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A Bill from FEMA

January 17, 2007

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As Katrina bore down on New Orleans, Marie Collins, now a junior, fled from student housing at the University of New Orleans to stay with her grandmother in Mississippi. Because she spent months displaced from her apartment, the Federal Emergency Management Agency later gave her thousands of dollars for housing assistance. Now the agency has sent her a bill asking her to return much of that money, leaving Collins in a lurch as she figures out how to come up with the cash.

“They said that my apartment complex was livable and they wanted the money back,” Collins said. Collins calculated that FEMA sent her a little over $4,000 and that the agency is asking her to return around $2,300.

“I really needed the money and I don’t have it to give back,” she said. “I don’t know what I’m going to do. I haven’t had time to think about that yet.”

There are potentially thousands of students that might be facing similar difficulties. An article from Black College Wire reported Tuesday that hundreds of students at Dillard University may be forced to pay back money that they received from FEMA.

A spokesman for FEMA said that Dillard is not the only college with students in this situation. Most of the students who are being asked to return FEMA money are from universities in New Orleans, but some students in Mississippi might also be affected. The agency does not know how many students the policy applies to.

Joseph K. Byrd, vice president for student services at Xavier University of Louisiana, said that he has been giving students a letter that they can pass along to FEMA, to prove that their residence was damaged.

“We’ve had requests from about 25 students and it will probably go higher than that,” he said. Byrd calculated that about 1,700 students were living in student housing when Katrina hit, but not all of them lost property or were flooded out.

James McIntyre, a spokesman for FEMA, said that students will have to pay back money if their valuables were covered by insurance. In some cases, he said, students became confused when they filed claims for losses and added in the college property, such as desks or other university property. That money will also have to be repaid. Students will also have to repay any money for housing assistance unless the student housing was their primary residence.

“All the students who have been contacted have a right to an appeal,” he said. If the appeal is ultimately rejected, McIntyre said that the agency will set up a payment plan to give each student more time to reimburse the government.

The investigations into overpayments following hurricane Katrina are being carried out by the Department of Homeland Security and an interagency federal force called the Hurricane Katrina Fraud Task Force. The task force has focused on fraudulent charities, identity theft, and government benefit fraud.

“Whether or not their housing was habitable, students should be qualified for assistance like everyone else,” said Melanie Roussell, spokeswoman for Rep. William Jefferson, a Democrat whose district includes New Orleans. She added that students were some of the first people to come back to New Orleans after the hurricane disaster.

“College students have become the backbone of our redevelopment and we need to do everything we can to make sure they can afford to stay,” she said. Roussell said that the bills from FEMA are a sign that the Stafford Act, which created the agency in 1979, needs to be reformed because it does not take into account catastrophes that can displace people for months at a time.

But McIntyre said that the agency has an obligation to go after tax payer money. “FEMA, as a rule, will go after anyone who was overpaid,” he said.

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Comments on A Bill from FEMA

  • Overpaid?
  • Posted by Lee on January 17, 2007 at 8:45am EST
  • FEMA will go after anyone who is overpaid, huh? Like Brownie?

  • Mis-communication
  • Posted by A Past FEMA Employee on January 17, 2007 at 10:30am EST
  • I worked for FEMA in MS for 2 months (due to my job at the time of Katrina being washed away-Thanks FEMA). FEMA overpaid many people who either knowingly or unknowingly represented themselves (personal property damaged and/or living situation following the storm).

    People were trying to claim property that wasn't theirs. They were getting paid a monthly rental amount when they were living free with a relative (FEMA will not pay a relative "rent" money) in addition to other scams or simply misunderstanding the rules - which FEMA was never very good at explaining. Boy, I could tell you some stories!! It is however extremely burdensome on students who received money without intentional misrepresentation who are now being told to return thousands of dollars. FEMA needs to do a better job of policing their output of funds in the first place. However, that also slows down the output of funds. So then they'd get yelled at for taking too long to get money to people who need it! It's a Catch 22 - and I know firsthand (as both a resident and a prior FEMA employee).

  • HUH??????
  • Posted by Martin on January 17, 2007 at 1:10pm EST
  • What the duce?????? What is happening with our federal government? Collecting a few thousand dollars from some displaced college kids while millions upon millions of dollars are unaccounted for after Katrina hardly makes sense. Heap upon that the fact that we are currently spending (throwing away)billions of dollars on a very unpopular and unproductive war and I say it is time that we, as citizens, look at the possibility of taking back our country. I hope that the democrats make good on some of those wacky campaign promises, but I doubt it. The first order of business would be a healthy audit of the federal government, most importantly FEMA and the military, and scratch the whole lot of them and start over.

