FEMA Housing Coming Slowly For Texas Hurricane Victims : The Real Estate Bloggers

FEMA Housing Coming Slowly For Texas Hurricane Victims

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

Remember all the consternation over the lack of FEMA housing provided after Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans and Louisiana? As billions of dollars poured into the communities surrounding New Orleans the cry was too late and never enough.

Fema-trailerNow in the aftermath of Hurricane Ike, the response has been much less both by the press and FEMA. Of the 4,000 families in unlivable homes that are requesting FEMA trailers, only 208 have been given out.

Now I am not expecting the government to fix all ills, but the response in the Texas cities has been tepid in comparison to that of Katrina. Would you chalk this up to politics or lack of press attention?

Local leaders have pleaded publicly about a housing crisis for weeks, distraught at FEMA’s inability to provide temporary homes. As of Thursday, 208 FEMA mobile homes and park model trailers had been installed and were occupied by residents whose homes were left unlivable by Ike’s Sept. 13 landfall.

Orange County leaders have said they need about 4,000 mobile homes or trailers. Jefferson and Chambers County have said they each have about 1,000 unlivable homes. Galveston County has said it needs as many as 2,000 housing units.

Poe, whose district includes Jefferson County and parts of Liberty and Harris counties, spoke with FEMA head R. David Paulson on Friday, urging the federal agency to increase its efforts.

Brady met Saturday in Beaumont with representatives from FEMA and Entergy Texas, the power company for much of the four-county coastal area.

U.S. reps enter push for FEMA housing >> www.beaumontenterprise.com - Local.

Related posts:
  1. FEMA to Pay for Evacuee Housing
  2. Hilton Head Properties Helps Hurricane Victims Find Housing
  3. Apartment Shortage in Houston
  4. Are Hurricane Prone Areas Losing Population Due To Fear Of Storms Or Housing Slowdown?
  5. In Hurricane Katrina and Rita’s Wake - Low Income Housing in High Demand

Post a Response

« Back to text comment
  • Popular

    Most Comments

    Search

    Tags

    Archives

  • Recent Comments

    • I saw this earlier today and thought the exact same thing, Tom. The politicians have been pushing homeownership for ...
      Joshua Dorkin @ BiggerPockets | 5Jan09 | More
    • I just found your blog and it's filled with great information. One of my goals this year is to update ...
      Albany Homes For Sale | 5Jan09 | More
    • Thanks for the kind words. I promise you the first year we did not have this level of readership. It ...
      Tom Royce | 5Jan09 | More
    • The limit on jumbo's is either 417,000 OR it is 115% of the median house price, not to exceed 150% ...
      Sigh | 5Jan09 | More
    • I like your blog and I have read many of your articles. I agree that it is amazing the ...
      Jackson Hole Real Estate Broker Rick Armstrong | 5Jan09 | More
    • Yes, there are some deals out there. While there are some deals out there, I'm an agent looking for ...
      Todd Covington | 5Jan09 | More
    • With mortgage rates poised to drop to 4.5 percent all we need now is some tax incentives to help home ...
      Mortgage | 3Jan09 | More
    • I think the overall interest in refinancing was definately high recently. However the problem is that although the rates dropped, ...
      Eric | 2Jan09 | More
    • I have had great success using craigslist. Renters need to be careful and make sure they check out their landlord ...
      Sean | 2Jan09 | More
    • This is the start of where the market can begin to level out. Home owners will start to be able to ...
      CompeteRealty | 2Jan09 | More
  • Advertisement



  • Statistics

  • Friends

  • Recent Friends Visiting

  • Subscribe





    Get Updates Delivered Daily By E-Mail:

    Delivered by FeedBurner