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entitled 'Disaster Assistance: Information on FEMA's Post 9/11 Public 
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Report to the Committee on Environment and Public Works, U.S. Senate:

United States General Accounting Office:

GAO:

August 2003:

Disaster Assistance:

Information on FEMA's Post 9/11 Public Assistance to the New York City 
Area:

GAO-03-926:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-03 -926, a report to the Committee on Environment 
and Public Works, U.S. Senate

Why GAO Did This Study:

The terrorist attacks on New York City created the most costly 
disaster in U.S. history. In response, the President pledged at least 
$20 billion in aid to the city. Approximately $7.4 billion of this aid 
is being provided through the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s 
(FEMA) public assistance program, which provides grants to state and 
local governments to respond to and recover from disasters. The Senate 
Committee on the Environment and Public Works requested that GAO 
determine (1) what activities FEMA supported in the New York City area 
through its public assistance program after the terrorist attacks; (2) 
how the federal government’s response to this terrorist event differed 
from FEMA’s traditional approach to providing public assistance in 
past disasters; and (3) what implications FEMA’s public assistance 
approach in the New York City area may have on the delivery of public 
assistance should other major terrorist attacks occur in the future.

What GAO Found:

FEMA has supported many activities through its $7.4 billion in public 
assistance-related funding to the New York City area. Activities 
funded include grants to state and local governments for emergency 
response, such as debris removal, and permanent work, such as the 
repair of disaster-damaged public facilities. FEMA also provided 
public assistance-related funding specifically directed by Congress 
that would not otherwise have been eligible for assistance (e.g. 
reimbursing costs of instructional time for students who lost school 
time after the terrorist attacks). The major uses for this funding are 
as follows: 
* $1.7 billion for debris removal operations and insurance. 

* $2.8 billion to repair and upgrade the transportation infrastructure 
of Lower Manhattan.

* $0.6 billion to the New York City Police and Fire Departments for 
such purposes as emergency efforts and replacing destroyed vehicles.

* $0.3 billion to miscellaneous city agencies for a wide range of 
activities (e.g., instructional time for students and building 
cleaning).

* $0.7 billion for non-New York City agencies for many purposes (e.g. 
office relocations and repair of damaged buildings).

* $1.2 billion available on June 30, 2003, for public assistance-
related reimbursements to New York City and state (work to be 
decided). 

The provision of public assistance to the New York City area differed 
in three significant ways from FEMA’s traditional approach.

FEMA and New York City officials agreed that FEMA’s public assistance 
approach in the New York City area creates uncertainties regarding the 
delivery of public assistance in the event of another major terrorist 
event. They differed on the effectiveness of using the public 
assistance program as currently authorized as the vehicle for federal 
disaster response to a future major terrorist event. Key New York City 
officials said that the program needed major revisions, while FEMA 
officials said it worked well along with the congressional prerogative 
to provide additional assistance. Nevertheless, FEMA has begun to 
consider ways to redesign the program to make it better able to 
address all types and sizes of disasters, including terrorist 
attacks. 

FEMA and New York City officials agreed that FEMA’s public assistance 
approach in the New York City area creates uncertainties regarding the 
delivery of public assistance in the event of another major terrorist 
event in the U.S. However, these officials differed on the 
effectiveness of using FEMA’s public assistance program as currently 
authorized as the vehicle for federal disaster response to a possible 
future major terrorist event. Key New York City officials said that 
the program needed major revisions to respond to the unique challenges 
posed by terrorist incidents such as long-term environmental 
liabilities and the need for heightened security, while FEMA officials 
said it worked well along with the Congressional prerogative to 
provide additional assistance. Nevertheless, FEMA has begun to 
consider ways to redesign the public assistance program to make it 
better able to address all types and sizes of disasters, including 
terrorist attacks. 

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-926.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click 
on the link above. For more information, contact JayEtta Z. Hecker at 
(202) 512-2834 or heckerj@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Contents:

Letter:

Results in Brief:

Background:

$7.4 Billion in Public Assistance-Related Funding Provided for Broad 
Range of Activities:

Debris Removal Operations and Insurance:

Interagency Agreement for Lower Manhattan Transportation System 
Reconstruction:

NYC Police and Fire Department Reimbursements:

Reimbursements to Other NYC Government Agencies:

Reimbursements to Non-NYC Government Agencies:

Reimbursements for Public Assistance-Related Work Authorized by 
Congress:

Public Assistance to NYC Differed from the Traditional FEMA Response in 
Several Areas:

No Sharing of Public Assistance Costs by State or Local Governments:

Different Processes for Selecting Projects and Closing Out the Disaster 
Based on Capped Funding Amounts:

Size and Type of Work Was Different Than Work in Other Major Disasters:

Response to NYC Area Creates Uncertainties about How Assistance Would 
be Delivered in a Future Catastrophic Terrorist Event:

Conclusions:

Agency Comments:

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:

Appendix II: Comments from the Federal Emergency Management Agency:

Appendix III: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contacts:

Acknowledgments:

Table:

Table 1: Ten Projects We Reviewed and Applicant Organizations 
Interviewed for Each of Them:

Figures:

Figure 1: Distribution of $7.4 Billion in Public Assistance and Public 
Assistance-Related Funding:

Figure 2: Public Assistance Funding Provides the Largest Federal 
Contribution to the NYC Area's Recovery:

Figure 3: Public Assistance-Funded Debris Removal Operations:

Figure 4: Debris Screening and Inspection Operations:

Figure 5: Interagency Agreement Will Fund Construction of a Permanent 
New Station to Replace the Extensively Damaged PATH Station Beneath the 
World Trade Center Towers:

Figure 6: Public Assistance Funded Police and Firefighter Overtime and 
Replaced Emergency Vehicles That Were Destroyed in the Terrorist 
Attacks:

Figure 7: NYC Agencies Received Public Assistance Funding for a Range 
of Work Including Cleaning Dust from Buildings:

Figure 8: Port Authority Received Public Assistance Funding to Restore 
Tunnels That Were Flooded in the Terrorist Attacks:

Abbreviations:

DHS: Department of Homeland Security:

DOT: Department of Transportation:

EPA: Environmental Protection Agency:

FEMA: Federal Emergency Management Agency:

FTA: Federal Transit Agency:

NEMIS: National Emergency Management Information System:

NYC: New York City:

OMB: Office of Management and Budget:

PATH: Port Authority of New York and New Jersey:

United States General Accounting Office:

Washington, DC 20548:

August 29, 2003:

The Honorable James M. Inhofe 
Chairman 
The Honorable James M. Jeffords 
Ranking Minority Member 
Committee on Environment and Public Works 
United States Senate:

The Honorable George V. Voinovich 
The Honorable Hillary Rodham Clinton 
United States Senate:

The September 11, 2001, terrorist acts were the most destructive and 
costly terrorist events--in terms of lives lost, physical damage, 
emotional trauma, and economic hardship--that this country has ever 
experienced. In New York City (NYC), the attacks killed almost 3,000 
people, injured thousands more, and leveled 16 acres of Lower 
Manhattan, including the World Trade Center Towers and other buildings 
on or around the World Trade Center site. The attacks also disabled 
major electrical and communications facilities and the transportation 
infrastructure in the Lower Manhattan area and left many residents 
temporarily homeless and thousands unemployed.

To help NYC respond to and recover physically, emotionally, and 
economically from the damages it incurred, the President pledged and 
Congress appropriated over $20 billion in federal assistance. Today, 
less than 2 years after the terrorist attacks, the rubble that was the 
World Trade Center is gone and rebuilding efforts have started. The 
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) led the federal 
response.[Footnote 1] Total FEMA funding for several programs it 
administered to help NYC area accounts for about $8.8 billion of the 
$20 billion in federal assistance, making this the largest disaster 
response in the agency's history. In only six other disasters had FEMA 
provided more than $1 billion in assistance, the largest of them being 
the Northridge earthquake in California in 1994.[Footnote 2]

FEMA's public assistance program was the largest federal disaster 
effort to the NYC area, totaling $7.4 billion.[Footnote 3] This program 
is designed to provide federal disaster grants to eligible state and 
local government agencies and specific types of private nonprofit 
organizations. It funds eligible "emergency work," such as responses by 
local emergency personnel and debris removal, and "permanent work," 
such as the repair, replacement, or restoration of disaster-damaged 
facilities, as authorized by the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and 
Emergency Assistance Act.[Footnote 4] FEMA is expected to provide about 
$7.4 billion to the NYC area through the public assistance program and 
public assistance-related spending directed by Congress, making FEMA's 
public assistance funding the largest single federal disaster aid 
effort to the NYC area.[Footnote 5]

You asked us to review several aspects of the federal government's 
response and recovery efforts. Since FEMA's public assistance program 
was the largest federal assistance program to help the New York City 
area, we agreed to identify what activities were funded and the 
possible implications of this public assistance response to any major 
terrorist events that may occur in the future. Specifically, we agreed 
to provide information on (1) what activities FEMA supported in the NYC 
area with its public assistance program after the terrorist attacks, 
(2) how the federal government's response to this terrorist event 
differed from FEMA's traditional approach to funding public assistance 
in past disasters, and (3) what implications FEMA's public assistance 
approach in the NYC area may have on the delivery of public assistance 
should other major terrorist attacks occur in the future. We also 
agreed to provide a separate report on the overall federal disaster 
assistance given to help the NYC respond to and recover from the 
terrorist attacks. That report will be provided to you later this year.

