After a day of record-breaking rainfall, at least one fatality, and hundreds of traffic and water-related emergency calls, Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins is asking residents to apply for financial assistance.
Jenkins declared a state of disaster on Monday afternoon, opening up federal financial assistance opportunities. The Federal Emergency Management Agency has multiple buckets of financial help options available now that Dallas County has declared a disaster.
For public buildings, roads and bridges, Texas is allocated $49 million dollars per disaster event for government agencies.
A separate bucket of assistance can go toward property owners and renters, even for apartments. There is no cap on individual assistance for homes, Jenkins said. Water-related damages that aren’t covered by insurance can be covered by FEMA.
“You might have flood insurance on your house, but you also sustained some damages that aren’t covered by the insurance, then you would qualify for assistance,” Jenkins said.
Federal help is still up in the air because the federal government also has to declare the floods to be a disaster to unlock the funds. The county judge was unhappy with FEMA’s disaster relief rejection during the October 2019 tornado that caused upard of $190 million in public infrastructure damage in Dallas County.
