National Low Income Housing Coalition and More Than 700 Organizations Strongly Support the Disaster Recovery Act of 2017

Washington, D.C. – NLIHC and its Disaster Housing Recovery Coalition (DHRC) of more than 700 local, state, and national organizations strongly support the Reforming Disaster Recovery Act of 2017, introduced by Congresswoman Ann Wagner (R-MO) and approved today by the House Financial Services Committee. We commend Congresswoman Wagner for her leadership in introducing this important bill. 

The Reforming Disaster Recovery Act permanently authorizes the federal government’s primary long-term disaster rebuilding program, the Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery (CDBG-DR) program, which provides states and communities with the flexible resources needed to rebuild affordable housing and infrastructure after a disaster. The bill also establishes important safeguards and tools to help ensure that federal disaster recovery and rebuilding efforts reach all impacted households, including those with the lowest incomes who are often the hardest-hit by disasters and have the fewest resources to recover.

DHRC is led by the National Low Income Housing Coalition and includes more than 700 national, state, and local organizations, including many organizations working directly with disaster-impacted communities and with first-hand experience recovering after disasters. The DHRC works to ensure low income survivors and communities receive the assistance needed for a full recovery.

The Reforming Disaster Recovery Act includes measures to help ensure that scarce resources are available to low income survivors and communities that face the greatest recovery needs. It requires states to allocate resources equitably between housing and infrastructure priorities and among homeowners, renters, and people experiencing homelessness. The bill maintains the requirement that 70 percent of funds must benefit low and moderate income communities and sets clearer direction to HUD on when it can adjust this requirement. By directing the Office of Inspector General to oversee program outcomes, the bill will help ensure that CDBG-DR delivers on Congress’s intent to serve all eligible survivors. The bill makes public data on the impact of the disaster and how resources are spent, promoting transparency, allowing effective public participation in the development of state recovery plans, and helping state and local governments and philanthropic organizations better identify critical gaps in services. The authorization bill also helps Congress ensure that the recovery process is administered consistently and that dollars can flow more quickly to communities in need.

NLIHC and the DHRC also commend Representative Maxine Waters (D-CA) for her efforts to ensure that CDBG-DR funding prioritizes the one-for-one replacement of federally subsidized affordable housing that is damaged or destroyed and that communities utilize their rebuilding funding in a manner that meets fair housing obligations.

“On behalf of NLIHC and the DHRC, I commend Congresswoman Wagner for her leadership in drafting this landmark legislation, which would ensure that federal recovery efforts are better able to reach the lowest income seniors, people with disabilities, families with children, people experiencing homelessness, and other vulnerable people and the communities they live in,” said Diane Yentel, president and CEO of the National Low Income Housing Coalition. “We look forward to working with Congressional leaders to further improve and enact this important legislation.”

See NLIHC's letter to Ms. Wagner here