To address our objectives, we reviewed disaster-related project 
documentation, and we analyzed management information system data on 
the public assistance FEMA provided and its cost. We reviewed 
approaches FEMA traditionally used to fund major natural disasters and 
the staffing and coordination processes it used to deliver the 
assistance and compared them to approaches used in the aftermath of the 
World Trade Center attacks. Using a structured data collection and 
interview instrument, we reviewed decisions FEMA made on funding 
applications for 10 projects that were nontraditional when compared to 
the types of work funded in the aftermath of previous major natural 
disasters. We also interviewed FEMA, NYC, and nonprofit organization 
officials about the assistance provided and the challenges FEMA faced 
in delivering public assistance. We asked these officials their views 
on whether differences in the approach to delivery of public assistance 
in the NYC area demonstrated a need for a new approach to providing 
public assistance should another major terrorist event occur in the 
future. Our scope and methodology are discussed in greater detail in 
appendix I.

Results in Brief:

FEMA supported a wide range of activities for the NYC area with its 
public assistance program. The approximately $7.4 billion in funding 
was distributed to major categories of recipients. (See fig. 1.):

Figure 1: Distribution of $7.4 Billion in Public Assistance and Public 
Assistance-Related Funding:

[See PDF for image]

Note: $0.08 million in grant administration costs are not reflected in 
the graph but are part of the total public assistance-related spending. 
Percentages do not total 100 percent because these costs are not 
included and due to rounding.

[A] Includes the NYC Departments of Sanitation and Design and 
Construction, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

[B] Excludes the NYC Departments of Police, Fire, Sanitation, and 
Design and Construction. Reimbursements to these four departments are 
shown under Debris Removal Operations & Insurance and NYC Police and 
Fire Departments.

[C] Includes New York state agencies, nonprofit organizations, and the 
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.

[End of figure]

Debris removal operations (costing about $0.7 billion) involved 
removing, screening, and disposing of 1.6 million tons of debris. The 
establishment of an insurance company to cover possible claims 
resulting from debris removal operations is projected to cost about $1 
billion. The largest individual amount of FEMA's public assistance 
funds--$2.8 billion or 38 percent--will be used jointly with additional 
funds from the U.S. Department of Transportation to repair and upgrade 
the transportation infrastructure--including streets, subway systems, 
and commuter railways--damaged in the disaster. Reimbursements for NYC 
Police and Fire Departments' emergency efforts, pensions, and vehicle 
and equipment losses amounted to $0.6 billion. The $0.3 billion in 
reimbursements to NYC agencies other than the Departments of Design and 
Construction, Sanitation, Police and Fire were for various activities 
such as exterior building cleaning, rescheduling elections, and DNA 
testing to identify victims. Another $0.7 billion provided to non-NYC 
government agencies--such as New York state agencies, nonprofit 
organizations, and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey--was 
to reimburse these agencies for, among other things, relocating offices 
and supporting some transportation projects that were not covered in 
transportation efforts listed above. Lastly, $1.2 billion was made 
available in June 2003 as a result of FEMA's early close out of its 
traditional public assistance program to NYC and state for 
congressionally authorized costs associated with the terrorist attacks. 
Most of these costs would not have been eligible for reimbursement 
under FEMA's traditional public assistance program. To receive the $1.2 
billion reimbursement for public assistance-related costs, FEMA 
officials reported that NYC and state officials must prepare 
traditional grant applications to document that disaster-related costs 
have been incurred, however Congress authorized a much wider scope of 
costs that could be reimbursed than are authorized under the Stafford 
Act. As we concluded our review, the list of projects to be funded had 
not been determined, but NYC and state had requested reimbursements for 
heightened security in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks and cost-
of-living adjustments to pensions of the survivors of fire fighters and 
police officers killed in the line of duty in the terrorist attacks. A 
reimbursement had been made for a public awareness campaign called "I 
Love New York," which was designed to attract visitors back to the city 
after the terrorist attacks.

While FEMA followed traditional processes for considering most 
applications, public assistance provided to the NYC area after the 
terrorist attacks differed significantly in three major ways from 
FEMA's traditional approach. First, FEMA did not require state or local 
governments to provide a share of federally provided disaster response 
and recovery costs. Typically, FEMA's public assistance program shares 
disaster costs burdens, with FEMA providing 75 percent of the costs--
the minimum provided for under the Stafford Act--and affected state and 
local governments paying the remaining share. At the direction of the 
President, FEMA provided 100 percent of all public assistance costs in 
the NYC area. This was the first time an entire FEMA public assistance 
operation was 100 percent federally funded. The second distinct aspect 
of FEMA's public assistance to New York was that there was a funding 
target that became a cap on the level of the assistance. As a result, 
the public assistance program did not follow customary project 
selection and close out processes. Consistent with the President's and 
Congress' commitment of approximately $20 billion in disaster 
assistance to New York, FEMA operated with a set spending level 
appropriated by Congress that it did not exceed for all public 
assistance-related work for the NYC area. In contrast, in prior 
disasters all applications for public assistance that FEMA determined 
to be eligible under the provisions of the Stafford Act were funded. 
Also, FEMA closed out public assistance funding for the World Trade 
Center disaster in June 2003, releasing money that had not been spent 
to NYC and state officials to use at their discretion for disaster-
related expenditures. A FEMA official said that no prior disaster had 
been closed out in this manner before work had been completed. Third, 
the size and type of work funded was quite different from the public 
assistance provided after prior major natural disasters. FEMA 
determined some non-traditional work was eligible for its public 
assistance program using flexible interpretations of the Stafford Act. 
For example, public assistance has traditionally been limited to 
coverage of disaster-related losses and damages--restoring, but not 
improving, existing infrastructure. However, FEMA officials said that 
they broadly interpreted the Stafford Act to allow funding that will 
not only to rebuild transportation systems that were damaged from the 
terrorist attacks, but may also improve the overall transportation 
system in Lower Manhattan. For example, within the FEMA/Department of 
Transportation interagency agreement, work has been proposed to 
construct a new transit station to replace the existing but undamaged 
Fulton Street station to improve the overall flow of commuter traffic. 
Congress also authorized FEMA to fund other disaster-related work, some 
of which would not have been eligible for assistance under the Stafford 
Act. As a result of the June 2003 close out of the public assistance 
program, $1.2 billion in funds that had not been spent for traditional 
public assistance work was made available to the city and state of New 
York for broader purposes authorized by Congress. For example, NYC 
plans to use FEMA funds to cover some of the costs of heightened 
security after the attacks.

These distinct aspects of FEMA's public assistance response in the NYC 
area compared to public assistance responses delivered after previous 
major disasters create uncertainties about the delivery of public 
assistance should there be another catastrophic terrorist attack in the 
future. FEMA and NYC officials who managed the disaster recovery 
efforts agreed that the decisions made in New York would likely be 
considered if terrorists struck again, and that it is uncertain whether 
an approach similar to the one that evolved in NYC would be followed. 
Furthermore, NYC and FEMA officials differed on how well the public 
assistance program, as authorized by the Stafford Act, serves as the 
federal government's vehicle for delivering this type of assistance. 
The NYC officials we interviewed did not think that the current program 
fully addressed the needs of the city. They said it should not be used 
to respond to major terrorist events unless it is significantly amended 
to address what they believe are unique challenges in aligning disaster 
assistance with the consequences of a terrorist incident; these 
concerns include long-term environmental liabilities and the need for 
heightened security efforts in the immediate aftermath of a terrorist 
attack. In contrast, FEMA officials said that they were generally 
satisfied that the Stafford Act provides the necessary flexibility for 
responding to terrorist attacks since Congress may authorize additional 
assistance to disaster-affected areas to address specific and unique 
needs, as it did for the NYC area. As we were completing our audit 
work, FEMA established a working group to look at ways to redesign the 
public assistance program to meet community needs for all types and 
sizes of disasters in the future, including those resulting from 
terrorist events. This group expects to provide an initial concept for 
revising the program by September 30, 2003.

In commenting on a draft of this report, the Acting Director of FEMA's 
Recovery Division said that FEMA officials are proud of the agency's 
response in delivering public assistance programs to NYC and state, and 
that they are satisfied that FEMA's authority was adequate and flexible 
enough in most circumstances to meet the response and recovery needs of 
New York. FEMA's comments are reprinted in appendix II. FEMA also 
provided technical comments on our draft, which we incorporated into 
the report where appropriate.

Background:

Under the Stafford Act, when a major natural catastrophe, fire, flood, 
or explosion occurs that is beyond the capabilities of a state and 
local government response, the President may declare that a major 
disaster exists. This declaration activates the federal response plan 
for the delivery of federal disaster assistance. The response plan is 
an agreement signed by 27 federal departments and agencies, including 
the American Red Cross. Under the Stafford Act, FEMA is responsible for 
coordinating both the federal and private response efforts. President 
Jimmy Carter established FEMA in 1978 to consolidate and coordinate 
emergency management functions in one location, addressing concerns 
about the lack of a coordinated federal approach to disaster relief. 
FEMA most recently redesigned its public assistance program in 1998. 
The federal assistance coordinated by FEMA is designed to supplement 
the efforts and available resources of state and local governments and 
voluntary relief organizations.[Footnote 6]

While FEMA had the lead in coordinating the federal response to the 
attacks on NYC, other federal agencies, including the Department of 
Transportation (DOT), the Small Business Administration (SBA), the U.S. 
Army Corps of Engineers, and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 
also provided significant assistance. The disaster declaration from the 
President triggers not only a role for FEMA as coordinator of the 
federal emergency response plan, but also a role in delivering 
assistance through several programs it administers. These programs 
include individual assistance to victims affected by a disaster and 
hazard mitigation funds to state and local governments to take steps to 
prevent future disasters. However, FEMA's public assistance program is 
typically its largest disaster assistance effort. It is designed to 
provide grants to eligible state and local government agencies and 
specific types of private nonprofit organizations that provide services 
of a governmental nature, such as utilities, fire departments, 
emergency and medical facilities, and educational institutions, to help 
cover costs of emergency response efforts and work associated with 
recovering from the disaster. According to FEMA regulations, work 
eligible for public assistance must be:

* to repair damage that occurred as a result of a declared event,

* located within an area declared by the President as a disaster area, 
and:

* the legal responsibility of an eligible applicant.

