Disaster Relief Funding and Emergency
Supplemental Appropriations
Bruce R. Lindsay
Analyst in Emergency Management Policy
Justin Murray
Information Research Specialist
January 26, 2010
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R40708
CRS Report for Congress
P
repared for Members and Committees of Congress
Disaster Relief Funding and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations
Summary
When a state is overwhelmed by an emergency or disaster, the governor may request assistance
from the federal government. Federal assistance is contingent on whether the President issues an
emergency or major disaster declaration. Once the declaration has been issued the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) provides disaster relief through the use of the Disaster
Relief Fund (DRF), which is the source of funding for the Robert T. Stafford Emergency Relief
and Disaster Assistance Act response and recovery programs. Congress appropriates money to the
DRF to ensure that funding for disaster relief is available to help individuals and communities
stricken by emergencies and major disasters (in addition, Congress appropriates disaster funds to
other accounts administered by other federal agencies pursuant to federal statutes that authorize
specific types of disaster relief).
The DRF is generally funded at a level that is sufficient for what are known as “normal” disasters.
These are incidents for which DRF outlays are less than $500 million dollars. When a large
disaster occurs, funding for the DRF may be augmented through emergency supplemental
appropriations. A supplemental appropriation generally provides additional budget authority
during the current fiscal year to: (1) finance activities not provided for in the regular
appropriation; or (2) provide funds when the regular appropriation is deemed insufficient.
Whether or not the current practice is the best system for budgeting disaster relief is subject to
debate. Some argue that more money should be appropriated in FEMA’s DRF account in annual
appropriations, while others maintain that augmenting the DRF through emergency supplemental
appropriations is preferable because it allows Congress to react directly to a particular situation.
Others may argue that emergency supplemental appropriations are preferable for fiscal
management reasons because an appropriation is not requested unless there is a real need for
supplemental funding. Another argument is to revamp the budgetary process to fund disaster
relief.
This report describes the various components of the DRF, including (1) what authorities have
shaped it over the years; (2) how FEMA determines the amount of the appropriation requested to
Congress (pertaining to the DRF); and (3) how emergency supplemental appropriations are
requested. In addition to the DRF, information is provided on funds appropriated in supplemental
appropriations legislation to agencies other than the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
Aspects of debate concerning how disaster relief is budgeted are also highlighted and examined,
and alternative budgetary options are summarized.
This report will be updated as events warrant.
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Disaster Relief Funding and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations
Contents
Disaster Relief Fund.................................................................................................................... 1
Past and Present Authorities Related to the Disaster Relief Fund ................................................. 2
Public Laws Influencing the Administration of Disaster Relief .............................................. 3
The Federal Disaster Relief Act of 1950 (P.L. 81-875)..................................................... 4
Disaster Relief Act of 1966 (P.L. 89-769) ........................................................................ 4
Disaster Relief Act of 1974 (P.L. 93-288) ........................................................................ 4
The Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (P.L. 100-
707) ............................................................................................................................. 4
Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act of 2006 ............................................. 5
How the DRF is Funded.............................................................................................................. 5
The Debate over Emergency Supplemental Appropriations.......................................................... 8
Emergency Supplemental Appropriations: FY1989 – FY2008 .................................................. 10
Recent Emergency Supplemental Appropriations ................................................................ 18
Emergency Supplemental Appropriations for Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma.............. 19
Measures Enacted in FY2005........................................................................................ 19
Measures Enacted in FY2006........................................................................................ 19
Measures Enacted in FY2007........................................................................................ 19
Measures Enacted in FY2008........................................................................................ 20
Summary of Recent Emergency Supplemental Appropriations............................................. 20
Issues for Congress ................................................................................................................... 23
Authorizing the DRF........................................................................................................... 23
Restructuring Budgetary Procedures.................................................................................... 23
Additional Approaches for Funding Federal Disaster Relief................................................. 25
Oversight on Reporting ....................................................................................................... 26
Concluding Policy Questions .................................................................................................... 26
Figures
Figure 1. Disaster Relief Fund Requests and Enacted Annual Appropriations, FY1989-
2009 ........................................................................................................................................ 8
Figure 2. Disaster Relief Fund: Requests, Enacted Appropriations, Supplemental
Appropriations FY1989-FY2009............................................................................................ 11
Figure 3. FY2005 – FY2008 Supplemental Disaster Appropriations, Hurricanes Katrina,
Rita, and Wilma ..................................................................................................................... 22
Tables
Table 1. Disaster Relief Fund ...................................................................................................... 7
Table 2. Presidential Requests and Emergency Appropriations for Disaster Relief, All
Agencies ................................................................................................................................ 12
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Disaster Relief Funding and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations
Table 3. FY2005-FY2008 Supplemental Disaster Appropriations After Hurricanes
Katrina, Rita, and Wilma ........................................................................................................ 21
Contacts
Author Contact Information ...................................................................................................... 28
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Disaster Relief Funding and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations
Disaster Relief Fund
The Disaster Relief Fund (DRF), sometimes referred to as the President’s Disaster Relief Fund, is
managed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The DRF is the main account
used to fund a wide variety of programs that provide grants and other support to assist state and
local governments and certain nonprofit entities during disaster recovery. In most cases, funding
from the DRF is released after the President has issued a declaration pursuant to the Robert T.
