November 1, 2021

HUD: More than $2 Billion Allocated to Advance Equitable Disaster Recovery, Build Climate Change Resilience

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development today announced the allocation of more than $2 billion ($2,040,617,000) in CDBG-Disaster Recovery (CDBG-DR) and CDBG-Mitigation (CDBG-MIT) funds appropriated in the continuing resolution, the Extending Government Funding and Delivering Emergency Assistance Act (PL 117-43; the Act), signed into law on September 30, 2021. These allocations underscore HUD and the Biden-Harris Administration’s commitment to equitably improving the nation’s disaster recovery and building long-term, inclusive resilience to meet the impacts of climate change, particularly for historically marginalized communities.

This allocation is being made to 10 states covering 15 separate major disasters that occurred calendar year 2020. The states, allocations, and disasters covered are available below.

These funds will go to recover from and build resilience to natural disasters, including climate disasters, with a specific focus on low- and moderate-income populations. The funds are specified to be used for: “disaster relief, long-term recovery, restoration of infrastructure and housing, economic revitalization, and mitigation, in the most impacted and distressed areas.”

“These disaster recovery and mitigation funds are essential to advancing the Biden-Harris Administration’s climate and equity priorities by building long-term and inclusive resilience to the impacts of climate change, particularly for underserved and marginalized communities,” said HUD Secretary Marcia L. Fudge. “With these allocations, we are addressing climate justice in hard-hit communities that can now begin the process of building back better from disasters and improving long-term, equitable resilience to future impacts of climate change.”

These are the first CDBG-DR/MIT awards of the Biden-Harris Administration. Oregon and Michigan are receiving their first ever DR/MIT allocations.

PL 117-43 appropriated a total of $5 billion in CDBG-DR/MIT funds for major disasters that occurred in 2020 or 2021. Allocation of the remaining CDBG-DR/MIT funds will be made over the next few months to address unmet needs from disasters occurring in 2021, including Hurricane Ida.

Climate change poses a multitude of risks for communities across the country. This includes rising costs to maintain and repair damaged infrastructure from more frequent and extreme weather events and health and safety challenges to the communities across the country. Acting now to manage climate risk will increase the resilience of communities to wildfires, extreme heat, tropical storms, heavy rains, and other disasters made worse by a changing climate.

Equitable disaster recovery and resilience is a priority of HUD’s newly published Climate Action Plan.

HUD’s Climate Action Plan notes that the Department is committed to advancing the goals of Executive Order 13985, which requires HUD to allocate resources in a manner that equitably invests in underserved communities, especially communities of color. HUD is committed to taking actions to invest in climate resiliency to reinforce its mission of creating strong, sustainable, and inclusive communities with affordable homes for all.


CDBG-DR Allocations for CY 2020 Most Impacted and Distressed Qualifying Disasters

StateDisasters CoveredALLOCATION
Alabama4563, 4573$311,732,000
California4558, 4569$231,203,000
Florida4564$113,191,000
Iowa4557$56,940,000
Louisiana4559, 4570$594,931,000
Michigan4547$54,498,000
Mississippi4576$28,470,000
Oregon4562$422,286,000
Puerto Rico4473, 4560$184,626,000
Tennessee4476, 4541$42,740,000
 Grand Total$2,040,617,000

Specific Disasters Covered

StateDisaster NumberDisaster DescriptionEvent Period
Alabama4563Hurrican SallySep 14, 2020 – Sep 16, 2020
Alabama4573Hurricane ZetaOct 28, 2020 – Oct 29, 2020
California4558WildfiresAug 14, 2020 – Sep 26, 2020
California4569WildfiresSep 4, 2020 – Nov 17, 2020
Florida4564Hurricane SallySep 14, 2020 – Sep 28, 2020
Iowa4557Severe StormsAug 10, 2020
Louisiana4559Hurrican LauraAug 22, 2020 – Aug 27, 2020
Louisiana4570Hurricane DeltaOct 6, 2020 – Oct 10, 2020
Michigan4547Severe Storms and Flooding (Dam Failure)May 16, 2020 – May 22, 2020
Mississippi4576Hurricane ZetaOct 28, 2020 – Oct 29, 2020
Oregon4562Wildfires and Straight-line WindsSep 7, 2020 – Nov 3, 2020
Puerto Rico4473EarthquakesDec 28, 2019 – Jul 3, 2020
Puerto Rico4560Tropical Storm IsaiasJul 29, 2020 – Jul 31, 2020
Tennessee4476Severe Storms, Tornadoes, Straight-line Winds, and FloodingMar 3, 2020
Tennessee4541Severe Storms, Tornadoes, Straight-line Winds, and FloodingApr 12, 2020 – Apr 13, 2020
This post was originally published here.