Analysis, Blog Posts

How Federal Policies Make It Harder for Houston’s Communities of Color and Low-Income Families to Return Home


Hurricane Harvey
Sohail Soomro, center right, accompanied by his family, dumps flood damaged furniture on his front yard in the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey on Thursday, September 7, 2017, at the Canyon Gate community in Katy, Texas. AP/Matt Rourke

Washington, D.C. —(ENEWSPF)–September 8, 2017.  As the Houston area looks to rebound after Hurricane Harvey, a new column from the Center for American Progress shows how some federal policies can make the road to recovery tougher for communities of color and residents who live paycheck-to-paycheck. The column explains how the Trump administration threatens vital programs to get people back on their feet and prevent the worst damage from future storms.

Some families struggling to recover from Harvey and prevent damage from future storms will rely on programs that the Trump administration wishes to cut or eliminate entirely, the column says. And many of the most supportive Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA) programs are only available to those who can provide the required documentation. That could leave as many as 575,000 undocumented Houstonians without resources for long-term recovery.

Read the column: “A Tale of Two Recoveries: How Federal Policies Make It Harder for Communities of Color and Low-Income Families to Return Home,” by Danielle Baussan and Miranda Peterson.

Source: http://americanprogress.org

Related Article:

Analysis: Majority of Flooded Texas Superfund Sites in Low-income Neighborhoods, Communities of Color


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