The Stafford Act sets the federal share for the public assistance 
program at no less than 75 percent of eligible costs of a disaster with 
state and local governments paying for the remaining portion. The 
assistance is to be provided to repair, restore, reconstruct, or 
replace eligible facilities. The amount of public assistance provided 
is reduced by, among other considerations, insurance proceeds and 
salvage value. Because the assistance provided by the program is 
limited by these factors, as well as certain eligibility criteria, the 
amount of public assistance funds FEMA provides in a disaster does not 
equal the total financial impact of a disaster on an affected community 
or area.

The Stafford Act has been amended several times since its enactment in 
1974, and FEMA has taken steps over the years to redesign its public 
assistance program with internal policy changes to make eligibility 
criteria for public assistance clearer, and more consistent and 
accurate. The Senate report on the Disaster Mitigation Act of 1999 
noted that the congressional interest in reducing the federal cost of 
disaster assistance would be achieved by, among other things, reducing 
the types of facilities and activities that may receive assistance in 
the event of a disaster.[Footnote 7] In August 2001, we reported that 
in a period of about 2 years since FEMA had completed a 1998 redesign 
of the public assistance program, it had developed or revised public 
assistance program policies in 35 areas or topics in part to make 
clearer eligibility criteria and improve the consistency and accuracy 
of eligibility determinations for individual projects.[Footnote 8]

FEMA's public assistance program is the largest portion of the federal 
assistance provided to New York in the aftermath of the World Trade 
Center attacks. Of a total of over $20 billion in federal assistance 
approved for this disaster, either in the form of direct assistance or 
in the form of tax benefits, about $7.4 billion was funded through 
FEMA's public assistance program or through public assistance-related 
spending authorized by Congress through appropriations to FEMA. Figure 
2 shows that FEMA's public assistance program is providing the largest 
single portion of the federal contribution to the NYC area's disaster 
recovery effort.

Figure 2: Public Assistance Funding Provides the Largest Federal 
Contribution to the NYC Area's Recovery:

[See PDF for image]

Note: Percentages do not total 100 percent due to rounding.

[A] Includes the Department of Health and Human Services, Department of 
Labor, and SBA.

[B] DOT funds are to assist in rebuilding and improving the 
transportation infrastructure.

[C] HUD funds are to be used for a variety of purposes, including 
assistance to businesses and individuals, infrastructure restoration, 
and economic recovery.

[D] Estimate by the Joint Congressional Committee on Taxation in March 
2002 of the cost of the Liberty Zone tax package to the federal 
government. The cost of the tax package in lost revenues to the federal 
government will not be precisely determined because data is not 
available. The package contains provisions designed to spur economic 
revitalization in Lower Manhattan.

[End of figure]

FEMA may assign work or enter into agreements with other federal 
agencies and the American Red Cross to handle aspects of public 
assistance within their areas of expertise. These agreements are called 
mission assignments and interagency agreements. Mission assignments 
were widely used in the first few months after the World Trade Center 
disaster to provide assistance for short-term projects. Interagency 
agreements--used for long-term projects--are similar to mission 
assignments in that they are funding agreements between agencies to 
provide goods and services on a reimbursable basis.

In March 2003, FEMA and its responsibilities were placed entirely into 
DHS in the largest reorganization of the federal government since the 
formation of the Department of Defense. The Emergency Preparedness and 
Response Directorate within DHS has responsibility for the public 
assistance program and continues to be referred to as FEMA, which we do 
in this report.[Footnote 9]

$7.4 Billion in Public Assistance-Related Funding Provided for Broad 
Range of Activities:

The approximately $7.4 billion of public assistance and public 
assistance-related work funded through FEMA is providing a broad range 
of aid to the NYC area. For example, public assistance-related funding 
was, or will be, provided to reimburse NYC authorities for immediate 
response and recovery actions--such as debris removal operations and 
emergency efforts by the NYC Departments of Design and Construction, 
Sanitation, Fire, and Police--and for long-term actions to repair and 
upgrade damaged facilities and transportation systems. Because of the 
unique nature of the NYC disaster, existing FEMA data system categories 
for tracking and reporting public assistance do not provide for some of 
the large public assistance-related efforts.[Footnote 10] Based on our 
analysis, we categorize the public assistance and related funding for 
NYC into six general areas:

* debris removal operations and insurance;

* reconstruction of the Lower Manhattan transportation infrastructure 
under an interagency agreement with DOT;

* reimbursement of police and fire department costs;

* reimbursement of expenses incurred by NYC agencies other than the 
Departments of Design and Construction, Sanitation, Police and Fire for 
such activities as DNA and forensic testing to identify victims and 
exterior building cleaning;

* reimbursement of expenses to agencies that are not part of the NYC 
government (i.e., New York state agencies, the Port Authority, and 
private non profits) for disaster-related costs such as transportation 
work not covered under the interagency agreement discussed above; and:

* reimbursement of public assistance-related expenses authorized by 
Congress that would not otherwise have been eligible for assistance 
(i.e. heightened security after the terrorist attacks) from funds made 
available after the June 30, 2003, close out of the traditional public 
assistance program.

Refer to figure 1 on page 4 for a graphic illustration of how public 
assistance funding to the NYC area was or will be distributed within 
these six categories.

Each category of public assistance funding and some of the major 
efforts funded in each of them, are described in the following 
sections.

Debris Removal Operations and Insurance:

FEMA funded about $1.7 billion in work related to debris removal 
operations and to reimburse the NYC Departments of Design and 
Construction and Sanitation for debris removal expenses. The most 
significant and costly activities in this category were removing and 
disposing of the destroyed World Trade Center buildings, screening 
debris for victims' remains and personal effects, and establishing an 
insurance company for possible claims resulting from debris removal 
operations.

Workers spent an estimated 3.1 million hours over 9 months to remove 
about 1.6 million tons of debris from the World Trade Center site. 
Debris from the collapse of the World Trade Center towers extended 7 
stories into the earth and more than 11 stories high at Ground Zero. 
Thick dust covered streets, buildings, and vehicles for blocks around 
the site. FEMA provided $620.9 million for removing the debris from the 
World Trade Center site and barging it to a landfill in Staten Island, 
N.Y., for screening, sorting, and disposal. Original estimates 
projected that the recovery effort and cleanup would take 2 years and 
$7 billion. Figure 3 shows debris removal and barging operations.

Figure 3: Public Assistance-Funded Debris Removal Operations:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

The need to sort and screen the debris to recover the remains and 
personal effects of victims and criminal evidence made the debris 
removal operation even more difficult. FEMA provided $72 million to the 
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to manage the debris inspection at the 
landfill. The sorting activities were an intense, meticulous effort to 
recover remains and personal belongings of victims to return them to 
their families and to gather criminal evidence related to the terrorist 
attacks. The Corps of Engineers provided labor, heavy equipment, 
conveyer belts, and screening equipment. The Corps also provided 
temporary buildings for storage and to shelter workers, worker 
decontamination facilities, and food service facilities. Figure 4 shows 
debris screening and inspection operations at the landfill.

Figure 4: Debris Screening and Inspection Operations:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

In addition to the costs of debris removal and disposal, FEMA set aside 
$1 billion to establish a debris removal insurance company to cover 
contractors and NYC for liability claims resulting from debris removal 
operations.[Footnote 11] According to city officials, private 
contractors came to Ground Zero to do search and rescue, recovery, and 
debris removal work in the immediate aftermath of the terrorist attacks 
before entering into formal contract agreements with NYC. The 
outstanding issue that kept the contractors and NYC from reaching a 
final agreement on compensation for the work done was liability 
insurance coverage. City officials said that liability insurance could 
not be obtained from a private insurance company because of the unknown 
risks and potentially large number of liability claims. Based on input 
from insurance experts, city officials and FEMA determined that the 
best solution was to establish an insurance company with $1 billion in 
federal capital to provide $1 billion in coverage for a payout period 
of up to 25 years. The insurance fund will cover NYC workers and 
contractor employees. As of June 2003, the details of the insurance 
coverage had not been finalized. Additional perspectives on how aspects 
of FEMA's establishment of the insurance fund differed from a 
traditional public assistance activity can be found on page 30 of this 
report.

Interagency Agreement for Lower Manhattan Transportation System 
Reconstruction:

FEMA provided $2.8 billion to help fund an interagency agreement with 
the DOT to reconstruct the Lower Manhattan transportation system. The 
terrorist attack at the World Trade Center severely damaged the 
intermodal public transportation system that was used by about 80 
percent of the 350,000 daily commuters to Lower Manhattan--the highest 
percentage of people commuting to work by public transit of any 
commercial district in the nation. The Port Authority of New York and 
New Jersey (Port Authority) commuter station underneath the World Trade 
Center was destroyed, and subway stations servicing the area were 
sufficiently damaged to prevent trains from stopping at them. In 
addition, some tunnels were temporarily closed, preventing commuter 
buses from entering Lower Manhattan. Access to and mobility within 
Lower Manhattan was severely diminished. Many streets were closed due 
to debris from the collapsed buildings and the subsequent debris 
removal operations. Large rescue vehicles and heavy debris removal 
equipment also damaged the area streets, making them more difficult to 
navigate.