Stafford Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (Stafford Act).1 There are, however, some
activities that may be funded by the DRF without a presidential declaration, mainly those
supported by the Disaster Readiness and Support Account. The Disaster Readiness and Support
Account pays for FEMA’s phone centers, finance centers, and housing inspectors. Through this
account certain recovery elements are already in place when the President issues a declaration.
The declaration process has the following general structure:
• the local government responds to an event;
• if the event overwhelms the local government, the state is called upon for
assistance;
• a Damage Assessment (DA) is completed by local, state, federal, and volunteer
organizations to determine loss and recovery needs;
• based on the DA findings, a declaration request is submitted to the President by
the Governor;2
• FEMA evaluates the governor’s request and recommends action to the White
House, based on the nature of the event and an assessment of the state’s ability to
recover; and
• the President may either approve the request or require FEMA to inform the
governor the request has been denied.3
A president’s declaration triggers the allocation of funds from the DRF, and the funding may be
distributed from any one, or any combination, of three categories of disaster aid.
1. Individual Assistance. Individual Assistance (IA) includes disaster housing for
displaced individuals, grants for needs not covered by insurance, crisis
counseling, and disaster-related unemployment assistance.
2. Public Assistance. Public assistance (PA), which is FEMA’s largest funded
program, helps communities absorb the costs of emergency measures such as
removing debris and repairing or replacing structures such as public buildings,
roads, bridges, and utilities.
1 42 USC 5121 et seq. For information on the declaration process, see CRS Report RL34146, FEMA’s Disaster
Declaration Process: A Primer, by Francis X. McCarthy.
2 Per 42 USC 5122(4), the District of Columbia and the U.S. territories use the same declaration process.
3 U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency. “The Disaster Process and Disaster Aid Programs.”
http://www.fema.gov/hazard/dproc.shtm.
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3. Hazard Mitigation. FEMA funds mitigation measures to prevent or lessen the
effects of a future disaster through the Hazard Mitigation Grant Program.4
Even if the President issues an emergency or major disaster declaration, not all persons or entities
affected by a disaster are eligible for disaster assistance. FEMA officials determine the need for
assistance after a declaration is issued. Aid is provided only to those persons or entities
determined by FEMA to need the assistance. An example of ineligibility would be a household
that has access to alternative housing.5 Another example includes public facilities or eligible
nonprofit facilities that have been damaged in a major disaster. After the incident, the owners
must maintain insurance on the facility in order to be eligible for comparable Stafford Act
assistance in the event similar disasters occur in the future.6 In such a case, the unit of
government may not receive funds to refurbish or rebuild its facilities. Thus, based on decisions
by FEMA officials on the extent of damage and the eligibility of applicants, the type and amount
of assistance made available will vary from one disaster to another.
