The Delaware Gazette

House approves $50.5 billion in Sandy aid

DAVID ESPO

AP Spe­cial Correspondent

WASHINGTON — More than 10 weeks after Super­storm Sandy bru­tal­ized parts of the heav­ily pop­u­lated North­east, the House approved $50.5 bil­lion in emer­gency relief for the vic­tims Tues­day night as Repub­li­can lead­ers strug­gled to close out an episode that exposed painful party divi­sions inside Con­gress and out.

The vote was 241–180, and offi­cials said the Sen­ate was likely to accept the mea­sure early next week and send it to Pres­i­dent Barack Obama for his sig­na­ture. Democ­rats sup­ported the aid in large num­bers, while major­ity Repub­li­cans opposed it by a lop­sided margin.

“We are not cry­ing wolf here,” said Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., one of a group of North­east­ern law­mak­ers from both par­ties who sought House pas­sage of leg­is­la­tion roughly in line with what the Obama admin­is­tra­tion and gov­er­nors of the affected states have sought.

Democ­rats were more polit­i­cally pointed as they brushed back South­ern con­ser­v­a­tives who sought either to reduce the mea­sure or off­set part of its cost through spend­ing cuts else­where in the budget.

“I just plead with my col­leagues not to have a dou­ble stan­dard,” said Rep. Car­olyn Mal­oney of New York. “Not to vote tor­nado relief to Alabama, to Louisiana, to Mis­sis­sippi, Mis­souri, to — with Ike, Gus­tav, Kat­rina, Rita — but when it comes to the North­east, with the sec­ond worst storm in the his­tory of our coun­try, to delay, delay, delay.”

One key vote came on an attempt by Rep. Rod­ney Freylinghuy­sen to add $33.5 bil­lion to an orig­i­nal allot­ment of $17 bil­lion in aid. That roll call was 228–192 and Democ­rats broke 190–2 in favor, while Repub­li­cans opposed it over­whelm­ingly, 190–38.

Sim­i­larly, on final pas­sage, 192 Democ­rats joined 49 Repub­li­cans in sup­port. Opposed were 179 Repub­li­cans and one Democrat.

Ear­lier, con­ser­v­a­tives failed in an attempt to off­set a part of the bill’s cost with across-the-board fed­eral bud­get cuts. The vote was 258–162.

Rep. Mark Mul­vaney, R-S.C., argu­ing for the reduc­tion, said he wasn’t try­ing to tor­pedo the aid pack­age, only to pay for it. “Are there no sav­ings, are there no reduc­tions we can put in place this year so these folks can get their money?” he asked plaintively.

Crit­ics said the pro­posed cuts would crimp Pen­ta­gon spend­ing as well as domes­tic accounts and said the aid should be approved with­out reduc­tions else­where. “There are times when a dis­as­ter sim­ply goes beyond our abil­ity to bud­get. Hur­ri­cane Sandy is one of those times,” said Rep. Hal Rogers of Ken­tucky, chair­man of the House Appro­pri­a­tions Committee.

Sandy roared through sev­eral states in late Octo­ber and has been blamed for 140 deaths and bil­lions of dol­lars in res­i­den­tial and busi­ness prop­erty dam­age, much of it in New York, New Jer­sey and Con­necti­cut. It led to power out­ages and inter­rup­tions to pub­lic trans­porta­tion that made life mis­er­able for mil­lions, and the clamor for fed­eral relief began almost immediately.

The emerg­ing House mea­sure includes about $16 bil­lion to repair tran­sit sys­tems in New York and New Jer­sey and a sim­i­lar amount for hous­ing and other needs in the affected area. An addi­tional $5.4 bil­lion would go to the Fed­eral Emer­gency and Man­age­ment Agency for dis­as­ter relief, and $2 bil­lion is tick­eted for restora­tion of high­ways dam­aged or destroyed in the storm.

The gov­er­nors of the three states most directly affected praised the con­gres­sional action.