Plans are underway to rebuild and improve the Lower Manhattan 
transportation system with funding from FEMA and DOT. These agencies, 
under an interagency agreement, will contribute $4.6 billion to these 
transportation system projects, with FEMA providing $2.8 billion and 
DOT providing an additional $1.8 billion. The agreement will result in 
not only rebuilding a system that was damaged, but also improving the 
overall Lower Manhattan transportation system. The agreement designated 
DOT's Federal Transit Administration (FTA) as the lead agency in charge 
of administering the federal assistance and coordinating with state and 
local implementing agencies.

In February 2003, the Governor of New York submitted funding requests 
to FEMA and DOT for three priority projects estimated to cost between 
$2.55 billion and $2.85 billion--the World Trade Center Transportation 
Hub, Fulton Street Transit Center, and South Ferry Subway Station to 
improve the overall flow of commuter traffic in lower Manhattan. 
Although the uses for the remaining $1.7 billion to $2.0 billion of the 
$4.6 billion in FEMA/DOT funds had not been determined as of June 2003, 
uses for the remaining funds being evaluated included improvements in 
access to JFK Airport and Long Island, improvements to West Street 
Route 9A, a tour bus facility, the World Trade Center sub grade 
infrastructure, and commuter ferries and street configuration work.

Figure 5 shows the extensive damage to the PATH commuter station 
beneath the World Trade Center Towers after the terrorist attacks and a 
model of the permanent station planned to be constructed in its place 
with FEMA/DOT interagency agreement funds.

Figure 5: Interagency Agreement Will Fund Construction of a Permanent 
New Station to Replace the Extensively Damaged PATH Station Beneath the 
World Trade Center Towers:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

FEMA is also funding transportation-related work for the Port Authority 
outside of the scope of this interagency agreement. This work is 
discussed on page 21 of this report. We provide additional perspective 
on how aspects of this interagency agreement differ from FEMA's 
traditional public assistance response to major disasters on page 28 of 
this report.

NYC Police and Fire Department Reimbursements:

FEMA provided about $643 million in assistance to the NYC Police and 
Fire Departments to pay benefits and wages to emergency workers during 
response and recovery efforts and to replace vehicles and equipment. As 
first responders, these departments suffered heavy casualties and 
damages in the collapse of the twin towers of the World Trade Center: 
343 NYC fire department employees, 23 active city police officers, and 
5 retired city police officers died in the line of duty, and 238 
emergency vehicles, as well as radios and other equipment were lost or 
destroyed. In the months after the attack, nearly 100 firefighters per 
shift worked at the disaster site around the clock standing over 
contractor-operated steel-ripping machines looking for victims' 
remains. Similarly, police officers were stationed 24 hours a day, 7 
days a week to provide security at the disaster site. Figure 6 includes 
photographs of police and firefighters during the search and rescue 
phase of work immediately after the terrorist attacks and 2 of the 
emergency vehicles that were destroyed in the World Trade Center 
collapse.

Figure 6: Public Assistance Funded Police and Firefighter Overtime and 
Replaced Emergency Vehicles That Were Destroyed in the Terrorist 
Attacks:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Public assistance grants to these two city agencies included $341 
million for police overtime and death benefits and $223 million for 
firefighter overtime, death benefits, and funeral costs. Grants also 
reimbursed emergency service departments $44 million to replace 98 
firefighter vehicles, radios, and other equipment; and $26 million to 
replace 140 police emergency vehicles and emergency equipment that were 
destroyed in the terrorist attacks.

Reimbursements to Other NYC Government Agencies:

Although the NYC Departments of Design and Construction, Sanitation, 
Fire, and Police were the city agencies that received the largest 
amounts of FEMA public assistance funding for debris removal and 
insurance and for emergency response losses and expenses related to the 
terrorist attacks, FEMA also provided direct public assistance to a 
number of other NYC agencies for a wide range of work totaling almost 
$300 million. Projects included:

* $46.7 million to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner for DNA 
testing, forensic analysis and equipment to help identify victims of 
the terrorist attacks;

* $8 million to the Department of Elections to reimburse the expenses 
it incurred to reschedule elections that were being held on September 
11, 2001, and to replace damaged voting equipment;

* $19.3 million to the NYC Department of Education to pay for 
instructional time for students who missed school due to closures, 
delayed openings, and school relocations[Footnote 12]; and:

* $8.6 million to the NYC Department of Environmental Protection for 
exterior building cleaning.

Other examples of funding that went to city agencies are $12.9 million 
to the NYC Department of Citywide Administrative Services for emergency 
supplies, equipment and services, and $10.6 million to set up the 
facilities and provide equipment and furniture for the NYC Family 
Center and reimburse city and state personnel for overtime at the 
Family Center who provided services for NYC residents in the aftermath 
of the terrorist attacks. Figure 7 shows the cloud of dust that covered 
buildings for blocks around the World Trade Center.

Figure 7: NYC Agencies Received Public Assistance Funding for a Range 
of Work Including Cleaning Dust from Buildings:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Reimbursements to Non-NYC Government Agencies:

FEMA provided over $700 million in public assistance-related funding to 
agencies that were not part of the NYC government, including the Port 
Authority, state agencies, counties, and private nonprofit 
organizations. Among the agencies receiving some of the largest amounts 
was the Port Authority, which sustained substantial losses of lives and 
property as a result of the terrorist attacks. The funding for the Port 
Authority was in addition to the FEMA transportation funding provided 
in its interagency agreement with DOT to rebuild and improve the Lower 
Manhattan transportation system, as discussed on page 16.

FEMA reimbursed the Port Authority for a wide range of work including 
$285.0 million to relocate offices that were located in the World Trade 
Center, repair commuter train tunnels that were damaged in the 
terrorist attacks, implement emergency ferry services, open a temporary 
PATH station, and pay overtime to the Port Authority police. The damage 
to the Port Authority's PATH train system was extensive; tunnels 
leading from the station to New Jersey were flooded and the Exchange 
Place station in New Jersey had to be closed because the station could 
not operate as a terminal. All tunnel components (i.e., fiber optics, 
conduits, pipes, lighting, ductbanks, track, contact rail, and ballast) 
needed to be replaced. The Port Authority also received public 
assistance funds to replace equipment it lost when its World Trade 
Center facilities were destroyed, including its voice telephone 
network, desktop computers, and fax and photocopy machines, and to pay 
overtime labor costs for the emergency response. Figure 8 shows PATH 
tunnel repair and construction efforts.

Figure 8: Port Authority Received Public Assistance Funding to Restore 
Tunnels That Were Flooded in the Terrorist Attacks:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

FEMA also provided public assistance funds to many other non-NYC 
government agencies to reimburse them for emergency and repair costs. 
For example, the New York State Police received $45 million for 
security operations, and New York University received $5.9 million for 
air monitoring, environmental cleaning, and emergency supplies and 
services. Other examples include the NYC Office of Emergency 
Management, which received $11.8 million from FEMA to replace destroyed 
equipment and leased office space that was located in the World Trade 
Center; Pace University, which was provided $4.4 million for damaged 
buildings; and the Battery Park City Authority, which received $3.9 
million to repair damaged facilities.

Reimbursements for Public Assistance-Related Work Authorized by 
Congress:

Lastly, $1.2 billion was made available in June 2003 as a result of 
FEMA's early close out of its traditional public assistance program to 
NYC and state for congressionally authorized costs associated with the 
terrorist attacks. Most of these costs would not have been eligible for 
reimbursement under FEMA's traditional public assistance program. The 
close out freed funds for discretionary public assistance-related uses 
by NYC and state and ensured that FEMA would spend the entirety of the 
appropriated assistance to the NYC area. Funds obligated for all of 
FEMA's programs, including individual assistance and hazard mitigation, 
were reconciled, and funds that had not been expended for approved 
projects as of April 2003 were de-obligated to be used for 
discretionary public assistance-related expenditures. To receive the 
$1.2 billion reimbursement for public assistance-related costs, FEMA 
officials reported that NYC and state officials must prepare 
traditional grant applications to document that disaster-related costs 
have been incurred; however, Congress authorized wide discretion on the 
type of costs that could be reimbursed.

As we concluded our review, the list of projects to be funded had not 
been determined, but NYC and state had requested reimbursements for 
heightened security in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks and cost-
of-living adjustments to pensions of the survivors of firefighters and 
police officers killed in the line of duty in the terrorist attacks. A 
$19 million reimbursement has been made for a public awareness campaign 
called "I Love New York," which was designed to attract visitors back 
to the city after the terrorist attacks. We discuss the heightened 
security reimbursements in more detail on page 32 of this report as an 
example of funding that was different in scope than a typical public 
assistance project and that would not have been eligible for FEMA 
funding unless it was specifically authorized by Congress.

Public Assistance to NYC Differed from the Traditional FEMA Response in 
Several Areas:

Each disaster to which FEMA responds has aspects that make it unique 
from other disasters, resulting in some differences in forms of 
assistance provided to affected communities within the parameters of 
the Stafford Act eligibility requirements, according to the head of 
FEMA's public assistance program. While FEMA followed traditional 
processes for considering most applications, the public assistance 
response in the NYC area after the terrorist attacks differed 
significantly from the traditional approach FEMA has used in providing 
assistance under the Stafford Act after major natural disasters. The 
three significant differences were:

* the elimination of any local sharing of disaster response and 
recovery costs,

* capped amounts of funding that resulted in significant modifications 
to the project selection and close out processes, and:

* the size and type of projects funded.