Past and Present Authorities Related to the Disaster
Relief Fund
The Stafford Act authorizes appropriations to carry out disaster relief activities, but does not
explicitly designate the DRF as the account for such funds. Rather, the DRF is the product of
legislation and federal policies that can be traced to the post-World War II era. Prior to that time,
disaster response activities were funded primarily through local efforts and voluntary groups. In
cases where the federal government did offer assistance, the needs of disaster victims and affected
communities were funded on an as-needed basis through appropriations that were then allocated,
pursuant to the legislation, by executive branch administrators and, ultimately, the President.7
Arguably, the forerunners to the DRF were appropriations known as “emergency funds for the
President.” For example, in a 1948 appropriation, Congress allocated $500,000 dollars to
“supplement the efforts and available resources of state and local governments or other agencies,
whenever ... any flood, fire, hurricane, earthquake, or other catastrophe in any part of the United
States is of sufficient severity and magnitude to warrant emergency assistance by the federal
government ... ”8 In subsequent years Congress continued to appropriate funds for disaster relief
and eventually a series of authorizations were provided in Section 606 of the Disaster Relief Act
of 1974 as amended.9 These authorizations provided funding for disaster-related activities until a
specified date. In 1988 Congress repealed Section 606 of the Disaster Relief Act ending
4 A structure does not have to be damaged to be eligible for mitigation. Hazard Mitigation Grants are available as block
grant funds and can be used outside of the disaster area. For more information, see CRS Report R40471, FEMA’s
Hazard Mitigation Grant Program: Overview and Issues, by Natalie Keegan.
5 44 C.F.R. § 206.101(2).
6 Federal Emergency Management Agency, Disaster Assistance Fact Sheet: DAP9580.3, Washington, June 19, 2008,
p. 2, http://www.fema.gov/pdf/government/grant/pa/policy.pdf. In addition, FEMA regulations mandate that insurance
must be maintained in order for full Stafford Act assistance to be provided in future disasters. See 44 CFR 206.252 and
44 CFR 206.253.
7 U.S. Congress, Senate Task Force on Funding Disaster Relief, Bipartisan Task Force on Funding Disaster Relief,
104th Cong., 1st sess., March 15, 1995, No. 104-4 (Washington: GPO, 1995), p. 1.
8 62 Stat. 1031.
9 See 42 USC 5202 (note).
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extensions of authorizations. 10 Since then funds have been appropriated, though not specifically
authorized.
In past years some congressional interest to authorize the DRF by name has been evident. For
example, the 110th Congress attempted to authorize the DRF through section 106 of H.R. 6658,
which would have amended the Stafford Act11 to state that in general there is, within “the
Treasury a fund known as the Disaster Relief Fund ... The Fund shall consist of amounts
appropriated and credited to the Fund pursuant to this Act.” The legislation, however, was not
enacted.
Public Laws Influencing the Administration of Disaster Relief
The approach to disaster relief changed from 1950 to 1979, transitioning from a largely
uncoordinated and decentralized system of relief funding to one dominated by the federal
government. The transition was due in part to an increased awareness of the complex
responsibilities of federal and nonfederal entities before and after a disaster, and to the efforts of
policymakers and administrators to address a variety of concerns―most notably civil defense.12
After World War II, concern over the possible use of atomic weapons and growing hostility
between the United States and the Soviet Union gave rise to the “Cold War.” As a consequence,
disaster management in the United States was organized around two tracks (1) the threat of a
nuclear war and (2) natural disasters. Several landmark federal disaster laws and policies
originate from attempts by lawmakers during this era to prepare the civilian population for a
potential atomic attack and provide aid after a natural disaster.13 The most notable of these laws
were the Civil Defense Act of 195014 and the Federal Disaster Relief Act of 1950. 15 These laws
set into motion federal-to-state assistance, prompting the need for an account to fund disaster and
emergency activities.
Once a framework of federal to state disaster assistance had been constructed in the 1950 statute,
the process of administering disaster relief was further shaped by the Disaster Relief Acts of
1966, 16 1974, 17 and the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act of
1988. 18 Prompted by large disasters such as Hurricanes Betsy in 1965 and Agnes in 1972, these
laws significantly increased federal involvement in emergency management, which in turn
created the need for a funding mechanism to pay for emergency and disaster activities.
Summaries of the statutes follow.
10 P.L. 100-707, 102 Stat. 4708.
11 42 U.S.C. 5141.
12 Keith Bea, “The Formative Years: 1950-1978,” in Emergency Management: The American Experience, ed. Claire B.
Rubin (Fairfax, VA: Public Entity Risk Institute, 2007), p. 81.
13 Richard Sylves, Disaster Policy and Politics: Emergency Management and Homeland Security (Washington: CQ
Press, 2008), p. 48.
14 P.L. 81-920.
15 P.L. 81-875, 64 Stat. 1109.
16 P.L. 89-796, 80 Stat. 1316.
17 P.L. 93-288, 88 Stat. 143.
18 102 Stat. 4689.