“We are grate­ful to those mem­bers of Con­gress who today pulled together in a uni­fied, bipar­ti­san coali­tion to assist mil­lions of their fel­low Amer­i­cans in New York, New Jer­sey, and Con­necti­cut at their great­est time of need,” said a joint state­ment issued by New York Gov­er­nor Andrew M. Cuomo, New Jer­sey Gov­er­nor Chris Christie and Con­necti­cut Gov­er­nor Dan­nel P. Mal­loy. “The tra­di­tion of Con­gress being there and pro­vid­ing sup­port for Amer­i­cans dur­ing times of cri­sis, no mat­ter where they live across this great coun­try, lives on in today’s vote in the House of Representatives.”

The gov­er­nors said they “antic­i­pate smooth pas­sage when this pack­age moves back to the Sen­ate for final approval and for this long-awaited relief to finally make its way to our residents.”

The Sen­ate approved a $60 bil­lion mea­sure in the final days of the Con­gress that expired on Jan. 3, and a House vote had been expected quickly.

It is highly unusual for a major­ity party to bring leg­is­la­tion to a vote that its own rank-and-file opposes, but in this case, Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and the lead­er­ship had lit­tle or no choice.

Boehner unex­pect­edly post­poned the vote in the final hours of the expir­ing Con­gress as he strug­gled to calm con­ser­v­a­tives unhappy that the House had just approved a sep­a­rate mea­sure rais­ing tax rates on the wealthy.

The delay drew a tor­rent of crit­i­cism, much of it from other Republicans.

“There’s only one group to blame for the con­tin­ued suf­fer­ing of these inno­cent vic­tims, the House major­ity and their speaker, John Boehner,” New Jer­sey Gov. Chris Christie said on the day after the delay was announced. Rep. Pete King of New York added that cam­paign donors in the North­east who give to Repub­li­cans “should have their head examined.”

Less than two weeks later, the lead­er­ship brought leg­is­la­tion to the floor under ground rules designed to sat­isfy as many Repub­li­cans as pos­si­ble while retain­ing sup­port from Democ­rats eager to approve as much in dis­as­ter aid as possible.

Across the capi­tol, major­ity Democ­rats indi­cated they would prob­a­bly not seek changes.

“While the House bill is not quite as good as the Sen­ate bill, it is cer­tainly close enough,” Sen. Charles Schumer of New York said. “We will be urg­ing the Sen­ate to speed­ily pass the House bill and send it to the president’s desk.”

Con­gress has already approved a $9.7 bil­lion increase in a fund to pay fed­eral flood insur­ance claims, much of it expected to ben­e­fit vic­tims of Sandy.

The polit­i­cal veered into the per­sonal at times dur­ing hours of debate.

In remarks on the House floor, Rep. Bill Pascrell, D-N.J., said one South Car­olina law­maker who has crit­i­cized the mea­sure “per­son­ally took a small busi­ness” dis­as­ter loan in the past. While he didn’t men­tion any names, South Car­olina Rep. Mul­vaney has said he received such a loan.

Mul­vaney later told reporters the com­par­i­son was a poor one. He said that unlike funds in the Sandy leg­is­la­tion, the loan he received was approved within the bud­get, and not as an add-on that increased the deficit.

In the weeks since the storm hit, the Fed­eral Emer­gency Man­age­ment Agency has spent about $3.1 bil­lion for con­struc­tion of shel­ters, restora­tion of power and other imme­di­ate needs after the late-October storm pounded the Atlantic Coast with hurricane-force winds and coastal flooding.

Offi­cials say Sandy is the most costly nat­ural dis­as­ter since Hur­ri­cane Kat­rina in 2005. The storm dam­aged or destroyed 305,000 hous­ing units in New York, and more than 265,000 busi­nesses were dis­rupted there, offi­cials have said. In New Jer­sey, more than 346,000 house­holds were destroyed or dam­aged, and more than 40,000 fam­i­lies remain liv­ing out of their homes, accord­ing to officials.

AP News Posted by on Jan 15 2013. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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