Many of these differences are based on presidential and congressional 
direction; however, some are the result of FEMA's interpretations of 
the Stafford Act to allow the approval of funding for certain 
assistance to New York.

No Sharing of Public Assistance Costs by State or Local Governments:

The Stafford Act sets the federal share for the public assistance 
program at no less than 75 percent of eligible costs. The President can 
increase the federal share for the public assistance program if it is 
determined that the disaster costs greatly exceed a state's financial 
capabilities. In practice, the federal share has reached 100 percent 
for emergency work, for limited periods of time, if determined that it 
was necessary to prevent further damage, protect human lives, or both. 
In 1992, for example, after Florida and Louisiana suffered large 
disaster expenses as a result of Hurricane Andrew, FEMA funded 100 
percent of all public assistance costs above $10 per capita.[Footnote 
13] According to a FEMA official, the 1994 Northridge, California 
earthquake, which cost almost $7.0 billion, was FEMA's most costly 
disaster funding effort until the World Trade Center attacks occurred; 
FEMA provided for 90 percent of all public assistance costs. In 
discussing the question of state and local sharing of public assistance 
costs, FEMA officials stated that they are reluctant to recommend a 100 
percent federal share for projects unless there are compelling reasons 
to do so because the traditional process with a matching share creates 
incentives for state and local officials to control costs and closely 
evaluate projects.

In the days immediately following the terrorist attacks, the President 
determined that the magnitude and nature of the disaster justified the 
federal government funding the total cost of public assistance 
projects, and he directed that FEMA fund 100 percent of the eligible 
costs with no state or local matching funds. This increased FEMA's 
costs and significantly reduced costs to NYC and other recipients. For 
example, on the transportation repair and improvements efforts, NYC 
area recipients did not have to make a financial contribution that 
could have totaled nearly $680 million--25 percent of the $2.75 billion 
that FEMA is providing.

Although New York received the benefits of 100 percent FEMA funding of 
public assistance projects, the President reduced the amount of related 
Hazard Mitigation Grant Program funds provided to New York. Created in 
1988 by the Stafford Act, this grant program provides funds to 
communities affected by major disasters to undertake mitigation 
measures following a major disaster. At the time of the terrorist 
attacks, grants funds up to 15 percent of the total amount of FEMA 
assistance provided are available to states following a 
disaster.[Footnote 14] However, in this case, the President limited the 
mitigation grant funds to 5 percent of the amount spent. Had the hazard 
mitigation funding percentage not been reduced, more than $1.2 billion 
in mitigation funds would have been required using the customary 15 
percent of total cost criteria.

Different Processes for Selecting Projects and Closing Out the Disaster 
Based on Capped Funding Amounts:

In a typical major disaster, FEMA's consideration of whether work is 
eligible for public assistance is not constrained by a limit on the 
total amount of public assistance funding that can be spent, and 
disasters remain "open" with FEMA until public assistance work is 
substantially completed. Generally, FEMA officials approve all public 
assistance applications that meet eligibility criteria under the 
Stafford Act, and they fund the work from FEMA's disaster relief fund. 
Also, according to a FEMA public assistance official, direct 
congressional appropriations are not typically made for a specific 
disaster. The official explained that damaged facilities are identified 
within 60 days following a kick-off meeting to begin federal disaster 
assistance between FEMA officials and state and local officials of the 
area impacted by the disaster. Proposed work is then considered for 
eligibility and funded through "project worksheets"--applications for 
specific funding amounts to complete discrete work segments. Project 
worksheets document the scope of work, cost estimates, locations, 
damage descriptions and dimensions, and special considerations of each 
work segment. No limit is set on the dollar amount of eligible work 
that can be approved. As the response and recovery progresses, states 
reimburse applicants for all costs that meet the Stafford Act's public 
assistance eligibility criteria and FEMA reimburses the states for the 
federal share. A public assistance official noted that disasters remain 
open with FEMA long after public assistance funds have been obligated. 
For example, as of June 2003, the Northridge, California, earthquake 
was still an open FEMA disaster 9 years after it occurred due to large 
and long-term reconstruction efforts. Disasters are "closed" when the 
project is complete, the final costs are known, and all appeals of 
funding decisions have been resolved.

Following the terrorist attacks, however, the process of selecting 
projects that were eligible for funding and closing out the public 
assistance for the NYC area did not follow FEMA's customary process 
because FEMA had a set amount of funds available for public assistance 
efforts. Congress provided FEMA with specific appropriations for the 
terrorist attacks that resulted in a capped funding amount of $8.8 
billion for its efforts to aid the NYC area from the President's pledge 
of at least $20 billion in federal assistance. In consideration of 
funding required for its other programs (assistance for individuals 
impacted by the disaster and hazard mitigation grants), $7.4 billion 
remained available for public assistance and public assistance-related 
projects. To help ensure that the amount of public assistance did not 
exceed this amount, FEMA asked that city and state officials prioritize 
their funding needs. As a result, about $400 million in funding 
initially budgeted for the Port Authority was eventually reallocated to 
other projects. FEMA also delayed a decision on funding for city and 
state pension actuarial losses resulting from line of duty deaths of 
police and fire fighters at the World Trade Center site so that 
officials could be certain that the costs of the project would not 
cause FEMA to exceed its total appropriation for the disaster.

A second major difference from how FEMA typically manages a disaster 
occurred when it established a June 30, 2003, deadline for closing out 
the regular public assistance program and the disaster before work was 
completed. According to FEMA officials, they established this deadline 
for closing out public assistance projects eligible for funding under 
the Stafford Act so that any remaining funds could be used for work 
identified as high priorities by city and state officials in New York 
and authorized by Congress. They said that deadlines for closing out 
public assistance had not been set in any prior disaster until work was 
completed, but that they believed it was necessary for the NYC area to 
manage the available funds to ensure that its priorities are best met 
as quickly as possible.

Size and Type of Work Was Different Than Work in Other Major Disasters:

The response to the NYC terrorist attacks was the largest public 
assistance effort in FEMA's history and by far its largest response to 
a terrorist event. Prior to the World Trade Center attacks, FEMA's most 
costly disaster assistance--almost $7 billion--was provided to aid in 
the recovery from the Northridge, California, earthquake in 1994. FEMA 
spent more than $1 billion for five other disasters in its history. 
Further, FEMA's experience with terrorism was limited to two occasions 
prior to the World Trade Center attacks. In April 1993, a major 
disaster was declared in the aftermath of an explosion caused by 
terrorism at the World Trade Center. FEMA spent about $4.2 million on 
that disaster recovery. In April 1995, an emergency and then a disaster 
were declared in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, in the aftermath of the 
bombing of the Murrah federal building--FEMA spent about $530 million 
on that recovery effort.

In its response to terrorism in the NYC area, FEMA provided public 
assistance funds for the same types of projects that are funded after a 
natural disaster (e.g., removing debris, repairing roads, and replacing 
emergency vehicles that were destroyed). However, other work funded was 
quite different because of the magnitude and nature of the disaster. 
FEMA officials said that they determined that some non traditional work 
was eligible for its public assistance program using flexible 
interpretations of the Stafford Act. Examples of public assistance 
projects approved by FEMA that we identified as being different from 
traditional public assistance work due to their size and/or type of 
work done included improvements to the Lower Manhattan transportation 
system and air quality testing. Some of these projects are discussed as 
follows.

Improving Lower Manhattan's Transportation System ($2.75 billion). 
Public assistance has traditionally been limited to repair of disaster-
related losses and damages to existing infrastructure. Assistance has 
not generally been provided to enhance or modernize the infrastructure 
beyond its pre disaster conditions. In recognizing the interdependence 
of Lower Manhattan's transportation system, however, FEMA officials 
said that they broadly interpreted their guidelines to enter into an 
interagency agreement with DOT to rebuild physical facilities that were 
damaged from the attacks and construct new facilities that may improve 
the overall Lower Manhattan transportation system. FEMA attorneys said 
that they determined that the Stafford Act would permit funding for the 
restructuring of the Lower Manhattan transportation system because they 
concluded that repairing and replacing individual elements would not 
completely restore the system's functionality.

Testing air quality and cleaning buildings ($36.9 million). FEMA 
officials said that air quality testing and removing dust from 
buildings had not been an issue in prior major disasters, however, it 
was important to the physical and psychological well being of NYC 
citizens in the aftermath of this disaster. FEMA determined that the 
testing of air quality and cleaning were eligible for public assistance 
funding where the collapse of the World Trade Center buildings, 
resulting fires, and subsequent debris removal caused potential health 
issues related to air quality. To meet this need, FEMA entered into 
interagency agreements with EPA to sample and test air quality in the 
NYC area, as well as to test ways to clean potentially hazardous dust 
in building interiors. FEMA also provided funding to the New York 
Department of Environmental Protection for the exterior cleaning of 244 
buildings and the interior cleaning of residences. EPA provided 
oversight over the interior cleaning program as part of the interagency 
agreement with FEMA.

