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Recovering from Hurricanes Ike and Gustav and Other Recent Natural 
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Report to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, 
U.S. Senate: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

September 2008: 

Disaster Recovery: 

Past Experiences Offer Insights for Recovering from Hurricanes Ike and 
Gustav and Other Recent Natural Disasters: 

Insights for Recovering from 2008 Disasters: 

GAO-08-1120: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-08-1120, a report to the Committee on Homeland 
Security and Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

This month, Hurricanes Ike and Gustav struck the Gulf Coast producing 
widespread damage and leading to federal major disaster declarations. 
Earlier this year, heavy flooding resulted in similar declarations in 
seven Midwest states. In response, federal agencies have provided 
millions of dollars in assistance to help with short- and long-term 
recovery. State and local governments bear the primary responsibility 
for recovery and have a great stake in its success. Experiences from 
past disasters may help them better prepare for the challenges of 
managing and implementing the complexities of disaster recovery. 

GAO was asked to identify insights from past disasters and share them 
with state and local officials undertaking recovery activities. GAO 
reviewed six past disasters—the Loma Prieta earthquake in northern 
California (1989), Hurricane Andrew in south Florida (1992), the 
Northridge earthquake in Los Angeles, California (1994), the Kobe 
earthquake in Japan (1995), the Grand Forks/Red River flood in North 
Dakota and Minnesota (1997), and Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in the 
Gulf Coast (2005). GAO interviewed officials involved in the recovery 
from these disasters and experts on disaster recovery. GAO also 
reviewed relevant legislation, policies, and its previous work. 

What GAO Found: 

While the federal government provides significant financial assistance 
after major disasters, state and local governments play the lead role 
in disaster recovery. As affected jurisdictions recover from the recent 
hurricanes and floods, experiences from past disasters can provide 
insights into potential good practices. Drawing on experiences from six 
major disasters that occurred from 1989 to 2005, GAO identified the 
following selected insights: 

* Create a clear, implementable, and timely recovery plan. Effective 
recovery plans provide a road map for recovery. For example, within 6 
months of the 1995 earthquake in Japan, the city of Kobe created a 
recovery plan that identified detailed goals which facilitated 
coordination among recovery stakeholders. The plan also helped Kobe 
prioritize and fund recovery projects, in addition to establishing a 
basis for subsequent governmental evaluations of the recovery’s 
progress. 

* Build state and local capacity for recovery. State and local 
governments need certain capacities to effectively make use of federal 
assistance, including having sufficient financial resources and 
technical know-how. State and local governments are often required to 
match a portion of the federal disaster assistance they receive. Loans 
provided one way for localities to enhance their financial capacity. 
For example, after the Red River flood, the state-owned Bank of North 
Dakota extended the city of Grand Forks a $44 million loan, which the 
city used to match funding from federal disaster programs and begin 
recovery projects. 

* Implement strategies for businesses recovery. Business recovery is a 
key element of a community’s recovery. Small businesses can be 
especially vulnerable to major disasters because they often lack 
resources to sustain financial losses. Federal, state, and local 
governments developed strategies to help businesses remain in the 
community, adapt to changed market conditions, and borrow funds at 
lower interest rates. For example, after the Loma Prieta earthquake, 
the city of Santa Cruz erected large pavilions near the main shopping 
street. These structures enabled more than 40 local businesses to 
operate as their storefronts were repaired. As a result, shoppers 
continued to frequent the downtown area thereby maintaining a customer 
base for impacted businesses. 

* Adopt a comprehensive approach toward combating fraud, waste, and 
abuse. The influx of financial assistance after a major disaster 
provides increased opportunities for fraud, waste, and abuse. Looking 
for ways to combat such activities before, during, and after a disaster 
can help states and localities protect residents from contractor fraud 
as well as safeguard the financial assistance they allocate to victims. 
For example, to reduce contractor fraud after the Red River flood, the 
city of Grand Forks established a credentialing program that issued 
photo identification to contractors who passed licensing and criminal 
checks. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO is not making any recommendations in this report. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-08-1120]. For more 
information, contact Stanley Czerwinski at (202) 512-6808 or 
czerwinskis@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Scope and Methodology: 

Create a Clear, Implementable, and Timely Recovery Plan: 

Build State and Local Capacity for Recovery: 

Implement Strategies for Business Recovery: 

Adopt a Comprehensive Approach to Combating Fraud, Waste, and Abuse: 

Concluding Observations: 

Agency Comments: 

Appendix I: Selected GAO Products Related to Disaster Recovery: 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Counties in Gulf Coast States That Received Federal Major 
Disaster Declarations as a Result of Hurricanes Gustav and Ike: 

Figure 2: Counties in Seven Midwest States That Received Federal Major 
Disaster Declarations as a Result of 2008's Severe Flooding: 

Figure 3: Six Disasters Included in This Review (1989-2005): 

Figure 4: Excerpt from the Financing Matrix in Grand Forks' Recovery 
Plan Which Identified Potential Funding Sources and Target Dates for 
Recovery Tasks: 

Figure 5: Temporary Pavilions in Santa Cruz, California, Following the 
Loma Prieta Earthquake: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

Washington, DC 20548: 

September 26, 2008: 

The Honorable Joseph I. Lieberman: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Susan M. Collins: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

This month, Hurricanes Ike and Gustav struck the Gulf Coast producing 
widespread damage and leading to federal major disaster declarations in 
Texas, Louisiana, and Alabama. Earlier this year, widespread flooding 
occurred in multiple states in the Midwest covering thousands of square 
miles, and resulting in billions of dollars in damaged infrastructure 
and crops. The severity of the impact resulted in federal major 
disaster declarations in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, 
Nebraska, and Wisconsin. Now that the winds have died down and the 
floodwaters have receded, these affected areas face the challenge of 
rebuilding damaged physical and economic infrastructure as well as 
helping their residents to recover.[Footnote 1] 

Several disaster assistance programs have been activated to help 
Midwest residents recover from the severe flooding that occurred 
earlier this year. For example, according to the Federal Emergency 
Management Agency (FEMA) over $400 million in federal assistance has 
been provided to help Iowa recover from the flooding. As of August 
2008, FEMA has approved over $109 million in housing assistance grants 
for rental or temporary lodging and housing repair. FEMA has also 
obligated more than $79 million in Public Assistance grants in response 
to requests from eligible entities that will provide funds for long- 
term rebuilding efforts, such as restoring public infrastructure and 
other disaster costs in Iowa. Similarly, the Small Business 
Administration has also provided assistance with long-term recovery. 
Over $274 million has been approved in loans for homeowners, renters, 
and businesses in the affected areas as of mid-August 2008. 

In contrast to the standardized set of activities and procedures 
typically associated with the immediate response to a disaster, the 
recovery process can be much more varied and complex. The particular 
path a community takes when recovering from a major disaster will 
differ as a result of several factors, including the scale of the 
disaster's impact, specific community needs and conditions, and the 
amount and type of resources available. While such specifics prevent 
the development of a "cookbook" for an effective recovery, potentially 
valuable insights can be learned from the experiences of communities 
that have already navigated the disaster recovery process. 

To assist you in your ongoing oversight of rebuilding in the wake of 
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, we briefed your staff on several occasions 
on the results of our ongoing work regarding recovery lessons from past 
disasters and how they might inform efforts on the Gulf Coast. Shortly 
after the Midwest experienced widespread flooding, you requested that 
we review the information we had collected and determine what insights 
might be useful to state and local officials. Accordingly, as agreed 
with your office, this report provides insights from six past disasters 
that state and local governments can consider as they move ahead with 
their recovery efforts following natural disasters, such as Hurricanes 
Ike and Gustav and the Midwest floods. In addition, we expect to issue 
a report next year that will build upon this framework with additional 
insights for how federal, state, and local governments can recover from 
major disasters as well as how these insights could inform ongoing 
efforts in the Gulf Coast. 

To that end, we selected previous disasters based on interviews with 
academics and practitioners as well as reviews of the disaster recovery 
literature and our body of work on natural disasters.[Footnote 2] We 
reviewed recovery experiences related to six major disasters:[Footnote 
3] (1) the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake in northern California; (2) 
Hurricane Andrew, which struck southern Florida in 1992; (3) the 1994 
Northridge earthquake in Los Angeles, California; (4) the 1995 Kobe 
earthquake in Japan; (5) the 1997 Grand Forks/Red River flood in North 
Dakota and Minnesota; and (6) the 2005 Gulf Coast hurricanes.[Footnote 
4] We have also published a body of work on the recovery of the Gulf 
Coast states from the 2005 Gulf Coast hurricanes. For a list of 
selected GAO reports on disaster recovery, see appendix I. 