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The Federal Disaster Relief Act of 1950 (P.L. 81-875)
The Federal Disaster Relief Act established much of the framework through which disaster policy
is carried out in the United States. The Federal Disaster Relief Act provided an orderly, ongoing
continued means of federal assistance to states and localities to alleviate suffering and damage
that resulted from major disasters. Prior to the Act, congressional action after each individual
incident was needed to provide federal aid. Once in place, the law authorized the President to
make the decision to provide federal aid without the consent of Congress. The act also put in
place the standard process in which the governors could ask the President for federal disaster
assistance for their respective states.19
Disaster Relief Act of 1966 (P.L. 89-769)
To some, the Disaster Act of 1950 appeared to effectively handle routine disasters, but did not
adequately address large-scale, catastrophic disasters. In response to this need, Congress enacted
the Disaster Relief Act of 1966. Some of the measures in the act included the authorization of
federal agencies to provide loans below market rates, and the extension of aid to unincorporated
areas.
Disaster Relief Act of 1974 (P.L. 93-288)
The Disaster Relief Act of 1974 contained several precedent-setting features. The act created the
first program to provide direct assistance to individuals and households following a disaster. It
instituted the Individual and Family Grant (IFG) program, which supplied 75% of the funding for
state-administered programs that provided money to purchase clothing, furniture, and essential
needs following a disaster. The act also formalized efforts to mitigate disasters, as opposed to
merely responding to them. Additionally, the act stressed a multi-hazard approach wherein
government officials would prepare and respond to all types of disasters, rather than maintaining
separate capacities for different types of hazards.20
The Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (P.L. 100-
707)
Today, the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act constitutes the
statutory authority for most federal disaster response and recovery activities especially as they
pertain to FEMA and FEMA programs. The Act authorizes the President to issue major disaster,
emergency, and fire management declarations at the request of the states. The declarations enable
federal agencies to provide assistance to states overwhelmed by disasters. Stafford Act disaster
assistance is provided through funds appropriated to the DRF. The funds may be used by states,
localities, and certain non-profit organizations for activities such as providing mass care, restoring
19 Richard Sylves, Disaster Policy and Politics: Emergency Management and Homeland Security (Washington: CQ
Press, 2008), p. 49.
20 Richard Sylves, Disaster Policy and Politics: Emergency Management and Homeland Security (Washington DC: CQ
Press, 2008), p. 54.
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damaged or destroyed facilities, clearing debris, aiding individuals and families with uninsured
needs, and mitigating the impact of future disasters.21
The history of federal disaster relief legislation demonstrates a steady expansion of federal aid
since the 1950s. As the federal role in emergencies and major disasters expanded, so too have the
costs. The costs associated with disaster relief have led some to contemplate changing how the
federal government funds these events. Some of these proposals are discussed later in this report.
Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act of 2006
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Congress passed the Post-Katrina Emergency Management
Reform Act22 to address emergency preparedness and response shortcomings identified in the
reports published by congressional committees and the White House. Based on those reports and
oversight hearings on many aspects of FEMA’s performance during the hurricane season of 2005,
Congress expanded the authority of the FEMA administrator, authorized accelerated federal aid,
and raised some ceilings on federal assistance, among other changes. In addition, Congress
mandated that, for FY2007, FEMA had to submit to Congress a monthly report on the DRF
detailing allocations, obligations, and expenditures for Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma.23
The reports had to include information on national flood insurance claims, manufactured housing
data, obligations, allocations for housing assistance, public assistance, individual assistance and
expenditures by state for unemployment.24
How the DRF is Funded
FEMA receives appropriations for disaster relief through annual appropriations. Each fiscal year,
FEMA and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) submit a request to the President for
the amount of funding the two agencies determine the DRF should receive. The President then
submits an administration request to Congress. The President may, or may not, use the amount
suggested by FEMA and the OMB.
The current methodology used to determine the funding amount in the DRF incorporates four
data points. The points include (1) the available appropriation, (2) the DRF monthly average (the
amount in the DRF), (3) the monthly cost estimates for catastrophic events, and (4) the estimated
monthly recoveries of unobligated funds.25
1. Available Appropriation. The available appropriation is a combination of prior
year funds that are carried-over, the current fiscal year appropriation, and any
supplemental appropriation funding.26
21 CRS Report RL33053, Federal Stafford Act Disaster Assistance: Presidential Declarations, Eligible Activities, and
Funding, by Keith Bea.
