The Delaware Gazette

Congress passes $50.5B Superstorm Sandy aid bill

ANDREW MIGA

Asso­ci­ated Press

WASHINGTON — Three months after Super­storm Sandy rav­aged coastal areas in much of the North­east, Con­gress on Mon­day sent a $50.5 bil­lion emer­gency relief mea­sure for storm vic­tims to Pres­i­dent Barack Obama for his signature.

“I com­mend Con­gress for giv­ing fam­i­lies and busi­nesses the help they deserve, and I will sign this bill into law as soon as it hits my desk,” Obama said in a state­ment late Monday.

Despite oppo­si­tion from con­ser­v­a­tives con­cerned about adding bil­lions of dol­lars more to the nation’s debt, the Sen­ate cleared the long-delayed bill, 62–36, after House Repub­li­cans had stripped it ear­lier this month of spend­ing unre­lated to dis­as­ters. All 36 votes against the bill were from Repub­li­can senators.

“This is a huge relief,” said Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., not­ing the vote came 91 days after Sandy struck. “We are now just a pres­i­den­tial pen-stroke away from begin­ning the rebuild­ing process in earnest.”

Law­mak­ers say the money is urgently needed to start rebuild­ing homes, busi­nesses, pub­lic trans­porta­tion facil­i­ties and other infra­struc­ture dam­aged by the Oct. 29 storm, one of the worst to strike the North­east. Sandy is blamed for more than 130 deaths in the U.S. and tens of bil­lions of dol­lars in prop­erty dam­ages, par­tic­u­larly in New York and New Jersey.

The House passed the bill two weeks ago. The mea­sure is aimed pri­mar­ily at help­ing res­i­dents and busi­nesses as well as state and local gov­ern­ments rebuild from the storm. Sandy roared up the East Coast and has been blamed for more than 130 deaths and bil­lions of dol­lars in res­i­den­tial and busi­ness prop­erty damage.

The biggest chunk of money is $16 bil­lion for Hous­ing and Urban Devel­op­ment Depart­ment com­mu­nity devel­op­ment block grants. Of that, about $12.1 bil­lion will be shared among Sandy vic­tims as well as those from other fed­er­ally declared dis­as­ters in 2011–2013. The remain­ing $3.9 bil­lion is solely for Sandy-related projects.

More than $11 bil­lion will go to the Fed­eral Emer­gency Man­age­ment Agency’s dis­as­ter relief aid fund for shel­ter, restor­ing power and other storm-interrupted util­ity ser­vices and meet­ing other imme­di­ate needs aris­ing from Sandy and other dis­as­ters. Another $10 bil­lion is devoted to repair­ing New York and New Jer­sey tran­sit sys­tems and mak­ing them more resis­tant to future storms.

“The fund­ing in this bill is urgently needed,” said Sen. Bar­bara Mikul­ski, D-Md. “Hun­dreds of thou­sands of fam­i­lies have seen their lives turned upside down.”

Sen. Dan Coats, R-Ind., said Repub­li­cans weren’t seek­ing “to under­mine” help for Sandy vic­tims but instead were try­ing to make sure that the money was actu­ally being spent on emer­gency needs.

“We’re sim­ply try­ing to say we need some stan­dards,” Coats said.

Ear­lier in Jan­u­ary, Con­gress approved and Obama signed a $9.7 bil­lion bill to replen­ish the National Flood Insur­ance Pro­gram, which has received well over 100,000 flood insur­ance claims from busi­nesses, home­own­ers and renters related to Sandy. Added to the new, $50.5 bil­lion pack­age, the total is roughly in line with the $60.4 bil­lion that Obama requested in December.

Sandy dam­aged or destroyed 305,000 hous­ing units in New York and more than 265,000 busi­nesses were dis­rupted there, accord­ing to offi­cials. In New Jer­sey, more than 346,000 house­holds were destroyed or damaged.

The aid pack­age was greased for pas­sage before the last Con­gress adjourned and the new one came in on Jan. 3. But Speaker John Boehner refused to bring it to the floor after two-thirds of House Repub­li­cans voted against a “fis­cal cliff” deficit-reduction deal rais­ing taxes on cou­ples mak­ing more than $450,000 a year while defer­ring some $24 bil­lion in spend­ing cuts to have been shared between defense and domes­tic programs.

The ruckus after the Sen­ate had passed an ear­lier $60.4 bil­lion Sandy relief pack­age by a nearly 2-to-1 mar­gin on Dec. 28 exposed deep polit­i­cal divi­sions within Repub­li­can ranks. “There’s only one group to blame for the con­tin­ued suf­fer­ing of these inno­cent vic­tims, the House major­ity and their speaker, John Boehner,” Repub­li­can New Jer­sey Gov. Chris Christie fumed at the time.

Top House Repub­li­cans responded by bring­ing new Sandy aid leg­is­la­tion to the floor under ground rules designed to win over as many Repub­li­cans as pos­si­ble while retain­ing sup­port from Democ­rats eager to approve as much in dis­as­ter aid as possible.

GOP lead­ers cut spend­ing in the Sen­ate bill unre­lated to dis­as­ters. One was to trans­fer $1 bil­lion for train­ing Iraqi police­men to instead be used on bol­ster­ing secu­rity at U.S. diplo­matic mis­sions. The shift in money fol­lowed a Sept. 11 ter­ror­ist attack on the Amer­i­can con­sulate in Beng­hazi, Libya, where the U.S. ambas­sador and three other Amer­i­cans were killed.

Also deleted was $188 mil­lion for an Amtrak expan­sion project that included new, long-planned tun­nels from New Jer­sey to Penn Sta­tion in Man­hat­tan, and another $150 mil­lion for fish­eries dis­as­ters that states such as Alaska and Mis­sis­sippi could have shared.

After all the cost-cutting, 179 House Repub­li­cans still voted against the dis­as­ter aid pack­age with only 49 favor­ing it. GOP lead­ers had to rely on yes votes from 192 Democ­rats to pass it.

As with past nat­ural dis­as­ters, the Sandy aid bill is not off­set with spend­ing cuts, mean­ing the aid adds to the deficit. The lone excep­tion is an off­set pro­vi­sion requir­ing that $3.4 bil­lion for Army Corps of Engi­neers projects to pro­tect against future storms be cov­ered by an equal amount of unspec­i­fied spend­ing cuts in other pro­grams before next October.

The Sen­ate on Mon­day rejected, 35–62, an attempt by Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, to amend the final pack­age Mon­day with a pro­vi­sion to cut fed­eral pro­grams across the board by one-half of 1 per­cent through 2021 as a way to pre­vent the dis­as­ter aid from swelling the U.S. debt.

While the bill passed by the Sen­ate car­ries a $50.5 bil­lion price tag, it could trim 5 per­cent or so if across-the-board spend­ing cuts are allowed to take place on March 1 as sched­uled under cur­rent law.

The cuts, known as a sequester, are pun­ish­ment for the fail­ure of a con­gres­sional deficit “super­com­mit­tee” to fol­low up a 2011 bud­get pact with addi­tional deficit curbs. The cuts would apply equally to every account in the measure.

As of Mon­day, FEMA said it spent $3.3 bil­lion in dis­as­ter relief money for shel­ter, restor­ing power and other imme­di­ate needs aris­ing from the storm.

New York, New Jer­sey, Con­necti­cut, West Vir­ginia, Vir­ginia, Mary­land, New Hamp­shire, Ohio, Delaware, Rhode Island, Penn­syl­va­nia, Mass­a­chu­setts and the Dis­trict of Colum­bia have shared that money.

AP News Posted by on Jan 28 2013. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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