Results in Brief: 

While the federal government provides significant financial assistance 
after major disasters, state and local governments play the lead role 
in disaster recovery. In our review of past disasters, we have 
identified several actions--both short-and long-term--that state and 
local governments can take as they prepare to recover after a major 
disaster. Because each disaster is distinctive and the resources and 
capacities of every community differ, affected jurisdictions need to 
consider whether and how to apply these insights to their specific 
circumstances. 

First, state and local governments have created clear, implementable, 
and timely recovery plans. Such plans, which the federal government has 
both funded and helped communities develop, can provide a roadmap for 
the recovery process. In the aftermath of a disaster, a recovery plan 
provides state and local governments with a valuable tool to document 
and communicate recovery goals, decisions, and priorities. In our 
review of recovery plans we have identified certain shared 
characteristics. Specifically, these plans (1) identify clear goals for 
recovery, (2) include detailed information to facilitate 
implementation, and (3) are established in a timely manner. For 
example, within 6 months of the 1995 earthquake that hit Kobe, Japan, 
the city completed a plan that helped Kobe prioritize and fund recovery 
projects. The plan also established a basis for subsequent governmental 
evaluations of the recovery's progress. 

Second, state and local governments have strengthened certain 
capacities--including having financial resources and technical know- 
how--to effectively take advantage of federal assistance. When 
recovering from past disasters, some local governments successfully 
used loans and special taxes to enhance their financial capacity. For 
example, after the 1997 Red River flood, the state-owned Bank of North 
Dakota provided a $44 million line of credit to the city of Grand 
Forks, North Dakota, which the city used to meet FEMA matching 
requirements. Affected jurisdictions have also enhanced their technical 
capacity to navigate federal disaster programs. For example, after the 
2005 Gulf Coast hurricanes, FEMA and Mississippi state officials used 
federal funding to obtain an on-line accounting system that tracked and 
facilitated the sharing of operational documents, thereby reducing the 
burden on applicants of meeting FEMA Public Assistance grant 
requirements.[Footnote 5] 

Third, federal, state, and local governments focused on strategies that 
successfully fostered business recovery after a disaster. Small 
businesses are vital to a community's economic health, yet are 
especially vulnerable to disasters because they often lack resources to 
sustain financial loss and have less capacity to withstand market 
changes. We found that some local governments developed strategies to 
help small businesses survive the disaster and keep them within the 
community. For example, by creating temporary locations for businesses, 
the city of Santa Cruz, California, provided businesses that suffered 
physical damage during the Loma Prieta earthquake with the means to 
continue operating. The city of Los Angeles provided technical 
assistance to counsel businesses on how to adapt to the changed market 
realities after the Northridge earthquake. The city of Grand Forks 
offered business loans which provided incentives to remain within the 
community. Further, tax incentives targeted to businesses and projects 
consistent with long-term recovery goals can provide another tool to 
help affected businesses recover. 

Finally, federal, state, and local governments have looked for ways to 
adopt a comprehensive approach to combating fraud, waste, and abuse. 
The influx of financial assistance available to victims after a major 
disaster provides increased opportunities for fraud, waste, and abuse. 
Specifically, disaster victims are at increased risk for contractor 
fraud. To address this issue after the 1997 Red River flood, the city 
of Grand Forks, North Dakota established a credentialing program that 
issued special photo identifications to contractors who passed 
licensing and criminal checks. Residents were advised to check for 
these credentials as they hired contractors to rebuild. Also at risk 
for fraud, waste, and abuse are federal and state disaster assistance 
programs. The need to quickly provide assistance to victims puts 
assistance payments at risk to fraudulent applicants who try to obtain 
benefits that they are not entitled to receive. We have previously 
testified that with a framework that prevents, detects, and monitors 
issues of fraud, waste, and abuse, government programs should not have 
to make a choice between the speedy delivery of disaster recovery 
assistance and effective fraud protection.[Footnote 6] 

We provided a draft of this report to the Federal Coordinator of Gulf 
Coast Recovery in the Department of Homeland Security. In addition, we 
provided drafts of the relevant sections of this report to officials 
involved in the particular practices we describe, as well as experts in 
disaster recovery. They generally agreed with the contents of this 
report. We have incorporated their technical comments as appropriate. 

Background: 

Overview of the disaster recovery process. According to the Department 
of Homeland Security's National Response Framework, once immediate 
lifesaving activities are complete after a major disaster, the focus 
shifts to assisting individuals, households, critical infrastructure, 
and businesses in meeting basic needs and returning to self- 
sufficiency. Even as the immediate imperatives for response to an 
incident are being addressed, the need to begin recovery operations 
emerges. The emphasis on response gradually gives way to recovery 
operations. During the recovery phase, actions are taken to help 
individuals, communities, and the nation return to normal. 

The National Response Framework characterizes disaster recovery as 
having two phases: short-term recovery and long-term recovery.[Footnote 
7] 

* Short-term recovery is immediate and an extension of the response 
phase in which basic services and functions are restored. It includes 
actions such as providing essential public health and safety services, 
restoring interrupted utility and other essential services, 
reestablishing transportation routes, and providing food and shelter 
for those displaced by the incident. Although called short-term, some 
of these activities may last for weeks. 

* Long-term recovery may involve some of the same actions as short-term 
recovery but may continue for a number of months or years, depending on 
the severity and extent of the damage sustained. It involves restoring 
both the individual and the community, including the complete 
redevelopment of damaged areas. Some examples of long-term recovery 
include providing permanent disaster-resistant housing units to replace 
those destroyed, initiating a low-interest façade loan program for the 
portion of the downtown area that sustained damage from the disaster, 
and initiating a buyout of flood-prone properties and designating them 
community open space. 

As the President has previously noted, state and local leaders have the 
primary role in planning for recovery efforts. Under the Robert T. 
Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (Stafford Act), 
the federal government is authorized to provide assistance to those 
jurisdictions in carrying out their responsibilities to alleviate 
suffering and damage which results from disasters.[Footnote 8] In 
general under the Stafford Act, the federal role is to assist state and 
local governments--which have the primary role with regard to recovery 
efforts. 

In major disasters where the event overwhelms the capacity of state and 
local governments, the federal government can offer more assistance to 
supplement the efforts and available resources of states, local 
governments, and disaster relief organizations in alleviating the 
damage, loss, hardship, or suffering caused by the disaster. After a 
major disaster, the federal government may provide unemployment 
assistance; food coupons to low-income households; and repair, 
restoration, and replacement of certain damaged facilities, among other 
things. For example, the city of New Orleans estimated this April that 
the federal government will provide over $15 billion for the rebuilding 
of the city through numerous disaster assistance programs, including 
FEMA's Public Assistance Grant Program and Community Disaster Loan 
program, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development's 
Community Development Block Grants program. Nevertheless, state and 
local governments have the main responsibility of applying for, 
receiving, and implementing federal assistance. Further, they make 
decisions about what priorities and projects the community will 
undertake for recovery. 

Impact of Hurricanes Gustav and Ike. Hurricanes Gustav and Ike made 
landfall in the Gulf Coast this month, resulting in federal major 
disaster declarations for 95 counties in Texas, Louisiana, and Alabama 
(see fig. 1). Gustav made landfall near Cocodrie, Louisiana, as a 
category 2 hurricane on September 1, 2008. Ike made landfall as a 
category 2 hurricane near Galveston, Texas, on September 13, 2008. 
These hurricanes have caused widespread damage to affected Gulf Coast 
states. For example, the state of Louisiana has confirmed 10 Gustav- 
related deaths. Recent press accounts have attributed the death of 
about 50 people in the United States to Hurricane Ike. 

Further, Hurricanes Gustav and Ike have significantly disrupted utility 
service as well as oil and natural gas production in the Gulf Coast. 
Specifically, Gustav caused power outages for over 1.1 million 
Louisiana and Mississippi customers, while over 2.2 million customers 
in Texas lost power after Ike made landfall. The hurricanes have also 
affected oil and natural gas production in the Gulf Coast. Most of the 
refineries in Gustav's path were affected, resulting in a 100 percent 
reduction in crude oil production. Almost all refineries in Ike's path 
shut down, halting crude oil production in the area by 99.9 percent. 
Over half of the 39 major natural gas processing plants in the affected 
areas have ceased operations as a result of Hurricanes Gustav and Ike, 
reducing the total operating capacity of the region by 65 percent. 
Given the recent landfall of these hurricanes, comprehensive damage 
assessments from government agencies were not available at the time of 
this report's issuance. 

Figure 1: Counties in Gulf Coast States That Received Federal Major 
Disaster Declarations as a Result of Hurricanes Gustav and Ike: 

This figure is a map showing counties in the Gulf Coast states that 
received federal major disaster declarations as a result of hurricanes 
Gustav and Ike. 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO analysis of FEMA data. 

