FEMA Wants Evacuees Out Of Hotels
Gov't Urges 53,000 Homeless Hurricane Victims To Find Longer Term Housing
-
Play CBS Video Video Gruesome Finds In New Orleans The official Hurricane Katrina death toll has topped 1,000, as residents returning home for the first time are still coming across the remains of the dead. Kelly Cobiella reports.
-
Video Brown Scrutinized Over E-Mails Former FEMA director Mike Brown is facing renewed criticism after congressional investigators released embarrassing e-mails he sent during the Katrina disaster. Bob Orr has more on their contents.
-
Video FEMA Head Urges Strong Caution CBS News RAW: The Federal Emergency Management Agency Acting Director R. David Paulison issued a stern warning for Florida residents after Hurricane Wilma barreled through the state.
-
-
Terrell Batiste, a performer at the Jazz Foundation's Nov. 16 benefit for musicians affected by Katrina, is searching for his grandmother, Ethel Herbert, missing since being airlifted from New Orleans. (AP Photo/Batiste family)
-
New Orleans evacuees Ann and Joseph Gadel are reunited with their dog, Daisy, in Orlando on Nov. 16, months after she was rescued and flown to Ohio where the Gadels found her through petfinder.com. (AP)
-
"There are still too many people (Katrina evacuees) living in hotel rooms," says acting FEMA director R. David Paulison. "We want to help them get into longer-term homes before the holidays." (AP Photo)
-
-
Special Report Gulf Coast Disaster Complete coverage of the effects of Hurricane Katrina on the Gulf Coast, including anniversary coverage.
-
Video Hurricane Katrina Video Coverage: The storm's devastating impact on the U.S. Gulf Coast.
-
Photo Essay Katrina: New Orleans A major U.S. city struggles with the devastation wrought by the deadly storm.
The agency said Tuesday that it will stop paying hotel bills by the end of the month for most of the families devastated by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, even though housing advocates fear they won't have enough time to find other places.
Most of the people still staying in hotels and motels are in Texas, Louisiana, Georgia and Mississippi.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency had previously set the December deadline as a goal to have evacuees out of hotels and into travel trailers, mobile homes or apartments until they find permanent homes.
Tuesday's announcement marked the first time the agency said it would cease directly paying for hotel rooms that have cost FEMA $274 million since the storms struck.
FEMA granted exceptions to evacuees in hotels in Louisiana and Mississippi, where there is a shortage of housing. Evacuees in those states have until Jan. 7 to find homes, said David Garratt, FEMA's acting director of recovery. He said 9,830 households remain in hotels in Louisiana and 2,508 in Mississippi.
"There are still too many people living in hotel rooms, and we want to help them get into longer-term homes before the holidays," FEMA Acting Director R. David Paulison said in a statement. "Across the country, there are readily available, longer-term housing solutions for these victims that can give greater privacy and stability than hotel and motel rooms."
"Those affected by these storms should have the opportunity to become self-reliant again and reclaim some normalcy in their lives," Paulison said.
After Dec. 1, most hurricane evacuees who aren't ready to leave hotels will have to pay the costs out of pocket — either with FEMA rental housing aid they receive or from their own funds.
Katrina hit on Aug. 29, followed by Rita on Sept. 24.
In Houston, Mayor Bill White demanded that FEMA grant a similar extension to the city as it moves 19,158 evacuees out of city hotels.
"We have moved more evacuees out of hotels than any other city has ever had in hotels," White said in a statement. "So we encourage those new to it to ask us, not tell us, how to do it."
©MMV The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Author Thomas Friedman on Obama's Afghanistan plan and the war on terror.




