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Joint Field Office
Raleigh, NC
North Carolina Department of
Crime Control & Public Safety
News Release
May 12, 2011
NC-1969 - NR-038
FEMA Media Contact: 919-779-8371
State Media Contact: 919-715-3747
USE DISASTER FUNDS WISELY AND FOR INTENDED PURPOSE
RALEIGH, N.C. – State and federal disaster assistance is bringing needed financial help to
homeowners, renters and business owners who suffered damage or loss as a result of the April 16 severe
storms and tornadoes. But state and federal emergency management officials are urging storm survivors
to use disaster funds wisely and only for their intended purpose.
“Many people have great needs and the money they receive may not cover all they would like,” said
N.C. Emergency Management Director Doug Hoell. “But if you spend money on anything other than
what your FEMA letter tells you, additional assistance may not be available.”
Funds are available through grants for housing or other needs and through low-interest federal loans to
replace housing or personal effects.
Housing Assistance grants must be used only for:
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Basic housing repairs for homeowners
Short-term rental assistance, or
Reimbursement of hotel/motel expenses.
Other Needs Assistance grants should be used to help replace essential personal property and meet
medical, dental, funeral, transportation and other serious disaster-related needs not covered by insurance
or other federal, state and charitable-aid programs. Most funds are deposited electronically and a letter
follows in the mail to explain how the money is to be used.
Low-interest disaster loans from the U.S. Small Business Administration are also available to
homeowners, renters, businesses and private nonprofit organizations of all sizes.
“We want you to use the money to meet specific disaster-related needs,” Federal Coordinating Officer
Mike Bolch said.
Here are tips to help you get the most out of your personal disaster recovery payment:
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Keep all of your receipts.
If you receive your grant in the form of a check, make sure to safeguard those funds and only
spend the money on disaster-related expenses.
Don’t be tempted to pay household bills with the disaster recovery payment.
Don’t make purchases unrelated to needs created by the disaster.
(MORE)
USE DISASTER FUNDS WISELY – Page 2
Disaster grants are subject to an audit and recipients should keep receipts or bills for three years to
demonstrate how all funds were used in meeting disaster-related needs. These grants are tax free and are
not a loan. They do not have to be repaid. They are not counted as income for welfare or other federal
benefit programs and they cannot be garnished.
“If you receive an SBA loan application after you apply with FEMA, be sure to complete and return it
to the SBA,” Bolch said. “If you don’t, you disqualify yourself from any more federal assistance.”
FEMA’s housing assistance and grants for disaster-related medical and dental expenses, funeral and
burial expenses do not require individuals to apply for an SBA loan. However, applicants who receive
SBA loan applications must submit them to the SBA to be eligible for assistance that covers personal
property, vehicle repair or replacement, and moving and storage expenses.
Completing the loan application does not commit you to a loan, but it is an important part of the federal
financial disaster assistance process.
President Obama’s major disaster declaration for North Carolina made federal assistance available to
affected individuals in 19 counties -- Bertie, Bladen, Craven, Cumberland, Currituck, Greene, Halifax,
Harnett, Hertford, Hoke, Johnston, Lee, Onslow, Pitt, Robeson, Sampson, Tyrrell, Wake and Wilson.
More information about this disaster is available at www.nccrimecontrol.org and www.fema.gov.
FEMA’s mission is to support our citizens and first responders to ensure that as a nation we work
together to build, sustain, and improve our capability to prepare for, protect against, respond to,
recover from, and mitigate all hazards.
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