[End of figure] 

Impact of the 2008 Midwest Floods. Heavy rainfall across much of the 
northern half of the Great Plains during early June 2008 resulted in 
river flooding. This flooding became increasingly severe as heavy rain 
continued into the second week of June and rising rivers threatened 
dams and levees and submerged large areas of farmland along with many 
cities and towns. As a result, the President issued federal major 
disaster declarations for counties in seven states: Illinois, Indiana, 
Iowa, Missouri, Minnesota, Nebraska, and Wisconsin (see fig. 2). The 
flooding resulted in widespread damage for some communities in these 
states. For example, the rivers in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, crested over 30 
feet, flooding 10 square miles of the city and displacing over 18,000 
people and several city facilitates, including the city hall, police 
department, and fire station. The flooding also affected agricultural 
production in these states. For example, the state of Indiana estimates 
the floods will result in a crop shortfall of $800 million in the 
coming year and $200 million in damaged farmlands. 

Figure 2: Counties in Seven Midwest States That Received Federal Major 
Disaster Declarations as a Result of 2008's Severe Flooding: 

This figure is a map showing counties in seven midwest states that 
received federal major disaster declarations as a result of 2008's 
severe flooding. 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO analysis of FEMA data. 

[End of figure] 

Scope and Methodology: 

To identify insights from past disasters we interviewed officials 
involved in disaster recovery in the United States and Japan. 
Domestically, we met with officials from state and local governments 
affected by the selected disasters, as well as representatives of 
nongovernmental organizations involved in long-term recovery. In Japan, 
we met with officials from the government of Japan, Hyogo Prefecture, 
and the city of Kobe. In addition, we also interviewed over 40 experts-
-both domestic and international--on the subject of disaster recovery. 
We visited the key communities affected by five of the six disasters in 
our study to meet officials involved in the recovery effort and examine 
current conditions. While we did not visit communities affected by the 
Red River flood, we were able to gather the necessary information 
through interviews by telephone with key officials involved in the 
recovery as well as recovery experts knowledgeable about the disaster. 
Further, we obtained and reviewed legislation, ordinances, policies, 
and program documents that described steps taken to facilitate long- 
term recovery following each of our selected disasters. The scope of 
our work did not include independent evaluation or verification 
regarding the extent to which the communities' recovery efforts were 
successful. 

We also drew on previous work we have conducted on recovery efforts in 
the aftermath of the 2005 Gulf Coast hurricanes. We have issued 
findings and recommendations on several aspects of the Gulf Coast 
recovery, including protecting federal disaster programs from fraud, 
waste, and abuse; providing tax incentives to assist recovery; and 
determining the role of the nonprofit sector in providing assistance to 
that region. See figure 3 for the locations of the six disasters that 
we selected for this review. We reviewed lessons from past disasters 
and collected information about the impact of Hurricanes Ike and Gustav 
and the 2008 Midwest floods from June 2007 through September 2008 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. Those 
standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that 
the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

Figure 3: Six Disasters Included in This Review (1989-2005): 

This figure is a map showing six disasters included in this review 
(1989-2005). 

Loma Prieta Earthquake, 1989: Northern California; 
Hurricane Andrew, 1992: South Florida; 
Northridge Earthquake, 1994: Southern California; 
Kobe Earthquake, 1995: Southeastern Japan; 
Grand Forks/ Red River Flood, 1997: North Dakota and Minnesota; 
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, 2005: Gulf Coast states. 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO; Art Explosion (map). 

[End of figure] 

Create a Clear, Implementable, and Timely Recovery Plan: 

After a major disaster, a recovery plan can provide state and local 
governments with a valuable tool to document and communicate recovery 
goals, decisions, and priorities. Such plans offer communities a 
roadmap as they begin the process of short-and long-term recovery. The 
process taken to develop these plans also allows state and local 
governments to involve the community in identifying recovery goals and 
priorities. After past disasters, the federal government has both 
funded and provided technical assistance on how to create such plans. 
In our review of recovery plans that state and local governments 
created after major disasters, we identified three key characteristics. 
Specifically, these plans (1) identified clear goals for recovery, (2) 
included detailed information to facilitate implementation, and (3) 
were established in a timely manner. 

Identify Clear Recovery Goals: 

A recovery plan containing clear goals can provide direction and 
specific objectives for communities to focus on and strive for. Clear 
recovery goals can also help state and local governments prioritize 
projects, allocate resources, and establish a basis for subsequent 
evaluations of the recovery progress. After the 1995 Kobe earthquake in 
Japan, the areas most hard-hit by the disaster--Hyogo prefecture and 
the city of Kobe--identified specific recovery goals to include in 
their plans. Among these were the goals of rebuilding all damaged 
housing units in 3 years, removing all temporary housing within 5 
years, and completing physical recovery in 10 years. According to later 
evaluations of Kobe's recovery conducted by the city and recovery 
experts, these goals were critical for helping to coordinate the wide 
range of participants involved in the recovery. In addition, it helped 
to inform the national government's subsequent decisions for funding 
recovery projects in these areas. 

These goals also allowed the government to communicate its recovery 
progress with the public. Each month, information on progress made 
towards achieving these goals was provided to the public on-line and to 
the media at press conferences. This communication helped to inform the 
public about the government's recovery progress on a periodic basis. 
Further, these goals provided a basis for assessing the recovery 
progress a few years after the earthquake. Both Hyogo and Kobe convened 
panels of international and domestic experts on disaster recovery as 
well as community members to assess the progress made on these targets 
and other recovery issues. These evaluations enabled policymakers to 
measure the region's progress towards recovery, identify needed changes 
to existing policies, and learn lessons for future disasters. 

Similar efforts to inform the public about the government's recovery 
progress are being taken in the wake of the 2005 Gulf Coast hurricanes. 
In February 2008, FEMA and the Federal Coordinator of Gulf Coast 
Recovery launched its Transparency Initiative. This web-based 
information sharing effort provides detailed information about selected 
buildings and types of projects in the Gulf Coast receiving Public 
Assistance grants. For example, the web site provides information on 
whether specific New Orleans schools are open or closed and how much 
federal funding is available for each school site. To do this, FEMA and 
Federal Coordinator staff pulled together information from state and 
locals as well as data on all Public Assistance grants for permanent 
infrastructure throughout the Gulf Coast. According to the Office of 
the Federal Coordinator, the initiative has been useful in providing 
information on federal funds available and the status of infrastructure 
projects in a clear and understandable way to the general public and a 
wide range of stakeholders. 

Include Detailed Information to Facilitate Implementation: 

With the uncertainty that can exist after major disasters, the 
inclusion of detailed implementation information in recovery plans can 
help communities realize their recovery goals. Implementable recovery 
plans specify objectives and tasks, clarify roles and responsibilities, 
and identify potential funding sources. Approximately 3 months after 
the 1997 Red River flood, the city of Grand Forks approved a recovery 
plan with these characteristics that helped the city take action 
towards achieving recovery. 

First, the Grand Forks plan identified 5 broad recovery goals covering 
areas such as housing and community redevelopment, business 
redevelopment, and infrastructure rehabilitation. The plan details a 
number of supporting objectives and tasks to be implemented in order to 
achieve the stated goals. For example, one of the 5 goals included the 
plan was to clean up, repair, and rehabilitate the city's 
infrastructure and restore public services to pre-flood conditions. The 
plan outlined 5 objectives to accomplish that goal, including repairing 
and rehabilitating the city's water distribution and treatment 
facilities. Some of the tasks specified in the plan to achieve that 
objective are repairing pumping stations, fixing water meters, and 
completing a 2-mile limit drainage master plan. Additionally, the plan 
identified a target completion date for each task so that the city can 
better manage the mix of short-and long-term activities necessary to 
recover. 

Second, the Grand Forks recovery plan clearly identified roles and 
responsibilities associated with the specific tasks, which helped with 
achieving broader recovery goals. To do this, the plan identified which 
personnel--drawn from city, state, and federal agencies--would be 
needed to carry out each task. For example, the plan called for 
collaboration of staff from the city's urban development and 
engineering/building inspection departments, FEMA, and the Army Corp of 
Engineers to create an inventory of substantially damaged buildings in 
the downtown area. By clarifying the roles and responsibilities of 
those who would be involved in accomplishing specific tasks, the plan 
provided detailed information to facilitate implementation. 

Third, the Grand Forks plan also identified funding sources for each 
recovery task. For example, to fund the task of cleaning up and 
repairing street lights (which would help achieve the objective of 
cleaning, repairing, and rehabilitating the city's streets), the plan 
referenced sources from FEMA's Public Assistance Grant Program, the 
state of North Dakota, and the city's general revenue fund. The plan 
contained a detailed financing matrix, organized by the broader 
recovery goals identified in the body of the plan, which identified 
various funding sources for each task (see fig. 4). The matrix also 
included a target completion date for each task. A city evaluation of 
the recovery plan found that the process of specifying goals and 
identifying funding sources allowed the city to conceive and formulate 
projects in collaboration with the city council and representatives 
from state and local governments. This helped Grand Forks meet its 
recovery needs as well as adhere to federal and state disaster 
assistance funding laws and regulations. 

