Pike County Flood Survivors Can Now Be Considered for Direct Temporary Housing

Pike County Flood Survivors Can Now Be Considered for Direct Temporary Housing

To assist survivors displaced by the July 26, 2022, Eastern Kentucky floods, FEMA has approved direct temporary housing assistance for Pike County—bringing the total number of approved counties to six—including: Breathitt, Floyd, Knott, Letcher, Perry and Pike.

This program makes available to disaster survivors several additional short-term housing solutions. However, it takes time to transport, permit, install and inspect these units, before they are available.

The Direct Housing program provides two primary options:

  • Multi-Family Lease and Repair, where FEMA enters into a lease agreement with the owner of multi-family rental properties (i.e., three or more units) and makes repairs to provide temporary housing for applicants.
  • Temporary Housing Units such as a travel trailer or manufactured home.
Direct temporary housing takes significant time to implement and is not an immediate solution for a survivor's interim and longer-term housing needs. Additionally, not everyone impacted by the disaster will be eligible for direct housing. Therefore, it is important that partners at all levels – local government, the commonwealth, other federal agencies, nonprofit and private sector organizations – work together to fill any gaps.

Survivors who have applied with FEMA for assistance do not need to reapply to be eligible for Direct Housing. FEMA reviews applications to identify those with housing needs. Survivors who need to update their FEMA application, or inform FEMA about changes in their housing situation, can do so by going to DisasterAssistance.gov, or by calling the FEMA Helpline at 800-621-3362.

For the latest information on Kentucky flooding recovery, visit fema.gov/disaster/4663 and follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/FEMARegion4.

Original source can be found here.

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