  • FEMA
  • Posted by Crystal , Student at Xavier University of LA at XULA on January 28, 2007 at 3:40pm EST
  • As a studnet at Xavier Univeristy if New Orleans, I would have to disagree with every comment. Students are being asked to return the money because we are considered 1. Temporary Residents 2. Loses were covered by the University. Both are these reasons are wrong! FEMA should not consider someone who lives in New Orleans 4 years, pays taxes here on items we purchase, registers to vote and here, and lives a citizen of New Orleans. Temporary housing is someone visiting or staying in a hotel, not someone who votes here! Secondly, Xavier University barely received monies from FEMA. The loses that students did have were not included in that money. It's easy to say students lied and just wanted money from someone who wasn't here. But from someone who went to school in New Orleans, and is from Mississippi and had damage in both locations, "HOW DARE YOU ASK FOR THE LITTLE $4000 THAT I RECEIVED." This was hardly enough to replace the tv, computer, stereo, clothes, books, and all the other items. It may seem trival to some, but these is what we lost. Thus we should have received funds, many of us didn't return home, we went to other universities, so we needed that rental assistance.

    Most importantly, we took that money in good faith. It was a diaster, one this nation has never seen before. I don't anyone could argue with the fact that we were displaced, some of us not at home with our parents, some were, but we had lost our things. Now you have the nerve to ask for a couple of thousand of dollars that wasn't enough back. Shame on you fema, shame on you.

  • Still Ridiculous!!!!
  • Posted by Wesley Hollis on February 2, 2007 at 4:30am EST
  • I wrote the article thats in Black College WIRE and it's all over the web now. I wrote it because i was angry by having to make a SECOND appeal with FEMA about the assitance I recieved because it was said "Dillard was not my primary residence". As a Dillard University student, we recieved the most damage out of all the schools. I considered that to be my home so everything i owned was there and lost!! HOW DARE FEMA TELL ME THAT DILLARD WAS NOT MY "PRIMARY RESIDENCE"!!! Yes..I did have my parent's home to evacuate to during the storm, However that is just it.... it is my PARENTS home. It became my PARENTS HOME and no longer MY HOME until after i graduated from high school!!!!! Also, since I am also from Houston, i knew plenty of evacuees who were from areas of New Orleans that was not touched by the hurricane YET RECIEVED $10,000.00 CHECKS!!! These people were all in the mall buying all the GUCCI AND LOUIS they want, yet many others were struggling to afford at least a WAL-MART wardrobe. I DONT SEE FEMA DEMANDING MONEY FROM THESE PEOPLE. Myself and many others from Colleges in New Orleans lost many things and for some money couldnt replace!!! SO WE NEEDED SOMETHING!!! Alot of us were relocating to other schools WITH NOTHING!!! Some of these host schools, like mine WERE NOT FREE, so that was more money!! We had to buy more books, more clothes, tuition and etc. And during this whole ordeal many were fighting with fema to get the little $2000 they gave us and most did'nt get it until almost November of 2005. So finally when we think things are over FEMA WANTS TO COME BACK AND HARRASS US ABOUT MONEY WE DESERVED!!!! I mean i could on and on about the sitiuation but it is just toooo much. I am very frustrated that FEMA is still pulling the "PRIMARY HOUSING EXCUSE" with me and not accepting my appeal. I JUST KNOW THIS!!! THEY ARE NOT GETTING ANYTHING BACK!!!

  • FEMA hits McNeese too
  • Posted by Brian Darling at McNeese State University on February 8, 2007 at 5:45am EST
  • I had been living in the doorms of Burton Hall for the previous 3 years before the hurrican. Rita not only hit my dorm (which still remains closed) but also hit my parrent's home. I have been asked to repay $4,052 because of duplicated benifits. I have talked ot lawyers, and they all say the same thing, That FEMA will lose in court. I followed the rules of FEMA n the appeal. I was denied. I am appealing again, but I fell that it is a lost cause. As far as I am concerned FEMA can go to hell. Take me to court, and more of tax payer's money will go down the drain. I will not lose.