Figure 4: Excerpt from the Financing Matrix in Grand Forks' Recovery 
Plan Which Identified Potential Funding Sources and Target Dates for 
Recovery Tasks: 

This figure is a chart showing an excerpt from the financial matrix in 
Grand Fork's recovery plan, which identified potential funding scores 
and target dates for recovery tasks. 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: City of Grand Forks, North Dakota. 

Note: "CDBG" refers to the Department of Housing and Urban 
Development's Community Development Block Grant Program, "FEMA 406" 
refers to FEMA's Public Assistance Grant Program, "FEMA 404" refers to 
FEMA's Mitigation Grant Program, and "FHWA" refers to the Federal 
Highway Administration. 

[End of figure] 

The recovery plans created by the Hyogo and Kobe governments after the 
1995 earthquake also helped to facilitate the funding of recovery 
projects. It served as the basis of discussions with the national 
government regarding recovery funding by clearly communicating local 
goals and needs. Towards this end, Hyogo and Kobe submitted their 
recovery plans to a centralized recovery organization that included 
officials from several national agencies including the Ministry of 
Finance and the Ministry of Construction. Ministry staff worked with 
local officials to reconcile the needs identified in their recovery 
plans with national funding constraints and priorities. As a result of 
this process, local officials were able to adjust their recovery plans 
to reflect national budget and funding realities. 

Establish the Plan in a Timely Manner: 

Some state and local governments quickly completed recovery plans just 
a few short months after a major disaster. These plans helped to 
facilitate the ensuing recovery process by providing a clear framework 
early on. The regional governments affected by the Kobe earthquake 
promptly created recovery plans to help ensure that they could take 
advantage of central government funding as soon as possible. After the 
earthquake, there was a relatively short amount of time to submit 
proposals for the national budget in order to be considered for the 
coming year. Facing this deadline, local officials devised a two-phase 
strategy to develop a plan that could quickly identify broad recovery 
goals to provide a basis for budget requests to meet the national 
budget deadline. After that initial planning phase, the governments 
then collaborated with residents to develop detailed plans for specific 
communities. 

In the first phase, Kobe focused on creating a general plan to identify 
broad recovery goals, such as building quality housing, restoring 
transportation infrastructure, and building a safer city. This first 
plan was issued 2 months after the earthquake and contained 1,000 
projects with a budget of $90 billion. It was designed to establish the 
framework for recovery actions and to provide the basis for obtaining 
central government funds. In the second phase, the city involved 
residents and local organizations, including businesses and community 
groups, to develop a more detailed plan for the recovery of specific 
neighborhoods. This second plan began 6 months after the earthquake. 
The two-phase planning process enabled Kobe and Hyogo to meet their 
tight national budget submission deadline while allowing additional 
time for communities to develop specific recovery strategies. 

Build State and Local Capacity for Recovery: 

Given the lead role that state and local governments play in disaster 
recovery, their ability to act effectively directly affects how well 
communities recover after a major disaster. There are different types 
of capacity that can be enhanced to facilitate the recovery process. 
One such capacity is the ability of state and local governments to make 
use of various kinds of disaster assistance. The federal government-- 
along with other recovery stakeholders, such as nongovernmental 
organizations--plays a key supporting role by providing financial 
assistance through a range of programs to help affected jurisdictions 
recover after a major disaster. However, state and local governments 
may need certain capacities to effectively make use of this federal 
assistance, including having financial resources and technical know- 
how. More specifically, state and local governments are often required 
to match a portion of the federal disaster assistance they 
receive.[Footnote 9] Further, affected jurisdictions may also need 
additional technical assistance on how to correctly and effectively 
process applications and maintain required paperwork. Following 
Hurricanes Ike and Gustav and the Midwest floods earlier this year, 
building up these capacities may improve affected jurisdictions' 
ability to navigate federal disaster programs. 

Enhance Local Financial Capacity: 

After a major disaster, state and local governments may not have 
adequate financial capacity to perform many short-and long-term 
recovery activities, such as continuing government operations and 
paying for rebuilding projects. The widespread destruction caused by 
major disasters can impose significant unbudgeted expenses while at the 
same time decimate the local tax base. Further, federal disaster 
programs often require state and local governments to match a portion 
of the assistance they receive, which may pose an additional financial 
burden. In the past, affected jurisdictions have used loans from a 
variety of sources including federal and state governments to enhance 
their local financial capacity. For example, the Stafford Act 
authorizes FEMA to administer the Community Disaster Loan program which 
can be used by local governments to provide essential postdisaster 
services. Additionally, affected localities have used special taxes to 
build local financial capacity after major disasters. 

Providing a loan to local governments is one way to build financial 
capacity after a disaster. Soon after the 1997 Red River flood, the 
state-owned Bank of North Dakota provided a line of credit totaling 
over $44 million to the city of Grand Forks. The city used this loan to 
meet FEMA matching requirements, provide cash flow for the city 
government to meet operating expenses, and fund recovery projects that 
commenced before the arrival of federal assistance. The city of New 
Orleans also sought state loans to help build financial capacity in the 
aftermath of the 2005 Gulf Coast hurricanes. The city is working with 
Louisiana to develop a construction fund to facilitate recovery 
projects. The fund would enable New Orleans to have more access to 
money to fund projects upfront and reduce the level of debt that the 
city would otherwise incur. 

Another way to augment local financial capacity is to raise revenue 
through temporary taxes that local governments can target according to 
their recovery needs. After the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, voters in 
Santa Cruz County took steps to provide additional financial capacity 
to affected localities. The county implemented a tax increment, called 
"Measure E," about 1 year after the disaster, which increased the 
county sales tax by ½ cent for 6 years. The proceeds were targeted to 
damaged areas within the county based on an allocation approved by 
voters. Measure E generated approximately $12 million for the city of 
Santa Cruz, $15 million for the city of Watsonville, and $17 million 
for unincorporated areas of Santa Cruz County. 

According to officials from Watsonville and Santa Cruz, Measure E 
provided a critical source of extra funding for affected Santa Cruz 
County localities. For example, officials from Watsonville (whose 
general fund annual budget was about $17 million prior to the 
earthquake) used proceeds from Measure E to meet matching requirements 
for FEMA's Public Assistance Grant Program. These officials also used 
Measure E to offset economic losses from the earthquake, as well as 
provide financing for various recovery projects, such as creating 
programs to repair damaged homes and hiring consultants that helped the 
community plan for long-term recovery. While raising local sales taxes 
may not be a feasible option for all communities, Santa Cruz officials 
recognized the willingness of county voters to support this strategy. 
Similarly, state and local governments in the Gulf Coast and Midwest 
states can look to develop strategies for increasing financial capacity 
in ways that are both practical and appropriate for their communities. 

Strengthen Local Technical Capacity: 

State and local governments face the challenge of implementing the wide 
range of federal programs that provide assistance for recovery from 
major disasters. Some of these federal programs require a certain 
amount of technical know-how to navigate. For example, FEMA's Public 
Assistance Grant Program has complicated paperwork requirements and 
multistage application processes that can place considerable demands on 
applicants. 

After the 2005 Gulf Coast hurricanes, FEMA and Mississippi state 
officials used federal funding to obtain an on-line accounting system 
that tracked and facilitated the sharing of operational documents, 
thereby reducing the burden on applicants of meeting Public Assistance 
Grant Program requirements. According to state and local officials, the 
state contracted with an accounting firm that worked hand-in-hand with 
applicants to regularly scan and transmit documentation on 
architectural and engineering estimates, contractor receipts, and 
related materials from this Web-based system. As a result, FEMA and the 
state had immediate access to key documents that helped them to make 
project approval decisions. Further, local officials reported that this 
information-sharing tool, along with contractor staff from an 
accounting firm, helped to relieve the documentation and resulting 
human capital burdens that state and local applicants of the Public 
Assistance Grant Program faced during project development. 

Implement Strategies for Business Recovery: 

Business recovery is a key element of a community's recovery after a 
major disaster. Small businesses are especially vulnerable to these 
events because they often lack resources to sustain physical losses and 
have little ability to adjust to market changes. Widespread failure of 
individual businesses may hinder a community's recovery. Federal, 
state, and local governments have developed strategies to facilitate 
business recovery, including several targeted at small businesses. 
These strategies helped businesses adapt to postdisaster market 
conditions, helped reduce business relocation, and allowed businesses 
to borrow funds at lower interest rates than would have been otherwise 
available. 

