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LOUELLA GIVENS
12 STEPS PLAN
As
Councilperson for District D, I will support adoption of local,
state and federal legislation modeled on HR 4197 as introduced to
the United States House of Representatives. This legislation
emphasizes two critical
objectives – the desire to see the New Orleans restored and the
desire to see the residents of New Orleans reunited with their
families.
I – Victim Restoration Fund : Use the
model approved by Congress after the 9/11 terrorist attacks – having
a Special Master make an individual evaluation of the amount each
claimant is to receive. Instead of making a determination of the
amount due for each claim as a result of death as was the case under
the 9/11 the Victim Compensation Fund, however, under the Victim
Restoration Fund, the Special Master's job would be to determine
what compensation is necessary to restore each individual Hurricane
Katrina claimant to his or her pre-Katrina condition. The Special
Master would be required to offset recoveries to each claimant from
collateral sources (insurance, government sources, etc.,) and would
be authorized to accept non-government funds to help reduce the
financial burden on the Federal government.
II – Environmental Provisions : Requires
the EPA to develop, in consultation with state officials, a
comprehensive environmental sampling and toxicity assessment plan (CESTAP)
including public health assessments and monitoring, training of
clean up workers, notification to the public of risks, a
step-by-step process for allowing residents to return to their
property, a process of compensating those unable to return to their
property because of environmental conditions and independent review
of determinations.
III – Health Provisions:
- Subtitle A authorizes grants to rebuild
and repair medical facilities destroyed or damaged by Hurricane
Katrina and to help close health access and outcome disparities
between minorities and others and provides coverage under
Medicaid for each survivor of Hurricane Katrina whose income
does not exceed 100% of the poverty line.
- Subtitle B authorizes 100% Federal payment
for states to provide emergency Temporary Assistance to Needy
Families (TANF) benefits to survivors of Hurricane Katrina who
meet eligibility standards regardless of where they are.
- Subtitle C provides 100% Federal coverage
of unemployment benefits (marked up 25% or $100 per week,
whichever is greater) to Katrina survivors for 26 additional
weeks.
- Subtitle D provides for Federal payment of
private health insurance premiums for at least 12 months for
employees and employers whose ability to continue payment of
premiums was severely impaired as a result of Katrina and
prohibits cancellation of policies by insurance providers who
receive premium payments under the program.
IV – Housing & Community Rebuilding
Provisions : Authorizes additional Federal funds for the
Hurricane Katrina disaster area for the following purposes and in
the following amounts:
- Public Housing Capital Funds - $100
million;
- HOPE VI Community Revitalization - $100
million;
- HOME - $1 billion;
- Community Development Block Grants (CDBG)
- $1 billion;
- CDBG Section 108 Loan Guarantee Funds -
$10 million;
- YouthBuild - $200 million;
- HUD Demonstration Act Funds - $4.5
million;
- Funding for 300,000 additional
tenant-based rental assistance (Section 8) Vouchers;
- $10 million for Fair Housing Enforcement;
and
- $10 million for Housing Counseling for
families in temporary shelters.
Title IV also prohibits placement of persons
displaced by Katrina in substandard housing, provides for more
vigorous enforcement of Fair Housing laws, gives people displaced by
Katrina preference for HUD inventory and foreclosed properties, and
establishes a mortgage payment fund for payment of mortgages similar
to the fund authorized under Title III for the payment of private
health insurance premiums.
V – Education Provisions : To help meet
the educational needs of the Katrina areas and evacuees from these
areas:
· Subtitle B provides additional emergency
funding for Child Care Development Act Block Grants and Head Start
Services;
· Subtitle C provides additional funding for
elementary and secondary schools to help students relocated as a
result of Hurricane Katrina and school systems to which they were
relocated, to help rebuild and restart the operation of schools in
the Katrina areas, to help homeless youth, for community learning
centers, for construction, modernization and repair of school
facilities damaged by Hurricane Katrina and for teacher incentive
programs; and
· Subtitle D provides loan forgiveness for
college students, grants for reconstruction and renovation of
colleges damaged by Hurricane Katrina and grants for recruitment and
retention of students and faculty at colleges impacted by
Katrina.
VI – Voting Rights: Provides Katrina
evacuees the same absentee ballot and registration provisions
available to military personnel and authorizes up to $50 million in
grants for the restoration and replacement of election supplies,
materials and equipment damaged by Hurricane Katrina.
VII – Financial Services Provisions :
Waives certain regulations, capital requirements, fees and customer
identification requirements to facilitate financial transactions for
persons displaced by Katrina, provides technical assistance to
minority financial institutions and allows CDFI Fund resources to be
used for disaster relief in the Katrina areas.
VIII – Expanded Opportunity and Small
Business Provisions:
- Subtitle A reinstates Davis-Bacon wage
requirements, sets small and minority business, local (Gulf
Coast) business and local employee participation goals in
post-Katrina contracting, requires financial incentives to be
provided to meet these goals, requires contractors to provide
apprenticeship opportunities and reinstates affirmative action
requirements suspended by President Bush after Hurricane
Katrina.
- Subtitle B authorizes additional funding
for new SBA disaster loans and increases loan caps on SBA loans
to small businesses impacted by Hurricane Katrina, allows the
SBA to defer payments and refinance existing loans, authorizes
additional funding for business counseling, small business
development centers and HubZones and increases the surety
bonding threshold for Katrina related procurement contracts.
IX – Tax Provisions: Provides tax
credits of up to $5,000 for persons or families displaced by
Hurricane Katrina who purchase or construct homes in Hurricane
Katrina areas, increases the low-income housing credit dollar amount
and allows the issuance of federally guaranteed, tax exempt bonds
for reconstruction of the Katrina disaster area.
X – Bankruptcy: Exempts victims of
natural disasters from most provisions of the Bankruptcy reform law
that recently became effective.
XI – FEMA Reimbursements: Requires FEMA
to reimburse entities that performed services that should have been
performed by FEMA following Hurricane Katrina if the entity requests
reimbursement and allows retroactive purchase of flood insurance by
victims of Hurricane Katrina who did not
live in a designated flood plain.
VII – Reduce Poverty: Empower the
community through education, employment and housing initiatives.
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