From the Hill:
“Johnson: Additional hurricane
aid ‘can wait’ until Congress is back in session”
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) on
Sunday said passing additional hurricane aid for states impacted by Hurricanes
Helene and Milton “can wait” until Congress is back in session after the
election. CBS “Face the Nation” host Margaret Brennan asked him why he thinks
it’s fine to wait until November for Congress to pass more aid for Hurricane
Helene and Hurricane Milton victims. “Well, it can wait because, remember, the
day before Hurricane Helene made landfall in Florida and then went up through
the states and wound up in Senator Tillis’s state of North Carolina, Congress
appropriated 20 billion additional dollars to FEMA so that they would have the
necessary resources to address immediate needs,” Johnson said.
Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) was
part of a bipartisan group of senators to sign a letter urging Senate leaders
to think about bringing lawmakers back into session this month to enact
disaster legislation before the end of the year. House lawmakers have also
urged Johnson to bring the chamber back into session. A group of Democrats sent
a letter last week asking him to do so, and Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.)
posted on the social media platform X, “If Congress goes into a special session
we can get it passed immediately. This needs to happen. @SpeakerJohnson call us
back.”
The continuing resolution
Congress passed to avert a government shutdown last month allowed for the
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to use the fund’s fiscal 2025
resources faster for disaster response for the duration of the nearly
three-month stopgap, allowing the agency access to a roughly $20 billion pot
starting Oct. 1. But it notably excluded any additional FEMA funding. Johnson
said that as of Sunday, less than 2 percent of the already passed funding has
been distributed. He said FEMA needs to “do its job” and disperse the funds to
the affected communities.
FEMA officials say they have
sufficient resources to respond to the pair of hurricanes until Congress
returns, but they also indicated nearly half that money is already spent. The
Speaker said the affected states, including Florida, Georgia and North
Carolina, need to assess the damage from the storm and calculate their needs
before requesting more money from Congress. “As soon as that is done, Congress
will meet and in a bipartisan fashion, we will address those needs, will
provide the additional resources, but it would be premature to call everyone
back now,” Johnson said.
^ In case you wanted to know what
the Politicians (in this case the Republicans from the top down) thought about
those who lost everything to the Hurricanes.
They don't care about you. Only
about themselves and their Elections. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/johnson-additional-hurricane-aid-wait-133237390.html
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