Provide Technical Assistance to Help Businesses Adapt to Postdisaster 
Realities: 

Major disasters can change communities in ways that require businesses 
to adapt. For example, following Hurricane Andrew, large numbers of 
people left south Miami-Dade County. The closing of Homestead Air Force 
Base, which was permanently evacuated just hours before the hurricane 
struck, reduced the population of the area significantly. Moreover, the 
base closure removed families and individuals with reliable incomes and 
spending power. Following the departure of Air Force personnel and 
dependents, winter residents and retired people also left in great 
numbers, never to return. Today, the city of Homestead is an entirely 
different place as community demographics have changed dramatically. 
Businesses that did not adapt to this new reality did not survive. 

The extent to which business owners can recognize change and adapt to 
the postdisaster market for goods and services can help those firms 
attain long-term viability after a disaster. Recognizing this after the 
Northridge earthquake, Los Angeles officials assisted neighborhood 
businesses in adapting to short-and long-term changes, using a 
combination of federal, state, and local funds. The Northridge 
earthquake caused uneven damage throughout the Los Angeles area, 
leaving some neighborhoods largely intact while creating pockets of 
damaged, abandoned buildings. Businesses in these areas suffered 
physical damage and the loss of customers when area residents abandoned 
their homes. 

The Valley Economic Development Center (VEDC), a local non-profit, 
established an outreach and counseling program to provide direct 
technical assistance to affected businesses throughout the San Fernando 
Valley after the Northridge earthquake. With funding from the city of 
Los Angeles, the state of California, and the Small Business 
Administration, VEDC provided guidance on obtaining federal and local 
governmental financial assistance, as well as strategies for adjusting 
to changes in the business environment. Toward this end, VEDC staff 
went door-to-door in affected business districts, served as a 
clearinghouse for information on earthquake recovery, sponsored 
workshops, reached out to business owners, and collected detailed 
information about businesses. VEDC also hosted conferences that taught 
business owners how to strategically market goods and services given 
the changed demographics. Speakers at these conferences provided 
information about the economic and social impact of the earthquake. 
VEDC estimates that over 6,000 businesses were served by these efforts. 
Additionally, they found that these services helped saved almost 8,000 
jobs in the San Fernando Valley. Continuing programs provided 
counseling and assistance with applying for financial assistance to 
hundreds of businesses for more than 5 years after the earthquake. 

The potential value of this type of technical assistance is illustrated 
by an example of a Northridge business that did not receive it. A well- 
established fish market outside of the San Fernando Valley reopened 
after the earthquake with the intention of resuming its formerly 
successful business of selling the same inventory that it sold before 
the disaster. However, as a result of the earthquake, the area's 
customer base had changed significantly and the new population did not 
purchase the market's merchandise. Despite spending his life savings to 
restore the business, the owner suffered considerable losses and 
eventually was forced to close the fish market after the lease expired. 

Create Strategies to Minimize Business Relocation and the Loss of 
Customer Base: 

Since major disasters can bring significant change to business 
environments, communities may look for ways to help retain some 
existing businesses because widespread relocation can hinder recovery. 
In an effort to minimize relocations after the Red River flood, the 
city of Grand Forks created incentives to encourage businesses to 
remain in the community using funds from the Department of Housing and 
Urban Development's Community Development Block Grant program and the 
Department of Commerce's Economic Development Administration. Grand 
Forks developed a program that provided $1.75 million in loans to 
assist businesses that suffered physical damage in the flood. This 
program offered 15-year loans with no interest or payments required for 
the first 5 years of the loan. In addition, businesses which continued 
to operate within the city at the end of 3 years had 40 percent of the 
loan's principal forgiven. A Grand Forks official said that over 70 
percent of the businesses that received the loan stayed in the 
community for at least 3 years. This official also estimated that over 
40 percent of the businesses would have closed without the loan 
program. 

The city of Santa Cruz also took steps to minimize the relocation of 
businesses from its downtown shopping district, which also helped to 
maintain a customer base for the community. Within weeks of the Loma 
Prieta earthquake, the city worked together with community groups to 
construct seven large aluminum and fabric pavilions where local 
businesses that suffered physical damage temporarily relocated. These 
pavilions, located in parking areas 1 block behind the main commercial 
area, were leased to businesses displaced by the earthquake. Over 40 
retail stores, including bookstores, cafes, and hardware stores, 
operated out of the pavilions for up to 3 years while storefronts were 
rebuilt (see fig. 5). City officials stated that these pavilions help 
to mitigate the impact of the earthquake on small businesses by 
enabling them to continue operations and thereby maintain their 
customer base. 

Figure 5: Temporary Pavilions in Santa Cruz, California, Following the 
Loma Prieta Earthquake: 

This figure is a photograph of temporary pavilions in Santa Crus, 
California following the Loma Prieta earthquake. 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: Photograph courtesy of Charles Eadie (1990). 

[End of figure] 

In contrast, officials near Santa Cruz in the city of Watsonville did 
not create such temporary locations after the Loma Prieta earthquake, 
and as a result, businesses moved out of the downtown area to a newly 
completed shopping center on the outskirts of the city. With the 
relocation of these businesses, some consumers stopped shopping in 
remaining stores in the downtown area. A senior Watsonville official 
told us that these business relocations continue to hamper the recovery 
of the downtown district almost two decades after the earthquake. 

Implement an Allocation Strategy that Uses Federal Tax Incentives in a 
Manner Consistent with Long-term Recovery Goals: 

The federal government has used tax incentives to stimulate business 
recovery after major disasters. These incentives provide businesses 
with financial resources for recovery that may otherwise not be 
available. Certain tax incentives are open-ended, meaning that any 
individual or business that meets specified federal requirements may 
claim the tax incentives. States allocate other tax incentives to 
selected businesses, projects, or local governments and ensure 
allocations do not exceed limits set for each state. For those tax 
incentives where the states have primary allocation responsibility, an 
opportunity exists for states to allocate the incentives in a manner 
consistent with their communities' recovery goals. Midwest and other 
states may find value in considering the experiences of communities 
recovering from past disasters when developing their own approach in 
how to allocate these incentives. 

The Congress created tax incentives after the 2005 hurricanes through 
the Gulf Opportunity Zone Act of 2005 (GO Zone Act) in part to promote 
business recovery.[Footnote 10] Following those hurricanes, affected 
state governments were responsible for allocating four tax incentives, 
including a $14.9 billion tax-exempt private activity bond authority to 
assist business recovery.[Footnote 11] These bonds allowed businesses 
to borrow funds at lower interest rates than would have otherwise been 
available because investors purchasing the bonds are not required to 
pay taxes on the interest they earn on the bonds.[Footnote 12] The Gulf 
Coast states exercising this authority are using the tax-exempt private 
activity bonds for a wide range of purposes to support different 
businesses, including manufacturing facilities, utilities, medical 
offices, mortgage companies, hotels, and retail facilities. 

Under the GO Zone Act, authorized states have established processes and 
selected which projects were to receive these bond allocations up to 
each state's allocation authority limit. These states generally used a 
first-come, first-served basis for allocating the rights to issue tax- 
exempt private activity bonds under the GO Zone Act and did not 
consistently target the bond authority to assist recovery in the most 
damaged areas at the beginning of the program. Officials in Louisiana 
and Mississippi involved in allocating this authority acknowledged that 
the first-come, first-served approach made it difficult for applicants 
in some of the most damaged areas to make use of the bond provision 
immediately following the 2005 hurricanes. Counties and parishes in the 
most damaged coastal areas of Louisiana and Mississippi faced 
challenges dealing with the immediate aftermath of the hurricanes and 
could not focus on applying for this authority. Louisiana recently set 
aside a portion of its remaining allocation authority for the most 
damaged parishes. 

This July, legislation was introduced in Congress modeled after the GO 
Zone Act, which, among other tax incentives, would provide private 
activity bond allocation authority to certain Midwest states to help 
the victims of this year's floods.[Footnote 13] Under the proposed 
legislation, similar to the GO Zone Act, affected states would also 
have the authority to allocate additional low-income housing tax 
credits for rental housing and issue tax credit bonds for temporary 
debt relief, among other provisions. The Gulf Coast states' first-come, 
first-served allocation process meant, according to some officials we 
interviewed, that some projects that would have been viable without tax-
exempt private activity bond financing received tax-exempt private 
activity bond allocations. Such allocations may not have fully 
supported the long-term recovery goals of that region. This may be 
particularly relevant to Midwest states given that the proposed 
legislation contains provisions related to tax-exempt private activity 
bonds similar to those authorized by the GO Zone Act of 2005. 