Reimbursing costs for rescheduling New York elections ($11 million). 
According to a FEMA official, this disaster was the first during which 
elections were being held on the day of a federally declared disaster 
event. FEMA officials said that they considered whether the costs of 
canceling the elections statewide and rescheduling them at a later date 
were eligible for public assistance or were increased operating 
expenses for the state and local governments that are not considered to 
be eligible for assistance under the Stafford Act. After initially 
denying the public assistance application for reimbursement, FEMA 
officials reconsidered and determined that the costs were eligible for 
reimbursement as disaster related expenses. NYC was also reimbursed for 
costs of damaged and destroyed computers, voting machines, and ballots 
as Stafford Act eligible public assistance.

Aiding WNET Public Television (covered completely by private insurance) 
and the Legal Aid Society of New York for Public Assistance ($1.6 
million). According to FEMA officials, WNET, a nonprofit television 
station, requested reimbursement from the public assistance program for 
expenses for a communications antenna that was damaged in the World 
Trade Center attacks. The New York Legal Aid Society asked for 
reimbursement of disaster-related costs including repair of damages to 
its building and reconstruction of its data hub that was destroyed in 
the attacks. Although public television stations are not among the 
specific types of non profit organizations that are normally considered 
to be eligible applicants for public assistance because they provide 
essential government services (i.e. educational, medical, water, and 
sewer treatment facilities), FEMA determined that WNET was eligible as 
a public facility because it provided health and safety information to 
the general public during the crisis. Later, WNET received full 
coverage for its claims from a private insurance company, so FEMA funds 
were not awarded. Similarly, FEMA officials said that although legal 
aid societies are not generally eligible for public assistance, the 
Legal Aid Society of New York was eligible because it provided 
government services as the public defender for NYC. These projects were 
not traditional because they required flexibility in FEMA's 
interpretation of Stafford Act definitions of private nonprofit and 
public facilities that are eligible for public assistance.

Notwithstanding its efforts to be flexible in defining public 
assistance activities eligible under the Stafford Act, FEMA officials 
denied some applications because they determined they were not eligible 
for public assistance under the Stafford Act, but the Congress directed 
FEMA to reimburse the NYC area for some public assistance-related costs 
that would not otherwise have been eligible for funding. An estimated 
total of $2.2 billion of FEMA's public assistance funds--about 28 
percent--will go to these costs.[Footnote 15] This public assistance-
related funding was different from work FEMA funds under the Stafford 
Act. The projects included authorizing a debris removal insurance fund 
for workers at the World Trade Center site and reimbursing NYC agencies 
for the costs of providing heightened security after the terrorist 
attacks. In addition, as discussed on page 24 of this report, as we 
concluded our review, FEMA and NYC and state officials were considering 
projects to be funded with $1.2 billion that became available after the 
close out of traditional work in June 2003 for congressionally 
authorized purposes. None of these reimbursements were eligible for 
funding under FEMA's public assistance program. Reimbursements being 
considered included payment of increased costs of the Medicaid program 
to meet health needs of recipients after the attacks, a public 
awareness campaign called "I Love New York," which was designed to 
attract visitors back to the city after the terrorist attacks, and cost 
of living adjustments made to the pensions of survivors of firefighters 
and police officers killed in the line of duty in the terrorist 
attacks.

Descriptions of Three Projects and the Congressional Actions Taken to 
Fund Them Follow:

Debris removal insurance for workers at the World Trade Center site ($1 
billion). As discussed on page 15, this project establishes an 
insurance company to insure NYC and its contractors for claims arising 
from debris removal at the World Trade Center, including claims filed 
by workers who suffer ill health effects as a result of working on 
debris removal operations. FEMA officials said that the project is 
unprecedented in its size and complexity and because it involves long-
term health and environmental issues of a scope FEMA had not considered 
in prior major disasters. Although officials said that FEMA has never 
established an insurance fund to manage claims from other major 
disasters, FEMA Office of General Counsel officials noted that FEMA 
does frequently pay for contractors' insurance because it is built into 
the contract between the public assistance applicant and the 
contractor. In this instance, workers rushed to the disaster site 
before any contracts were approved, and no private insurance company 
would carry the insurance because of unknown liabilities. FEMA 
officials said that the portion of the project pertaining to 
contractors qualified for public assistance under the Stafford Act and 
is a disaster-related cost that FEMA has traditionally assumed in major 
natural disasters. Expanding the coverage to include liability for 
claims filed against NYC or by city workers was an eligibility issue 
that was under consideration within FEMA when Congress authorized the 
funding in the Consolidated Appropriations Resolution for fiscal year 
2003.[Footnote 16]

Reimbursement for heightened security costs in the aftermath of the 
terrorist attacks (amount of funding not determined). FEMA denied 
applications for public assistance to reimburse city agencies, 
including the Departments of Environmental Protection, Corrections, 
Fire, and Transportation to cover costs for increased security (e.g., 
the Department of Environmental Protection took increased security 
measures to protect the city water supply). A FEMA official said that 
the applications were not eligible for public assistance because the 
work was of the sort that was being done nationwide after the terrorist 
attacks and were intended to prevent future attacks rather than respond 
to the disaster that had occurred. However, NYC Office of Management 
and Budget (OMB) officials said that some of the heightened security 
costs would be reimbursed as a result of the enactment of the 
Consolidated Appropriations Resolution for fiscal year 2003, which 
allowed NYC flexibility in covering disaster-related costs not 
otherwise reimbursable under the Stafford Act. At the time of our 
review, the amount of funding to be provided for heightened security 
costs had not been determined, but it was anticipated by FEMA officials 
to be over $100 million.

Reimbursement for instructional time for students to make up for days 
missed after the terrorist attacks ($19.3 million). FEMA initially 
denied a public assistance request to pay for additional hours of 
instructional time for students who missed school due to closures, 
delayed openings, and school relocations in the aftermath of the 
terrorist attacks. FEMA officials said that the application was denied 
because the after-school program designed by the NYC Board of Education 
to make up for the lost instructional time was predicated on direct 
FEMA funding, but it did not meet the standards of emergency work for 
which applicants must perform work immediately after a disaster, 
regardless of who will pay, to eliminate an immediate threat to health, 
life, and safety. However, FEMA was specifically directed by the 
congressional conference committee making supplemental appropriations 
for fiscal year 2002 to provide funds for the additional instructional 
time. The conference report also directed FEMA to provide compensation 
to the NYC school system for costs stemming from the terrorist attacks 
for services and supplies, including mental health and trauma 
counseling, guidance and grief counseling, and replacement of lost 
textbooks and perishable food.[Footnote 17] NYC Board of Education had 
spent $19.3 million of a total $77.6 million approved for this work as 
of April 30, 2003. The remainder of the funding was de-obligated to be 
used for public assistance related spending authorized by Congress.

Response to NYC Area Creates Uncertainties about How Assistance Would 
be Delivered in a Future Catastrophic Terrorist Event:

Because the public assistance response to the NYC area after the 
terrorist attacks was unique and expanded in terms of the level and 
types of assistance provided, it creates uncertainty about how public 
assistance will be delivered if another catastrophic terrorist attack 
occurs. Both NYC and FEMA officials, including managers of the World 
Trade Center Federal Recovery Office and top officials of the NYC 
Offices of Emergency Management and OMB, agreed that they were 
uncertain regarding the level and type of future FEMA assistance. These 
officials stated that if another major terrorist disaster occurs, other 
communities might seek similar types of assistance as was received in 
the federal public assistance response to New York. In this regard, an 
official of the NYC OMB anticipated that one of the first calls by a 
mayor of a city that experienced a major terrorist event would be to 
NYC to discuss the decisions made in the aftermath of the World Trade 
Center attacks. FEMA Recovery Office officials agreed that the 
decisions made in New York would be on the table at discussions of 
federal assistance for any future terrorist event. They noted that it 
would remain to be seen whether an approach similar to the one that 
evolved in NYC, including a 100 percent federal share for public 
assistance funding, a capped funding amount, and flexibility in 
addressing needs, would be used following any future event.

The Congressional Research Service noted similar concerns in a June 
2002 report about the implications that the response and assistance 
provided to the NYC area may have on future federal response to 
catastrophic terrorist events.[Footnote 18] The agency's report pointed 
out that one of the long-standing principles of federal disaster 
assistance policies has been that federal aid should supplement--not 
supplant--nonfederal efforts and that the actions taken in the 
aftermath of the terrorist attacks might have established precedent for 
an expanded federal role in consequence management after terrorist 
attacks. The report noted that traditionally, the types and amounts of 
assistance provided after one disaster have been sought following 
succeeding catastrophes.

The report also states that the overriding question is whether the 
range of existing federal policies for responding to disasters is 
appropriate if a terrorist attack more devastating than that of 
September 11 were to occur. This is a question to which NYC and FEMA 
officials have differing positions. With respect to the effectiveness 
of the Stafford Act in dealing with a major terrorist event of an 
impact equal to or greater than the World Trade Center attacks, the 
officials from NYC involved in the response and recovery efforts whom 
we interviewed did not believe that the act fully addressed the needs 
of the city and did not think it should be used to respond to major 
terrorist events unless it had significant amendments to address the 
unique challenges related to terrorist events. According to top 
officials of both the NYC Office of Emergency Management and OMB, the 
public assistance program authorized by the Stafford Act is not a good 
fit for the needs of a large municipal government that is coping with 
the effects of a terrorist event. They pointed out that the impacts of 
the terrorist attacks in NYC were different than impacts from the 
natural disasters that the act was created to address. For example, the 
Stafford Act does not address concerns such as the federal government's 
responsibility for addressing long-term environmental liabilities. 
Additionally, a NYC emergency management official noted that the 
Stafford Act lacked provisions for cities and states to be eligible for 
reimbursement of money spent to provide security in the immediate 
aftermath of terrorist attacks. The city officials noted that funding 
to help alleviate these impacts was eventually approved, but not 
without considerable discussion with FEMA officials and specific 
direction from Congress.

