Congress to quickly pass a nearly $100 billion disaster relief spending bill. Around $40 billion of the money requested will go to FEMA’s disaster relief fund as Americans in the Southeast are still cleaning up from major back-to-back Hurricanes Helene and Milton.

Further, $24 billion would go to the Department of Agriculture to help farmers, $12 billion would be given to the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s fund for communities, $8 billion would go toward road and bridge repair, $4 billion for water system upgrades and $2 billion to the Small Business Administration’s disaster loan program.

“From rebuilding homes and reopening critical infrastructure, such as schools and roads — to supporting the nation’s farmers and ranchers and ensuring access to healthcare services — impacted communities await your response. There can be no delay,” President Joe Biden wrote in a letter to House Speaker Mike Johnson.

Biden noted that such hefty supplemental disaster aid is not a new thing. More than $120 billion was provided after Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria in 2017.

Congress must now decide whether to take up the request as a standalone bill or packaged with the end-of-year spending bill.

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Full story

The Biden administration is calling for bipartisan action and urging Congress to quickly pass a nearly $100 billion disaster relief spending bill. Around $40 billion of the money requested will go to FEMA’s disaster relief fund as Americans in the Southeast are still cleaning up from major back-to-back Hurricanes Helene and Milton.

Further, $24 billion would go to the Department of Agriculture to help farmers, $12 billion would be given to the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s fund for communities, $8 billion would go toward road and bridge repair, $4 billion for water system upgrades and $2 billion to the Small Business Administration’s disaster loan program.

“From rebuilding homes and reopening critical infrastructure, such as schools and roads — to supporting the nation’s farmers and ranchers and ensuring access to healthcare services — impacted communities await your response. There can be no delay,” President Joe Biden wrote in a letter to House Speaker Mike Johnson.

Biden noted that such hefty supplemental disaster aid is not a new thing. More than $120 billion was provided after Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria in 2017.

Congress must now decide whether to take up the request as a standalone bill or packaged with the end-of-year spending bill.

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70 total sources

Key points from the Center

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