Adopt a Comprehensive Approach to Combating Fraud, Waste, and Abuse: 

The influx of federal financial assistance available to victims after a 
major disaster provides increased opportunities for fraud, waste, and 
abuse. Disaster victims are at risk, as well as the public funds 
supporting government disaster programs. Specifically, many disaster 
victims hire contractors to repair or rebuild their homes using 
financial assistance from the government. Residents are potential 
targets for fraud by unscrupulous contractors. In addition, government 
programs are also vulnerable: the need to quickly provide assistance to 
disaster victims puts assistance programs at risk of fraudulent 
applicants trying to obtain benefits that they are not entitled to 
receive. We identified two actions that state and local governments can 
take after major disasters to combat fraud, waste, and abuse. 

Require Credentialing to Help Reduce Contractor Fraud: 

Communities are often faced with the problem of contractor fraud after 
major disasters as large numbers of residents look to hire private 
firms to repair or rebuild their homes and businesses. For example, 
after Hurricane Andrew in 1992, over 7,000 homeowners filed formal 
complaints of contractor fraud with Miami-Dade County's Construction 
Fraud Task Force from August 1993 through March 1995. An official from 
the Miami-Dade Office of the State Attorney reported that they 
successfully prosecuted more than 300 felony cases, over 290 
misdemeanor cases, and resulting in the restitution of more than $2.6 
million to homeowners by October 1996. Other complaints that were not 
criminal in nature resulted in substantial administrative fines and 
additional restitution. More recently, FEMA and Midwest states 
anticipate that fraud will also be a concern after this year's floods 
and have issued warnings to residents about the need to be vigilant for 
potentially fraudulent contractors. To help address this issue, FEMA 
has issued tips and guidelines to the public about hiring contractors. 

To help protect its residents from contractor fraud after the Red River 
flood, the city of Grand Forks established a required credentialing 
program for contractors. This included a "one-stop shop" that served as 
a mandatory clearinghouse for any contractor who wanted to do business 
with recovering residents. The clearinghouse was staffed by 
representatives from a range of city and state offices, including the 
North Dakota Secretary of State, the North Dakota Attorney General, the 
North Dakota Workers Compensation Bureau, the North Dakota Bureau of 
Criminal Investigations, and the Grand Forks Department of 
Administration and Licensing. These staff carried out a variety of 
functions, including checking that contractors had appropriate 
licenses, insurance, and no criminal records, in addition to collecting 
application fees and filing bonding information. After passing these 
checks and completing all the required applications, contractors were 
issued photo identification cards, which they were required to carry at 
all times while working within the city limits. 

To inform its citizens about this program, Grand Forks officials 
conducted press briefings urging residents to check for these photo 
identifications and to hire only credentialed contractors. In about 2 
months, the city issued approximately 500 new contractor licenses and 
2,000 contractor identification cards through the one-stop shop. During 
that same period, officials arrested more than 20 individuals who had 
outstanding warrants. City and state officials credited this approach 
with playing a key role in limiting contractor fraud in Grand Forks 
during the recovery from the Red River flood. 

In the wake of this year's flooding, the city of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 
has created a similar contractor credentialing program modeled after 
Grand Forks' One-Stop-Shop program, in an effort to minimize instances 
of contractor fraud. Cedar Rapid's program requires contractors to 
visit a local mall where representatives from the police department and 
community development, and code enforcement divisions are assembled. 
There, city officials check contractors' licenses and insurance 
policies, as well as conducting criminal background checks. Similar to 
Grand Forks' program, contractors who pass checks are issued photo 
identification cards. Those who do not obtain identification before 
working in the area can incur a fine of $100 or face up to 30 days of 
jail time. As of August 2008, over 900 local and out-of-town 
contracting companies and 6,200 individual contractors have been 
credentialed through this program. Twelve people have been arrested as 
a result of outstanding warrants that were identified through criminal 
background checks. 

Establish State Framework to Combat Fraud, Waste, and Abuse: 

Our prior work on FEMA's Individuals and Households Program payments 
and the Department of Homeland Security's purchase card program show 
that fraud, waste, and abuse related to disaster assistance in the wake 
of the 2005 Gulf Coast hurricanes are significant.[Footnote 14] We have 
previously estimated improper and potentially fraudulent payments 
related to the Individuals and Households Program application process 
to be approximately $1 billion of the first $6 billion 
provided.[Footnote 15] In addition, FEMA provided nearly $20 million in 
duplicate payments to individuals who registered and received 
assistance twice by using the same Social Security number and 
address.[Footnote 16] Similarly, the Hurricane Katrina Fraud Task 
Force--comprised of the Department of Justice's Criminal Division and 
Offices of the United States Attorneys; several other federal agencies, 
including the Federal Bureau of Investigations, Secret Service, and 
Securities and Exchange Commission; and various representatives of 
state and local law enforcement--have collaborated to prosecute 
instances of fraud related to the hurricane. According to the Office of 
the Federal Coordinator of Gulf Coast Recovery, the efforts of the task 
force have resulted in the indictment of over 890 cases of fraud to 
date. 

Because of the role state governments play in distributing and 
allocating this federal assistance, these known vulnerabilities call 
for states to establish effective controls to minimize opportunities 
for individuals to defraud the government. With the need to provide 
assistance quickly and expedite purchases, programs without effective 
fraud prevention controls can end up losing millions or potentially 
billions of dollars to fraud, waste, and abuse. We have previously 
testified on the need for fraud prevention controls, fraud detection, 
monitoring adherence to controls throughout the entire program life, 
collection of improper payments, and aggressive prosecution of 
individuals committing fraud.[Footnote 17] These controls are crucial 
whether dealing with programs to provide housing and other needs 
assistance or other recovery efforts. By creating such a fraud 
protection framework--especially the adoption of fraud prevention 
controls--government programs should not have to make a choice between 
the speedy delivery of disaster recovery assistance and effective fraud 
protection. 

Concluding Observations: 

While receiving millions of dollars in federal assistance, state and 
local governments bear the main responsibility for helping communities 
cope with the destruction left in the wake of major disasters. Now that 
the wind and storm surge from Hurricanes Ike and Gustav have passed and 
the Midwest flood waters have subsided, state and local governments 
face a myriad of decisions regarding the short-and long-term recovery 
of their communities. We have seen that actions taken shortly after a 
major disaster and during the early stages of the recovery process can 
have a significant impact on the success of a community's long-term 
recovery. Accordingly, this is a critical time for communities affected 
by these major disasters. 

Insights drawn from state and local governments that have experienced 
previous major disasters may provide a valuable opportunity for 
officials to anticipate challenges and adopt appropriate strategies and 
approaches early on in the recovery process. There is no one right way 
for how state and local governments should manage recovery from a major 
disaster, nor is there a recipe of techniques that fits all situations. 
While many of the practices we describe in this report were tailored to 
the specific needs and conditions of a particular disaster, taken 
together, they can provide state and local officials with a set of 
tools and approaches to consider as they move forward in the process of 
recovering from major disasters. 

Agency Comments: 

We provided a draft of this report to the Federal Coordinator of Gulf 
Coast Recovery in the Department of Homeland Security. In addition, we 
provided drafts of the relevant sections of this report to officials 
involved in the particular practices we describe, as well as experts in 
disaster recovery. They generally agreed with the contents of this 
report. We have incorporated their technical comments as appropriate. 

We are sending copies of this report to other interested congressional 
committees, the Secretary of Homeland Security, the FEMA Administrator, 
and state and local officials affected by Hurricanes Ike and Gustav as 
well as the Midwest floods. We will make copies available to others on 
request. In addition, the report will be available at no charge on 
GAO's Web site at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have any questions regarding this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-6806 or czerwinskis@gao.gov. Contact points for 
our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found 
on the last page of this report. GAO staff who made key contributions 
to this report are listed in appendix II. 

Signed by: 

Stanley J. Czerwinski: 

Director Strategic Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Selected GAO Products Related to Disaster Recovery: 

Recovery from the 2005 Gulf Coast Hurricanes: 

Gulf Coast Rebuilding: Observations on Federal Financial Implications. 
GAO-07-1079T. Washington. D.C.: August 2, 2007. 

Preliminary Information on Rebuilding Efforts in the Gulf Coast. GAO- 
07-809R. Washington, D.C.: June 29, 2007. 

Gulf Coast Rebuilding: Preliminary Observations on Progress to Date and 
Challenges for the Future. GAO-07-574T. Washington, D.C.: April 12, 
2007. 

Catastrophic Disasters: Enhanced Leadership, Capabilities, and 
Accountability Controls Will Improve the Effectiveness of the Nation's 
Preparedness, Response, and Recovery System. GAO-06-618. Washington, 
D.C.: September 6, 2006. 

Hurricane Katrina: GAO's Preliminary Observations Regarding 
Preparedness, Response, and Recovery. GAO-06-442T. Washington, D.C.: 
March 8, 2006. 

Hurricane Katrina: Providing Oversight of the Nation's Preparedness, 
Response, and Recovery Activities. GAO-05-1053T. Washington, D.C.: 
September 28, 2005. 