A key NYC OMB official also said that the Stafford Act is too 
restrictive for responding to a major terrorist event because it does 
not allow the reimbursement to affected communities for budget 
shortfalls resulting from lost tax revenues. The official said that NYC 
lost tax revenues, both from real estate taxes from the destroyed 
buildings and corporate, sales, and income taxes from displaced 
businesses and individuals that were eligible for reimbursement under 
the Stafford Act. He said that NYC requested $650 million in 
reimbursement for revenue shortfalls in fiscal years 2002 and 2003 that 
were directly related to the terrorist attacks. While FEMA officials 
agreed that the estimate seemed reasonable, the amount was not eligible 
for reimbursement under the Stafford Act. Congress recognized the 
problem and provided the city some flexibility to cover expenses in 
these areas. However, the New York OMB official said that a federal 
block grant would have allowed the city to spend the money in ways that 
were most needed without specific congressional authorization to do so; 
he viewed a block grant approach to providing disaster relief as 
preferable to trying to obtain the funding under the Stafford Act.

In contrast, FEMA officials said that the Stafford Act worked 
appropriately for the NYC area. FEMA attorneys said that the Stafford 
Act contains enough flexibility to allow funding for non traditional 
activities. They added that every disaster has unique aspects, which 
continually challenge FEMA officials to exercise their discretion under 
the act to provide needed assistance. Furthermore, they point out that 
it is always the prerogative of the Congress to provide additional 
assistance to disaster-affected areas to address specific and unique 
needs. If Congress saw a need to fund public assistance-related work 
not covered under the Stafford Act in the event of another major act of 
terrorism, it could appropriate funds specifically for the disaster, as 
it did in NYC. Consequently, the FEMA officials are generally satisfied 
that they are able to apply provisions of the Stafford Act to respond 
to the terrorist attacks and, as of June 2003, did not believe 
significant changes to the legislation were necessary in the aftermath 
of September 11, 2001.

Nevertheless, FEMA recently initiated an effort to develop a concept 
for redesigning the public assistance program. A working group of the 
Public Assistance Program Redesign Project, formed at the request of 
the director of FEMA's Recovery Division, held its first meeting in May 
2003. Members included FEMA public assistance and research and 
evaluation staff and state program managers to provide a broader 
perspective on the issues and concerns. The project was established to 
suggest proposals to improve the public assistance program and make it 
more efficient and capable of meeting community needs for all types and 
sizes of disasters, including those resulting from terrorism. Among 
other things, the project seeks to transform the program to one that:

* is flexible enough to meet the demands of disasters of all types and 
sizes,

* reduces overall resource requirements,

* offers incentive for timely close outs,

* places operational control principally with states and applicants, 
and:

* eliminates redundancies in decision making and processes.

The working group will examine potential options for redesigning the 
program that include an annual block grant program managed by the 
states, a disaster-based state-managed program, and a capped funding 
amount. The project is currently scheduled to hold a listening session 
for local officials and representatives of other organizations in 
August 2003, and develop a basic concept design for revising the 
program by September 30, 2003.

Conclusions:

The public assistance program FEMA delivered in the NYC area after the 
terrorist attacks was substantially different in several ways from a 
"typical" FEMA public assistance response. For example, in the NYC area 
there was a lack of cost sharing with state and local governments; a 
smaller than usual federal share of hazard mitigation funding; a 
different process for project review, selection, and close out; and, 
most significantly, the size and scope greatly exceeds the traditional 
public assistance response after a major natural disaster. The reasons 
for these differences are many and include the President's early 
commitment to providing a specified amount of funding to New York, 
congressional direction on activities to fund, and FEMA's discretion 
under the Stafford Act.

Irrespective of the reasons for the differences in the way public 
assistance was delivered after the terrorist attacks, these differences 
raise questions about FEMA's response to any future major terrorist 
event in this country. The key issue is whether the differences in the 
ways the public assistance program in the NYC area was delivered will 
serve a baseline for the federal approach in the event of another major 
terrorist event. Should such a terrorist event occur, it is not 
unrealistic to assume that affected communities will expect to receive 
public assistance comparable to that provided for the NYC area to meet 
their needs.

DHS, within its Emergency Preparedness and Response Directorate, has an 
opportunity to assess the questions raised as a result of these 
differences and, if necessary, revise the public assistance program or 
provide Congress with suggestions for legislative changes that are 
needed so that it will be positioned to address new expectations for 
disaster assistance. The newly formed Public Assistance Redesign 
Project, established as we were concluding our audit work at the 
request of the Director of FEMA's Recovery Division, plans to address 
many of the issues raised in this report, including whether the 
approach used in NYC is the appropriate way to provide federal 
assistance for recovery from terrorist acts. It is too early for us to 
assess the impact the project will have on the public assistance 
program in the future; however, it is a promising first step toward 
addressing these issues and better ensures that DHS will have a process 
in place to deliver public assistance that eliminates uncertainties and 
questions about the ways in which the needs of affected communities 
will be met in the event of another major terrorist attack.

Agency Comments:

In commenting on a draft of this report, the Acting Director of FEMA's 
Recovery Division said that FEMA officials are proud of the agency's 
response in delivering public assistance programs to NYC and state, and 
that they are satisfied that FEMA's authority was adequate and flexible 
enough in most circumstances to meet the response and recovery needs of 
New York. The Acting Director did not take exception to any of the 
information provided in our report. FEMA's comments are reprinted in 
appendix II. FEMA also provided technical comments on our draft, which 
we incorporated into the report where appropriate.

As we agreed with your offices, unless you publicly announce the 
contents of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution of it 
until 30 days from the date of this letter. We will then send copies of 
this report to the Secretary of Homeland Security and interested 
congressional committees. We will make copies available to others upon 
request. In addition, this report will be available at no charge on our 
Web site at http://www.gao.gov.

If you or your staff have any questions about this report, please 
contact me on (202) 512-2834 or at heckerj@gao.gov. Individuals making 
key contributions to this report are listed in appendix III.

JayEtta Hecker 
Director, Physical Infrastructure Issues:

Signed by JayEtta Hecker: 

[End of section]

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:

To determine what activities the Federal Emergency Management (FEMA) 
supported through its public assistance program, we analyzed published 
FEMA reports and FEMA's National Emergency Management Information 
System (NEMIS) data. NEMIS is FEMA's primary information system that 
manages disaster grant funding, and we analyzed NEMIS data on public 
assistance funding for this disaster. Though we were not able to 
completely assess the reliability of the published FEMA program data, 
we did perform logic tests of the data and found no obvious errors of 
completeness or accuracy. Also, according to FEMA officials, the 
published reports are the most reliable information available. The 
officials said that published FEMA reports were compiled based on NEMIS 
data, as well as the knowledge of public assistance program managers of 
funding for specific projects. We also updated spending amounts for 
some projects to reflect changes made after FEMA's June 30, 
2003,closeout of the traditional public assistance program, based on 
technical comments to our draft report. We interviewed FEMA 
headquarters, regional, and recovery office officials in New York City, 
N.Y., and Washington, D.C. We analyzed FEMA, Office of Management and 
Budget (OMB), and Congressional Research Service reports on federal 
assistance to the New York City (NYC) area to recover from the 
terrorist attacks. We reviewed the Stafford Act and FEMA regulations 
for ensuring that public assistance program funds are spent 
appropriately on eligible work and discussed oversight processes with 
FEMA headquarters, regional, and recovery office officials. We also 
discussed the agreements that FEMA used to coordinate responses of 
other federal agencies. We selected and examined the FEMA agreements 
with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Department of Transportation 
(DOT), and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and reviewed support 
documents. We met with officials of the FEMA Inspector General to 
discuss planning for full audits of selected projects within 3 years of 
their completion.

To determine how the federal government's response to the terrorist 
event differed from FEMA's traditional approach to funding public 
assistance in other disasters, we selected 10 projects for detailed 
review from an issue matrix created by the public assistance officer at 
the World Trade Center Federal Recovery Office. The issue matrix 
tracked 32 public assistance funding issues and other types of concerns 
that required higher than normal levels of review. In making our 
selection of projects, we consulted with officials of the FEMA Office 
of General Counsel in Washington, D.C., and FEMA officials at the World 
Trade Center Recovery Office in New York City, N.Y. For each project 
selected, we reviewed available written documentation such as project 
worksheets, case management files, letters, and memoranda. We reviewed 
the legislation that directed FEMA to fund selected projects. Using 
structured interview instruments, we interviewed FEMA project managers 
and representatives of agencies that applied for public assistance to 
discuss how the challenging issues were considered and resolved. Table 
1 lists the 10 projects we reviewed and the applicant organizations 
that participated in interviews on each of them. We also discussed 
FEMA's staffing processes with human resources officials at FEMA 
Headquarters in Washington, D.C., World Trade Center Federal Recovery 
Office managers, and representatives of each of FEMA's three technical 
assistance contractors who sent staff to NYC.

Table 1: Ten Projects We Reviewed and Applicant Organizations 
Interviewed for Each of Them:

Project: Debris removal insurance for workers at Ground Zero; Applicant 
organization: * NYC OMB.

Project: Reimbursement for NYC budget deficits directly related to the 
terrorist attacks; Applicant organization: * NYC OMB.

Project: Reimbursement for instructional time for students to make-up 
for days missed after the terrorist attacks; Applicant organization: * 
NYC Department of Education.

