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2020-11-05 HCHA Approved Minutes
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2020-11-05 HCHA Approved Minutes
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HCHA meeting November 5, 2020 <br />I'll go through some of them just to facilitate our discussion today. So first and <br />foremost, of course, is ... are the disaster impacts. I think we know the impacts <br />very well. The graph ... the map here does show where the inundated or isolated <br />areas immediately following the eruption, prior to any road restoration that's <br />happened since has happened. We speak a lot about the farms and homes <br />that have been inundated by the lava but this map not only properties but <br />structures or farms and businesses that were inundated. The yellow dots also <br />demonstrate where places were isolated and the green dots also indicate <br />where lava did not take or damage a property but it was impacted by the <br />irruption, between the gases and earthquakes that have been documented. <br />The county looked at several data sources in the day following that first initiation <br />of the eruption since data collected at civil defense, data with the real property <br />tax division of finance, data from FEMA and SPA and the FEMA and SPA data is <br />represented both of those properties that have structures or farms destroyed as <br />well as those that were damaged. Folks sought assistance for damage even if <br />the structure may have still be standing. Below are just a breakdown of really <br />what we're talking about in terms of residences verses agricultural parcels and <br />then isolated parcels as well. <br />This is a table from the action plan that breaks out what we know to date in <br />terms of the funding and assistance that has been received by the county and <br />families impacted by the disaster. So this is the first part of the equation that HUD <br />requires us to look at in terms of what assistance we've received following <br />looking at the impacts and damages. I think this also speaks to the columns <br />represent the different categories of recovery efforts and the rows represent the <br />different funding sources. <br />Essentially because this is also framed for a HUD conversation is does not <br />calculate yet the assistance that HUD is providing to supplement what has been <br />otherwise received and anticipated. <br />This next table which is also in the action plan fills out the equation. Essentially <br />the ... across these different types of recovery work on the row side, the first <br />column demonstrates the need that's been articulated right, around housing <br />needs, infrastructure and economic development we factor in, in the middle <br />column, the assistance we've received and that third column represents the <br />unmet need and then we factor in the CDBG award after that. <br />Really going back to key policy issue around HUD requiring grantees to address <br />our unmet housing recovery need prior to allocating funding towards other <br />eligible projects or activities its that first column that were really tracking. So <br />understanding what the total documented damage in need was at <br />Page 19 of 36 <br />
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