Agricultural Issues: 

Department of Agriculture, Farm Service Agency: 2005 Section 32 
Hurricane Disaster Programs; 2006 Livestock Assistance Grant Program. 
GAO-07-715R. Washington, D.C.: April 16, 2007. 

Department of Agriculture, Commodity Credit Corporation: 2006 Emergency 
Agricultural Disaster Assistance Programs. GAO-07-511R. Washington, 
D.C.: April 16, 2007. 

Contracting Issues: 

Small Business Contracting: Observations from Reviews of Contracting 
and Advocacy Activities of Federal Agencies. GAO-07-1255T. Washington, 
D.C.: September 26, 2007. 

Hurricane Katrina: Agency Contracting Data Should Be More Complete 
Regarding Subcontracting Opportunities for Small Business. GAO-07- 
698T. Washington, D.C.: April 12, 2007. 

Hurricane Katrina: Agency Contracting Data Should Be More Complete 
Regarding Subcontracting Opportunities for Small Businesses. GAO-07- 
205. Washington, D.C.: March 1, 2007. 

Hurricane Katrina: Improving Federal Contracting Practices in Disaster 
Recovery Operations. GAO-06-714T. Washington, D.C.: May 4, 2006. 

Hurricane Katrina: Army Corps of Engineers Contract for Mississippi 
Classrooms. GAO-06-454. Washington, D.C.: May 1, 2006. 

Hurricane Katrina: Planning for and Management of Federal Disaster 
Recovery Contracts. GAO-06-622T. Washington, D.C.: April 10, 2006. 

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita: Preliminary Observations on Contracting 
for Response and Recovery Efforts. GAO-06-246T. Washington, D.C.: 
November 8, 2005. 

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita: Contracting for Response and Recovery 
Efforts. GAO-06-235T. Washington, D.C.: November 2, 2005. 

Fraud, Waste, and Abuse: 

Hurricane Katrina: Ineffective FEMA Oversight of Housing Maintenance 
Contracts in Mississippi Resulted in Millions of Dollars of Waste and 
Potential Fraud. GAO-08-106. Washington, D.C.: November 16, 2007. 

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita Disaster Relief: Continued Findings of 
Fraud, Waste, and Abuse. GAO-07-300. Washington, D.C.: March 15, 2007. 

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita Disaster Relief: Prevention Is the Key to 
Minimizing Fraud, Waste, and Abuse in Recovery Efforts. GAO-07-418T. 
Washington, D.C.: January 29, 2007. 

Response to a post hearing question related to GAO's December 6, 2006 
testimony on continued findings of fraud, waste, and abuse associated 
with Hurricanes Katrina and Rita relief efforts. GAO-07-363R. 
Washington, D.C.: January 12, 2007. 

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita Disaster Relief: Continued Findings of 
Fraud, Waste, and Abuse. GAO-07-252T. Washington, D.C.: December 6, 
2006. 

Purchase Cards: Control Weaknesses Leave DHS Highly Vulnerable to 
Fraudulent, Improper, and Abusive Activity. GAO-06-1117. Washington, 
D.C.: September 28, 2006. 

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita: Unprecedented Challenges Exposed the 
Individuals and Households Program to Fraud and Abuse; Actions Needed 
to Reduce Such Problems in Future. GAO-06-1013. Washington, D.C.: 
September 27, 2006. 

Disaster Relief: Governmentwide Framework Needed to Collect and 
Consolidate Information to Report on Billions in Federal Funding for 
the 2005 Gulf Coast Hurricanes. GAO-06-834. Washington, D.C.: September 
5, 2006. 

Individual Disaster Assistance Programs: Framework for Fraud 
Prevention, Detection, and Prosecution. GAO-06-954T. Washington, D.C.: 
July 12, 2006. 

Expedited Assistance for Victims of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita: FEMA's 
Control Weaknesses Exposed the Government to Significant Fraud and 
Abuse. GAO-06-655. Washington, D.C.: June 16, 2006. 

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita Disaster Relief: Improper and Potentially 
Fraudulent Individual Assistance Payments Estimated to Be Between $600 
Million and $1.4 Billion. GAO-06-844T. Washington, D.C.: June 14, 2006. 

Expedited Assistance for Victims of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita: FEMA's 
Control Weaknesses Exposed the Government to Significant Fraud and 
Abuse. GAO-06-403T. Washington, D.C.: February 13, 2006. 

Housing Issues: 

Disaster Housing: Implementation of FEMA's Alternative Housing Pilot 
Program Provides Lessons for Improving Future Competitions. GAO-07- 
1143R. Washington, D.C.: August 31, 2007. 

Disaster Assistance: Better Planning Needed for Housing Victims of 
Catastrophic Disasters. GAO-07-88. Washington, D.C.: February 28, 2007. 

Human Services and Environmental Protection Issues: 

Hurricane Katrina: Continuing Debris Removal and Disposal Issues. GAO- 
08-985R. Washington, D.C. August 25, 2008. 

Hurricane Katrina: Trends in the Operating Results of Five Hospitals in 
New Orleans before and after Hurricane Katrina. GAO-08-681R. 
Washington, D.C.: July 17, 2008. 

Hurricane Katrina: EPA's Current and Future Environmental Protection 
Efforts Could Be Enhanced by Addressing Issues and Challenges Faced on 
the Gulf Coast. GAO-07-651. Washington, D.C.: June 25, 2007. 

Hurricane Katrina: Allocation and Use of $2 Billion for Medicaid and 
Other Health Care Needs. GAO-07-67. Washington, D.C.: February 28, 
2007. 

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita: Federal Actions Could Enhance Preparedness 
of Certain State-Administered Federal Support Programs. GAO-07-219. 
Washington, D.C.: February 7, 2007. 

Hurricane Katrina: Status of Hospital Inpatient and Emergency 
Departments in the Greater New Orleans Area. GAO-06-1003. Washington, 
D.C.: September 29, 2006. 

Child Welfare: Federal Action Needed to Ensure States Have Plans to 
Safeguard Children in the Child Welfare System Displaced by Disasters. 
GAO-06-944. Washington, D.C.: July 28, 2006. 

Lessons Learned for Protecting and Educating Children after the Gulf 
Coast Hurricanes. GAO-06-680R. Washington, D.C.: May 11, 2006. 

Hurricane Katrina: Status of the Health Care System in New Orleans and 
Difficult Decisions Related to Efforts to Rebuild It Approximately 6 
Months After Hurricane Katrina. GAO-06-576R. Washington, D.C.: 
March 28, 2006. 

Infrastructure Issues: 

Army Corps of Engineers: Known Performance Issues with New Orleans 
Drainage Canal Pumps Have Been Addressed, but Guidance on Future 
Contracts Is Needed. GAO-08-288. Washington, D.C.: December 31, 2007. 

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' Procurement of Pumping Systems for the 
New Orleans Drainage Canals. GAO-07-908R. Washington, D.C.: May 23, 
2007. 

Hurricane Katrina: Strategic Planning Needed to Guide Future 
Enhancements Beyond Interim Levee Repairs. GAO-06-934. Washington, 
D.C.: September 6, 2006. 

Small Business Assistance Issues: 

Small Business Administration: Response to the Gulf Coast Hurricanes 
Highlights Need for Enhanced Disaster Preparedness. GAO-07-484T. 
Washington, D. C.: February 14, 2007. 

Small Business Administration: Additional Steps Needed to Enhance 
Agency Preparedness for Future Disasters. GAO-07-114. Washington, D.C.: 
February 14, 2007. 

Small Business Administration: Actions Needed to Provide More Timely 
Disaster Assistance. GAO-06-860. Washington, D.C.: July 28, 2006. 

Tax Issues: 

Gulf Opportunity Zone: States Are Allocating Federal Tax Incentives to 
Finance Low-Income Housing and a Wide Range of Private Facilities. GAO- 
08-913. Washington, D.C.: July 16, 2008. 

Tax Compliance: Some Hurricanes Katrina and Rita Disaster Assistance 
Recipients Have Unpaid Federal Taxes. GAO-08-101R. Washington, D.C.: 
November 16, 2007. 

Recovery from Other Natural Disasters: 

Disaster Assistance: Guidance Needed for FEMA's 'Fast Track' Housing 
Assistance Process. RCED-98-1. Washington, D.C.: October 17, 1997. 

Disaster Assistance: Improvements Needed in Determining Eligibility for 
Public Assistance. RCED-96-113. Washington, D.C.: May 23, 1996. 

Emergency Relief: Status of the Replacement of the Cypress Viaduct. 
RCED-96-136. Washington, D.C.: May 6, 1996. 