22 Title VI of P.L. 109-295, the FY2007 DHS appropriations legislation.
23 Sec. 528, P.L. 109-295, 120 Stat 1383.
24 A similar reporting requirement has been carried forward in subsequent appropriations statutes. See, for example,
P.L. 110-329, 122 Stat 3674-75.
25 This section is based on the author’s in-person interview with a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) finance
official, March 9, 2009.
26 The DRF is a “no year” account; funds remain until expended.
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2. DRF Monthly Average. The calculation for the DRF monthly average is based
on a five-year rolling average of “normal” disasters. Normal disasters are
incidents that cost less than $500 million dollars. The rationale of excluding large
events from the calculation is discussed later in this report.
3. Monthly Cost Estimates for Catastrophic Events. Estimates obtained from the
field on pending (still open) disaster projects are routinely used in calculating
monthly cost estimates.
4. Estimated Recoveries. Estimated recoveries represent the recovery of obligated
funds that have not been used. This can include duplication of benefit funds27 as
well as long-term projects for PA or mitigation that either were not finished, or
were completed at a lower cost.
The end-of-fiscal-year projection is estimated by subtracting the cumulative DRF monthly
averages and cost estimates for incidents from the available appropriation. Then, the cumulative
recoveries are added. The DRF end-of-fiscal-year estimate is revised monthly, based on the actual
obligations that are recorded in lieu of the monthly estimates, and new estimates submitted for
“open” incidents.28
Since FY1989, the average initial Administration request for the DRF has been $1.7
billion dollars (in 2009 dollars).29 The lowest request was in FY1992 for $286 million
dollars, while the largest request was in FY2001 for $3.6 billion dollars. By comparison,
the average actual annual appropriation approved by Congress is roughly $1.1 billion
dollars. The lowest actual annual appropriation was in FY1991 for $0 (due to a large
carryover from the previous year), with the largest actual annual appropriation in FY2000
for $3.5 billion. A comparison between Administration requests and annual
appropriations is presented in Table 1 and Figure 1.
27 An example of a duplication of a benefit fund is when the state receives an insurance payment for disaster damages
after obtaining federal funding for the same damages. In such a case the state is to return the funding to the federal
government.
28 Open incidents are those whose related activities are currently being funded by FEMA.
29 These figures reflect annual appropriations and do not include supplemental appropriations.
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Table 1. Disaster Relief Fund
Requests, Appropriations, and Supplemental Appropriations (in millions of dollars)
A B C D F H I J
K
Fiscal
Administrative Administrative Enacted
Enacted
Supplemental Supplemental Total
Total
Year
Request
Request (2009 Appropriation Appropriation (Nominal)
(2009
Nominal
Constant
(Nominal)
Constant
(Nominal)
(2009
Constant
2009
Dollars)
Constant
Dollars)
Dollars
Dollars)
1989
200 352 100 176
1,108
1,952
1,208
2,128
1990 270
451
98
164 1,150 1,922 1,248
2,086
1991
270
433 0 0 0 0 0
0
1992
184 286 185 288
3,993
6,216
4,178
6,504
1993
292 441 292 441
1,735
2,622
2,027
3,063
1994 1,154
1,701
292
430
5,117
7,541
5,409 7,971
1995
320 459 318 456
2,275
3,260
2,593
3,716
1996
320 445 222 309
3,171
4,414
3,393
4,723
1997
320 435 1,320 1,796 3,300 4,490 4,620
6,286
1998 2,708
3,628
320
429
1,600
2,144
1,920 2,573
1999 2,566
3,364
308
404
1,806
2,368
2,114 2,772
2000
2,780 3,526 2,780 3,526
0
0 2,780
3,526
2001
2,909 3,589 1,594 1,967
0
0 1,594
1,967
2002 1,369
1,662
664
806
0
0
664 806
2003 1,843
2,188
800
950
1,426
1,693
2,226 2,643
2004
1,956 2,261 1,800 2,081 2,213 2,559 4,013
4,640
2005
2,151 2,405 2,042 2,284
43,091
48,188
45,133
50,472
2006
2,140 2,318 1,770 1,918 6,000 6,500 7,770
8,418
2007
1,941 2,045 1,500 1,580 4,092 4,311 5,592
5,891
2008
1,652 1,677 1,400 1,421
10,960
11,123
12,360
12,544
2009
1,900 1,900 1,278 1,278
0
0 1,278
1,278
2010
2,000 2,000 1,600 1,600
0
0 1,600
1,600
Total
$31,245 $37,566 $20,683 $24,304 $93,037
$111,303
$113,720
$135,607
Source: Data derived from database maintained by CRS based upon Administration budget documents and
appropriations statutes.
