Infrastructure

Hey Texas, You Have 45 Days To Turn In Your Delayed Assignment: Feds Halt $1.95 Billion In Harvey Aid Thanks To Missing Document

The state of Texas can’t seem to catch a break when it comes to acquiring Department of Housing and Urban Development aid.

Half of the $4.3 billion in HUD aid that Congress approved four years ago hasn’t been allocated, and recently HUD halted the distribution of $1.95 billion Hurricane Harvey aid because it said the state has failed to send the required paperwork — according to an analysis by The Houston Chronicle explaining how the state’s proposed list of disaster mitigation projects helps the most vulnerable residents.

The Texas General Land Office has 45 days to submit the missing document, until then Texas can’t distribute $1.2 billion in flood mitigation grants to local governments, as well as $750 million to Harris County, which didn’t receive anything from the last contest. 

“We look forward to receiving and reviewing Texas’s submission of the additional information needed for approval,” the HUD statement said. “We are hopeful that Texas will take the steps needed to begin much-needed, forward-looking mitigation projects in the state.”

Since 2018, when the HUD aid package was approved by Congress, federal, state, and local leaders have spent energy bickering over it. Texas received $2.1 billion for mitigating future disasters and the GLO held a funding competition for a $1 billion tranche of the aid. Despite suffering more deaths and flooded homes during Harvey, Houston and Harris County received $0 from the contest. A Houston Chronicle investigation revealed that the GLO had created criteria for the contest that discriminated against populous areas, which effectively doomed the city and county’s chances of winning.

Even more shocking, they found metrics that counties with a higher risk of natural disasters were less likely to receive the disaster mitigation aid.

Only after a rare, bipartisan outcry, Land Commissioner George P. Bush decided to seek HUD’s permission to award $750 million to Harris County – Houston would still receive nothing, as reported by The Houston Chronicle.

RA Staff

Written by RA News staff.

Recent Posts

Influencers and Podcasters Drive Huge Spike in Live Event Ticket Sales

Social media personalities, podcast hosts, and authors are turning online influence into in-person fan engagement…

1 day ago

Kelly Clarkson Steps Away from Texas Flood Benefit After Ex-Husband’s Passing

Kelly Clarkson will no longer perform at this weekend’s Band Together Texas benefit concert, stepping…

2 days ago

Judge Lina Hidalgo Dubs Colleagues the ‘GOP Three’

Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo escalated tensions at Commissioners Court on Thursday, branding two of…

3 days ago

Texas Democrats Plan Return to Block Gerrymander, Awaiting End of Special Session

Dozens of Texas Democratic lawmakers are preparing to head back to Austin early next week…

3 days ago

Texas Democrats say they will return to state once session ends, California unveils retaliatory map

Texas House Democrats who left the state in protest of proposed congressional redistricting said Thursday…

4 days ago

Texas Private Schools Face Minimal Oversight Despite State Funding Expansion

For years, some Texas private schools have engaged in governance and financial practices that would…

4 days ago

This website uses cookies.