Disaster Assistance: Information on Expenditures and Proposals to 
Improve Effectiveness and Reduce Future Costs. T-RCED-95-140. 
Washington, D.C.: March 16, 1995. 

GAO Work on Disaster Assistance. RCED-94-293R. Washington, D.C.: August 
31, 1994. 

Los Angeles Earthquake: Opinions of Officials on Federal Impediments to 
Rebuilding. RCED-94-193. Washington, D.C.: June 17, 1994. 

Earthquake Recovery: Staffing and Other Improvements Made Following 
Loma Prieta Earthquake. RCED-92-141. Washington, D.C.: July 30, 1992. 

Transportation Infrastructure: The Nation's Highway Bridges Remain at 
Risk From Earthquakes. RCED-92-59. Washington, D.C.: January 23, 1992. 

Loma Prieta Earthquake: Collapse of the Bay Bridge and the Cypress 
Viaduct. RCED-90-177. Washington, D.C.: June 19, 1990. 

Disaster Assistance: Program Changes Expedited Delivery of Individual 
and Family Grants. RCED-89-73. Washington, D.C.: April 4, 1989. 

Disaster Insurance: 

National Flood Insurance Program: Financial Challenges Underscore Need 
for Improved Oversight of Mitigation Programs and Key Contracts. GAO- 
08-437. Washington, D.C.: June 16, 2008. 

Natural Catastrophe Insurance: Analysis of a Proposed Combined Federal 
Flood and Wind Insurance Program. GAO-08-504. Washington, D.C.: April 
25, 2008. 

National Flood Insurance Program: Greater Transparency and Oversight of 
Wind and Flood Damage Determinations Are Needed. GAO-08-28. Washington, 
D.C.: December 28, 2007. 

Natural Disasters: Public Policy Options for Changing the Federal Role 
in Natural Catastrophe Insurance. GAO-08-7. Washington, D.C.: November 
26, 2007. 

Federal Emergency Management Agency: Ongoing Challenges Facing the 
National Flood Insurance Program. GAO-08-118T. Washington, D.C.: 
October 2, 2007. 

National Flood Insurance Program: FEMA's Management and Oversight of 
Payments for Insurance Company Services Should Be Improved. GAO-07- 
1078. Washington, D.C.: September 5, 2007. 

National Flood Insurance Program: Preliminary Views on FEMA's Ability 
to Ensure Accurate Payments on Hurricane-Damaged Properties. GAO-07- 
991T. Washington, D.C.: June 12, 2007. 

National Flood Insurance Program: New Processes Aided Hurricane Katrina 
Claims Handling, but FEMA's Oversight Should Be Improved. GAO-07-169. 
Washington, D.C.: December 15, 2006. 

Federal Emergency Management Agency: Challenges for the National Flood 
Insurance Program. GAO-06-335T. Washington, D.C.: January 25, 2006. 

Federal Emergency Management Agency: Challenges Facing the National 
Flood Insurance Program. GAO-06-174T. Washington, D.C.: October 18, 
2005. 

Catastrophe Risk: U.S. and European Approaches to Insure Natural 
Catastrophe and Terrorism Risks. GAO-05-199. Washington, D.C.: February 
28, 2005. 

Catastrophe Insurance Risks: The Role of Risk-Linked Securities. GAO- 
03-195T. Washington, D.C.: October 8, 2002. 

Catastrophe Insurance Risks: The Role of Risk-Linked Securities and 
Factors Affecting Their Use. GAO-02-941. Washington, D.C.: September 
24, 2002. 

Federal Disaster Insurance. GGD-95-20R. Washington, D.C.: November 7, 
1994. 

Federal Disaster Insurance: Goals Are Good, But Insurance Programs 
Would Expose the Federal Government to Large Potential Losses. T-GGD- 
94-153. Washington, D.C.: May 26, 1994. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Stanley Czerwinski, (202) 512-6806 or CzerwinskiS@gao.gov: 

Acknowledgements: 

In addition to the individual named above, Peter Del Toro, Assistant 
Director; Patrick Breiding; Michael Brostek; Keya Chateauneuf; Thomas 
Gilbert; Shirley Hwang; Gregory Kutz; Donna Miller; John Mingus; 
MaryLynn Sergent; and Diana Zinkl made key contributions to this 
report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Other recent natural disasters resulting in federal major disaster 
declarations this year include Hurricane Dolly, which made landfall in 
Texas in late July, and Tropical Storm Fay, which struck Florida in 
late August. 

[2] We selected natural disasters that occurred recently enough so that 
key officials and supporting documentation were still available. 

[3] The five disasters we studied that occurred in the United States 
received major disaster declarations from the federal government. The 
sixth disaster in our study, the Kobe earthquake, was a magnitude 7.3 
earthquake that killed over 6,400 people in Japan and is also 
considered a major disaster. 

[4] In this report, unless otherwise noted, we refer to the 1997 flood 
in Grand Forks, North Dakota and East Grand Forks, Minnesota, as the 
"Red River flood." In addition, "the 2005 Gulf Coast Hurricanes" refers 
to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, and for the purposes of this report, 
they are treated collectively as a single disaster event. 

[5] FEMA's Public Assistance Grant Program provides funding to state 
and local governments to repair and rebuild damaged public buildings 
and infrastructure. 

[6] GAO, Hurricanes Katrina and Rita Disaster Relief: Prevention Is the 
Key to Minimizing Fraud, Waste, and Abuse in Recovery Efforts, GAO-07-
418T (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 29, 2007). 

[7] The National Response Framework, issued by the Department of 
Homeland Security in January 2008, is a guide for how federal, state, 
local, and tribal governments, along with nongovernmental and private 
entities, will collectively respond to and recover from all disasters, 
particularly catastrophic disasters such as Hurricane Katrina, 
regardless of their causes. 

[8] The Stafford Act, as amended, establishes the primary programs and 
processes for the federal government to provide major disaster and 
emergency assistance to states, local governments, tribal nations, 
individuals, and qualified private nonprofit organizations. 42 U.S.C. 
§§ 5121-5207. 

[9] Under the Stafford Act, the federal share of Public Assistance 
grants may not be less than 75 percent of the eligible cost of repair, 
restoration, reconstruction, or replacement after most disasters. 42 
U.S.C. § 5172(b)(1). FEMA Public Assistance regulations recommend 
increasing the federal share from 75 percent to not more than 90 
percent whenever a disaster is so severe that actual federal 
obligations meet a certain benchmark level (in 2008, $122 per capita of 
the state population). 44 C.F.R. § 206.47(b). The regulations also 
provide that "if warranted by the needs of the disaster" FEMA will 
recommend up to 100 percent federal funding for emergency work for a 
limited period in the initial days of the disaster irrespective of the 
per capita impact. 44 C.F.R. § 206.47(d). 

[10] Pub. L. No. 109-135, 119 Stat. 2577 (Dec. 21, 2005). The GO Zone 
Act of 2005 also included a number of tax incentives available to 
businesses and individuals not subject to state allocation limits. 
These provisions are not addressed in the scope of this report. 

[11] In addition to the tax-exempt private activity bond authority, the 
GO Zone Act of 2005 authorized Gulf Coast states additional low-income 
housing tax credit authority for building rental housing, authority to 
advance refund certain tax-exempt bonds that could not otherwise be 
advance refunded, and issue tax credit bonds, a relatively new form of 
tax incentive where investors receive a credit against their tax 
liability in lieu of receiving interest on the bonds. The latter two 
provisions provided debt relief to the states in the aftermath of the 
Gulf Coast hurricanes. For more information on how these provisions 
were allocated and used in the GO Zone, see GAO, Gulf Opportunity Zone: 
States Are Allocating Federal Tax Incentives to Finance Low-Income 
Housing and a Wide Range of Private Facilities, GAO-08-913 (Washington, 
D.C.: July 16, 2008). 

[12] This bond authority is broadly similar to that offered to the city 
of New York, referred to as the New York Liberty Zone, following the 
September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. See GAO, Tax Administration: 
Information Is Not Available to Determine Whether $5 Billion in Liberty 
Zone Tax Incentives Will Be Realized, GAO-03-1102 (Washington, D.C.: 
Sept. 30, 2003) for more information. 

[13] H.R. 6587, 110th Cong. (2008); S. 3322, 110th Cong. (2008). 

[14] GAO-07-418T. 

[15] GAO, Hurricanes Katrina and Rita Disaster Relief: Improper and 
Potentially Fraudulent Individual Assistance Payments Estimated to Be 
Between $600 Million and $1.4 Billion, GAO-06-844T (Washington, D.C.: 
June 14, 2006). 

[16] GAO-07-418T. We have issued a large body of work on fraud, waste, 
and abuse of federal disaster relief programs after the 2005 
hurricanes. See appendix I for a list of reports and testimonies on 
this issue. 

[17] See GAO-07-418T. 

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