Beshear Cites Progress In FEMA Response To Kentucky Flooding

Gov. Andy Beshear pointed to signs of progress Thursday as federal emergency personnel respond to requests for assistance in flood-ravaged eastern Kentucky, but stressed it's “still not enough” as people work to recover from the disaster that swept away homes and inundated communities.

Gov. Andy Beshear pointed to signs of progress Thursday as federal emergency personnel respond to requests for assistance in flood-ravaged eastern Kentucky, but stressed it’s “still not enough” as people work to recover from the disaster that swept away homes and inundated communities.

A week ago, the Democratic governor berated the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s response, just days after President Joe Biden visited the stricken Appalachian region and declared the federal government would provide support until residents were back on their feet. The catastrophic flooding caused at least 39 deaths. Two women in the region are still missing.

Beshear was more upbeat Thursday in his updated assessment of FEMA’s response, while stressing that the state is closely monitoring the agency’s handling of relief requests.

Since flash flooding engulfed parts of eastern Kentucky late last month, FEMA has approved more than $40 million in grants for 5,267 households under its Individuals and Households Program, the governor said. About half the total requests for the assistance have been approved so far, up from the “30-something percent” figure he saw initially, he said.

“Still not enough, but it is progress,” Beshear said at a news conference. “And when our federal partners, even if we’re frustrated sometimes, are making real progress, we want to say thank you, while also continuing to push FEMA to help out our families.”

That money distributed by FEMA includes more than $32 million in housing assistance grants to help people restore their homes to “sanitary and habitable conditions,” Beshear said. Another $8 million has gone to help people meet other immediate needs, such as medical and dental expenses, moving and storage costs and child care, he said.

Of more than 10,000 applications for the assistance, 1,502 are deemed ineligible at this point, FEMA said Thursday. It said the reasons can include when FEMA aid would duplicate benefits from other sources, including insurance. Other reasons can include issues with verifying the applicant’s identity or homeowner status or other missing documents.

A denial of assistance isn’t “necessarily the end of the road” in seeking relief, FEMA has said. Agency personnel are reaching out to people being denied to review their applications.

Beshear on Thursday urged people in those situations to “keep pushing” and to meet with FEMA officials “eye to eye” to do a thorough review. The agency also is texting people who haven’t responded to calls as another means to reach out, the governor said.

He praised those efforts, saying: “It’s got to happen, because our people are depending on it.”

The governor said there are a lot of “moving pieces” regarding the government relief effort.

“We’re going to try to further drill down on the different buckets,” the governor said. “How many are pending, how many have been denied, how many have been denied and then later approved, what are the reasons. But we are getting more transparency and more numbers. It will help us to be good advocates. … And it will help families to know the additional work they need to do.”

Kentucky leaders, meanwhile, are crafting a state relief package for the flood-stricken region. Beshear said he’s “getting closer” to calling a special legislative session to take up the legislation.

“We’ve got to have agreement up front on all the pieces to it,” the governor said. “That is going well. I hope in the next day or so we can get a firm date on it.”

Meanwhile, more than 450 people left homeless by the flood are being housed in state parks, churches, schools and community centers, Beshear said. Of that total, 319 are staying at state parks.

In response to the mental stress caused by the disaster, crisis counseling teams are working in flood affected-areas, he said. The teams are working through the local Community Mental Health Centers.

In urging people to reach out if they need the support, the governor said: “It is OK to not be OK. I don’t know how anybody can be OK if they’ve lost everything and/or lost a loved one.”

After The Rain Comes The Heat In Flooded Kentucky Towns

The rain that unleashed massive floods in Appalachian mountain communities was diminishing on Tuesday, leaving survivors to face a new threat: baking in the heat as they try to recover.

The rain that unleashed massive floods in Appalachian mountain communities was diminishing on Tuesday, leaving survivors to face a new threat: baking in the heat as they try to recover.

“It’s going to get really, really hot. And that is now our new weather challenge,” Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said at his morning briefing on the disaster.

The death toll stood at 37 on Tuesday after more bodies were found Monday in the ruined landscape, and while more than 1,300 people have been rescued, crews are still trying to reach some people who remain cut off by floods or mudslides. Hundreds were unaccounted for, a number that should drop as cellphone service is restored and people can tell each other they’re alive, the governor said.

“It is absolutely devastating out there,” Beshear said. “It’s going to take years to rebuild. People left with absolutely nothing. Homes that we don’t know where they are, just entirely gone. And we continue to find bodies of our brothers and sisters that we have lost.”

The National Weather Service warned that slow-moving showers and thunderstorms could provoke more flash flooding through Tuesday morning along waterways swollen by Sunday’s heavy rain, a dismal coda to last week’s historic floods. That includes communities just across the state line in Virginia and West Virginia, where some people also remain without power.

Cooling stations are being set up in buildings that were spared the floods as more than 9,600 customers remain without electricity in eastern Kentucky, Beshear said.

“They have been set up in time, in fact before this heat. We may, for the first time, be ahead of the weather,” he said.

“I know you may be out there working to salvage whatever you can. But be really careful Wednesday and Thursday when it gets hot,” the governor said. “We’re bringing in water by the truckloads. We’re going to make sure we have enough for you. But you’re going to need a cool place at least to take a break.”

For hundreds of people whose homes were damaged or destroyed, that place was an emergency shelter. As of Tuesday, nearly 430 people were staying at 11 such shelters, and 191 more were being housed temporarily in state parks, Beshear said.

Meanwhile, the flooding has forced some eastern Kentucky districts to delay the start of school. Several schools in the region were damaged, officials said, and the focus now is on helping families whose homes were damaged or destroyed.

“Just that in and of itself is going to take time before we can even start the conversation with the community about where kids are going to go to school,” said John Jett, superintendent in Perry County, where classes were supposed to start Aug. 11 but have been delayed.

Two of the Perry County district’s nine schools suffered severe damage and one will likely have to be rebuilt because of a partial collapse, he said.

In Knott County, Superintendent Brent Hoover said classes would be delayed until the district can assess damage at the high school, an elementary school and the technology center. In Letcher County, Superintendent Denise Yonts said six of the district’s 10 schools were damaged by flooding and two staff members died. The district is committed to getting students back into classrooms as soon as possible to restore some sense of normalcy, she said.

“Our community as a whole is devastated,” Yonts said.

President Joe Biden declared a federal disaster to direct relief money to counties flooded after 8 to 10 1/2 inches (20 to 27 centimeters) of rain fell in just 48 hours in parts of eastern Kentucky, southern West Virginia and western Virginia.

The disaster was the latest in a string of catastrophic deluges that have pounded parts of the U.S. this summer, including St. Louis. Scientists warn that climate change is making such events more common.

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Reynolds reported from Louisville. Other Associated Press contributors include Leah Willingham in Charleston, West Virginia.

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