Project: NYC share of reimbursement for pension actuarial losses 
resulting from line of duty deaths of police and firefighters at Ground 
Zero; Applicant organization: * NYC OMB.

Project: Commuter train station construction costs; Applicant 
organization: * Port Authority of N.Y. and N.J.; * NYC Department of 
Transportation.

Project: Reimbursement for damage to voting equipment and rescheduling 
NYC elections; Applicant organization: * NYC Board of Elections.

Project: Reimbursement for heightened security costs in the aftermath 
of the terrorist attacks; Applicant organization: * NYC OMB; * NYC 
Office of Emergency Management; * NYC Fire Department; * NYC Police 
Department; * NYC Office of Corrections; * NYC Department of 
Environmental Protection.

Project: Cleaning of dust and debris from emergency vehicles; Applicant 
organization: * NYC OMB; * NYC Office of Emergency Management; * NYC 
Fire Department; * NYC Police Department.

Project: WNET Public Television eligibility for public assistance for 
disaster-related costs; Applicant organization: * Educational 
Broadcasting Corporation (WNET).

Project: Legal Aid Society of N.Y. eligibility for public assistance 
for disaster-related Costs; Applicant organization: * N.Y. Legal Aid 
Society.

Source: FEMA.

[End of table]

To identify some of the implications these different approaches may 
have on the delivery of public assistance should terrorist attacks 
causing similarly catastrophic damage occur in the future, we 
interviewed FEMA officials in NYC, and FEMA and Congressional Research 
Service officials in Washington, D.C. We also analyzed our report and 
Congressional Research Service reports on federal emergency response 
and recovery policies, and we reviewed the Stafford Act and FEMA 
regulations.

We conducted this review from August 2002 to July 2003. We performed 
our audit work in accordance with generally accepted government 
auditing standards.

[End of section]

Appendix II: Comments from the Federal Emergency Management Agency:

Federal Emergency Management Agency Washington, D.C. 20472:

AUG 20 2003:

Ms. JayEtta Z. Hecker:

Director, Physical Infrastructure Team U.S. General Accounting Office:

441 G Street, N.W. Washington, DC 20515:

Dear Ms. Hecker:

Thank you for having provided FEMA the opportunity to comment on the 
United States General Accounting Office draft report entitled 
"Information on FEMA's Post-9/11 Public Assistance to the New York City 
Area." Your staff incorporated many of our suggestions and information, 
thereby making the report more accurate.

Given the enormous challenge presented by the September 11 terrorist 
attacks, we are proud of FEMA's response in delivering its Public 
Assistance programs to New York City and New York State. While FEMA 
does not have comprehensive authority to provide all assistance 
requested, we are satisfied that FEMA's authority was adequate and 
flexible enough in most circumstances to meet the response and recovery 
needs of New York.

Once the President declares a major disaster, FEMA implements its 
Public Assistance program to provide reimbursement for necessary 
assistance such as emergency protective measures, debris removal and 
infrastructure repair. While every disaster presents unique 
circumstances, FEMA's Public Assistance program and its processes and 
policies established prior to September 11 were implemented for New 
York with only slight modifications. This demonstrates the flexibility 
of FEMA's authority and its ability to provide essential Public 
Assistance regardless of the cause of the event.

More than 17 months after the disaster, Congress provided FEMA, in the 
Consolidated Appropriations Resolution, 2003, P.L. 108-7, additional 
authority to ensure that FEMA would be authorized to expend its full 
appropriation for the New York recovery effort. Only then was FEMA able 
to modify its Public Assistance program by implementing an expedited 
financial closeout to expedite the obligation of FEMA's remaining funds 
to New York.

We appreciate the opportunity you have given us to make meaningful 
contributions to your report. Please call me at (202) 646-3642 if you 
have any additional questions.

Laurence W. Zensin:

Acting Director, Recovery Division:

Signed by Laurence W. Zensin: 

Emergency Preparedness and Response Directorate 
Department of Homeland Security:

[End of section]

Appendix III: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contacts:

JayEtta Z. Hecker (202) 512-2834 John R. Schulze (202) 512-4390:

Acknowledgments:

In addition to those named above, John E. Bagnulo, C. Vashun Cole, Kara 
Finnegan-Irving, Julian L. King, Deborah A. Knorr, and John A. Rose:

FOOTNOTES

[1] In March 2003, FEMA and its approximately 2,500 staff became part 
of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Most of FEMA--including 
its disaster assistance efforts--is now part of the Department's 
Emergency Preparedness and Response Directorate; however, it has 
retained its name and individual identity within the department. We 
therefore refer to FEMA in this report.

[2] The six other disasters for which FEMA spent more than $1 billion 
were caused by earthquakes, hurricanes, or floods. These six disasters 
are: $6.99 billion for the Northridge Earthquake, Calif. (1994); $2.25 
billion for Hurricane Georges, Ala., Fla., La., Miss., P.R., V.I. 
(1998); $1.84 billion for Hurricane Andrew, Fla., La. (1992); $1.13 
billion for Hurricane Hugo, N.C., S.C., P.R., V.I. (1989); $1.14 
billion for Midwest Floods, 9 Midwestern states (1993); and $1.08 
billion for Hurricane Floyd, 13 Eastern Seaboard states (1999).

[3] The term "public assistance" is also used for unrelated government 
programs administered by other agencies. For example, in the Department 
of Health and Human Services, public assistance refers to benefits for 
low-income individuals. For this report, public assistance refers to 
the FEMA program.

[4] Pub. L. No. 93-288, 88 Stat. 143 (1974), as amended. The Stafford 
Act authorized the public assistance program that gives FEMA authority 
to provide assistance, defines basic program criteria and eligibility, 
and authorizes FEMA to publish regulations.

[5] In the Consolidated Appropriations Resolution for fiscal year 2003, 
Congress authorized the state and NYC to use funds appropriated to FEMA 
for disaster relief for costs associated with the World Trade Center 
attacks that are not reimbursable under the Stafford Act. We refer to 
these funds as public assistance-related because they are used for 
projects in the public domain that are not related to hazard 
mitigation. 

[6] In a December 2002 report, we discussed charitable organizations' 
contribution to the disaster relief efforts in the NYC area and the 
need for a greater FEMA role in facilitating collaboration among these 
organizations. U.S. General Accounting Office, September 11: More 
Effective Collaboration Could Enhance Charitable Organizations' 
Contributions in Disasters, GAO-03-259 (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 19, 
2002).

[7] Senate Report 106-295.

[8] U.S. General Accounting Office, Disaster Assistance: Improvement 
Needed in Disaster Declaration Criteria and Eligibility Assurance 
Procedures, GAO-01-837 (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 31, 2001).

[9] FEMA's Office of National Preparedness, which is responsible for 
terrorism preparedness and response, was placed in the Border and 
Transportation Security Directorate. This placement was designed to 
achieve a measure of consolidation with preparedness functions from 
other agencies. However, as we reported in our Performance and 
Accountability Series in January, 2003, other disaster preparedness and 
response efforts will be in the Emergency Preparedness and Response 
Directorate and close coordination will be needed among these groups to 
ensure that problems of duplication, overlap, and confusion that 
occurred in the past are not replicated. U.S. General Accounting 
Office, Major Management Challenges and Program Risks: Federal 
Emergency Management Agency, GAO-03-113 (Washington, D.C.: January 
2003). 

[10] FEMA's categories for public assistance work are (1) debris 
removal, (2) emergency protective measures, (3) road and bridge 
systems, (4) water control facilities, (5) public buildings and 
equipment, (6) public utilities, and (7) recreation and other. However, 
some large public assistance efforts funded in NYC did not fit well 
within the standard categories. For example, a $64.6 million 
application to cover increased NYC contributions to the retirement 
system due to the line-of-duty deaths of police and fire fighters in 
the terrorist attacks was classified as an emergency protective 
measure, and a FEMA official noted that the "recreation and other" 
category was used to classify reimbursements that did not fit in other 
categories. For example, funding to provide additional school time for 
students who lost instructional time as a result of the terrorist 
attacks was classified as "recreational or other." For this reason, we 
did not use the FEMA categories for our analysis.

[11] FEMA was authorized to do so by the Consolidated Appropriations 
Resolution of 2003, Pub. L. No. 108-7. $1 billion is a projected cost, 
but actual costs will be unknown for many years.

[12] Funding of $77 million was approved for the NYC Board of Education 
for this purpose. As of April 2003, $19.3 million was. The remaining 
funds were de-obligated from the project and directed to public 
assistance related work authorized by Congress after the close out of 
the traditional assistance program.

[13] Per capita personal income is commonly used in federal grant 
programs as a basis for sharing program costs between states and the 
federal government.

[14] The Consolidated Appropriations Resolution of 2003, Pub. L. No. 
108-7, has since amended the Stafford Act to reduce the amount 
available for mitigation grant funds to 7.5 percent. However, pursuant 
to the The Disaster Mitigation Act of 2000, up to 20 percent of the 
total estimated federal assistance amount is available for states that 
meet enhanced planning criteria.

[15] The congressionally directed funding includes funding for projects 
that FEMA officials said were at least partially eligible for public 
assistance under the Stafford Act (i.e. the contractor portion of the 
$1 billion debris removal insurance fund to cover workers at the World 
Trade Center site.)

[16] Pub. L. No.108-7.

[17] House Report 107-593.

[18] Congressional Research Service, Federal Disaster Policies After 
Terrorists Strike: Issues and Options for Congress (Washington, D.C.: 
June 24, 2002).

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