As hurricane season hits full swing, your properties may be subject to damage as disasters impact areas where your assets reside. To aid in recovery and response to a major disaster, mortgage servicers will want to pay close attention to the actions taken by local governments, in addition to those taken by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).
A disaster declaration is a formal statement by the jurisdiction’s chief public official (i.e. Mayor, County Judge, or Governor) that a disaster or emergency situation exceeds their response capabilities.
A FEMA Emergency Declaration is generally requested when the state and local governments need help responding to an emergency or disaster, however no long term recovery assistance is needed. With this, generally, only disaster response programs are at the disposal of the state government following an Emergency Declaration. The President may downgrade a Governor’s Major Disaster Declaration request to an Emergency Declaration if they believe the former is not warranted.
According to the FEMA website, if it is apparent that a Presidential disaster declaration may be necessary to assist in the recovery of the impacted area, the State or Indian tribal government should contact their FEMA Regional Office and request a joint Federal, State/Tribal Preliminary Damage Assessment (PDA). Local government representatives should be included, if possible.
Together, the team will conduct a thorough assessment of the impacted area to determine:
Though commonly addressed after a disaster, a declaration may be made if a disaster is “imminent.” A disaster declaration is not wide sweeping though. Each level of government (county, state, and federal) will tailor their disaster declaration to include only the area(s) impacted by the disaster. Because Emergency Management in the United States takes a “bottom-up” approach to response, cities will proclaim a disaster declaration, followed by a county, then state, then the federal government.
Once a disaster declaration is issued, it is promptly recorded into the public record and disseminated to the general public. There are two types of disaster declarations you need to be aware of: emergency declarations and major disaster declarations. Both declaration types authorize the President to provide supplemental federal disaster assistance, according to FEMA’s website. However, the events related to the two different types of declaration, scope and amount of assistance differ.
*Information pulled from the FEMA website
Emergency Declarations
The President can declare an emergency for any occasion or instance when the President determines federal assistance is needed. Emergency declarations supplement State and local or Indian tribal government efforts in providing emergency services, such as the protection of lives, property, public health, and safety, or to lessen or avert the threat of a catastrophe in any part of the United States. The total amount of assistance provided for in a single emergency may not exceed $5 million. The President shall report to Congress if this amount is exceeded.
Requirements
The Governor of the affected State or Tribal Chief Executive of the affected Tribe must submit a request to the President, through the appropriate Regional Administrator, within 30 days of the occurrence of the incident. The request must be based upon a finding that the situation is beyond the capability of the State and affected local governments or Indian tribal government and that supplemental federal emergency assistance is necessary to save lives and protect property, public health and safety, or to lessen or avert the threat of a disaster. In addition, the request must include:
Assistance Available
A Governor or Tribal Chief Executive may request an emergency declaration in advance or anticipation of the imminent impact of an incident that threatens such destruction as could result in a major disaster. Such requests must meet all of the statutory and regulatory requirements for an emergency declaration request. Requests must demonstrate the existence of critical emergency protective measure needs prior to impact are beyond the capability of the State and affected local governments or Indian tribal government and identify specific unmet emergency needs that can be met through DFA. Such DFA may include, but is not limited to, personnel, equipment, supplies, and evacuation assistance. Pre-positioning of assets generally does not require a declaration. Assistance made available under a pre-disaster emergency declaration will typically be Category B (emergency protective measures), limited to DFA. FEMA may require damage assessments and/or verified cost estimates if additional types of assistance are requested.
Major Disaster Declarations
The President can declare a major disaster for any natural event, including any hurricane, tornado, storm, high water, wind-driven water, tidal wave, tsunami, earthquake, volcanic eruption, landslide, mudslide, snowstorm, or drought, or, regardless of cause, fire, flood, or explosion, that the President determines has caused damage of such severity that it is beyond the combined capabilities of state and local governments to respond. A major disaster declaration provides a wide range of federal assistance programs for individuals and public infrastructure, including funds for both emergency and permanent work.
Requirements
The Governor of the affected State or Tribal Chief Executive of the affected Tribe must submit the request to the President through the appropriate Regional Administrator within 30 days of the occurrence of the incident. The request must based upon a finding that the situation is beyond the capability of the State and affected local governments or Indian tribal government and that supplemental federal assistance is necessary. In addition the request must include:
Assistance Available
Not all programs, however, are activated for every disaster. The determination of which programs are authorized is based on the types of assistance specified in the Governor or Tribal Chief Executive’s request and the needs identified during the joint PDA and subsequent PDAs. FEMA disaster assistance programs are as follows:
Factors: When evaluating requests for major disasters and making recommendations to the President, FEMA considers the following factors:
Public Assistance Program
Individual Assistance Program
Safeguard Properties strives to continually provide the most current information on disasters as they occur. No matter the form they take — fires, tornadoes, hurricanes or floods — all of them can cause a tremendous amount of damage to your assets.
Our online Disaster Alert Center to stay up to date on when large-scale disasters strike, and the actions being taken in response. Visit https://safeguardproperties.com/disaster-alert-center/ for the latest information.