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Disaster Relief Funding and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations
Figure 1. Disaster Relief Fund Requests and Enacted Annual Appropriations, FY1989-
2009
(In 2009 Dollars)
Source: Table 1 of this report, using data from columns C and F.
The Debate over Emergency Supplemental
Appropriations
Congress has traditionally appropriated funds to maintain the DRF at a certain level, and then
provided additional financing for assistance through supplemental appropriations following a
specific large disaster. Currently, the DRF funds disaster relief for emergencies and major
disasters that cost $500 million dollars or less. Major disasters costing more than $500 million
dollars are generally funded with emergency supplemental appropriations. A supplemental
appropriation provides additional budget authority during the current fiscal year either to finance
activities not provided for in the regular appropriation, or to provide funds when the regular
appropriation is deemed insufficient.
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Catastrophic incidents may deplete the DRF. In such cases, the President may submit a request to
Congress for an emergency supplemental appropriation. Historically, FEMA is the second-largest
recipient of supplemental appropriations.30 Most emergency supplemental appropriations
originate with the Administration. Some emergency supplemental appropriations, however, have
been initiated by Congress. For example, in 2007, Congress waived the cost share provisions for
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, which prompted a supplemental appropriation (P.L. 110-28).
Another example of an emergency supplemental appropriation originating in Congress was in
2008, when Congress added DRF supplemental funding (P.L. 110-329) to the FY2009
Department of Homeland Security Appropriations bill on its own initiative in response to the
Midwest Flooding and Hurricanes Ike and Gustav. The amount of funding for the supplemental
appropriation was based on estimates provided to Congress by FEMA.
The current process of funding disasters has been a subject of debate at times because of concern
over high levels of federal spending and the inability to institute fiscal planning mechanisms.
Some of the debate includes discussions of options for lowering the budget deficit through
budgetary enforcement procedures in Congress. Others argue supplemental appropriations are
used to make budgets appear to forecast a lower deficit. OMB indicated a desire to break from the
current practice of funding disaster relief by budgeting for large-scale disasters. In A New Era of
Responsibility, the first FY2010 document issued by the Obama Administration, OMB stated that
“in the past, budgets assumed that there would not be any natural disasters in our nation that
would necessitate federal help ... This omission is irresponsible, and has permitted past
Administrations to project deficits that were lower than likely occur.” 31
Accordingly, the debate over the amount of funding in the DRF generally falls into two basic
categories: (1) proponents who advocate the use of emergency supplemental appropriations to
augment the DRF, and (2) those who oppose their use.
Proponents of the current system of using emergency supplemental appropriations argue there are
several benefits associated with their use. Some of these perceived benefits are summarized as
follows:
• Disasters cannot be anticipated, a condition that creates a budgeting challenge.
Because of their flexibility, emergency supplemental appropriations facilitate
funding decisions for disasters, the timing and severity of which are
unpredictable. Budgeting for large disasters through regular appropriations would
likely require Congress to reduce funding for other programs to pay for an
unknown and possibly non-existent future event.
• The President is authorized to unilaterally determine when federal assistance is
made available after an incident. Congress retains authority to control spending
by voting on supplemental funding legislation. In essence, a balance of powers is
at least theoretically maintained through this process.
• A large balance in the DRF may be subject to transfer or rescission. Such actions
could carry an additional negative consequence if a large disaster were to take
30 Based on U.S. Government Accountability Office, Disaster Relief: Government Framework Needed to Collect and
Consolidate Information to Report on Billions in Federal Funding for the 2005 Gulf Coast Hurricanes, GAO-06-834,
September 2006. The Department of Defense (DOD) is the largest recipient of supplemental funding.
31 Office of Management and Budget, A New Era of Responsibility: Renewing America’s Promise, Washington DC,
February 26, 2009, p. 36.
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place after funds have been withdrawn. An emergency supplemental can be sized
according to the needs of the actual incident.
Arguments used by some of the opponents against the enactment of emergency supplemental
appropriations to augment the DRF include the following.
• Supplemental spending allows lawmakers to circumvent budgetary enforcement
mechanisms by deliberately underfunding programs in annual appropriations.
Because there is a perception that a supplemental appropriation must be passed
quickly, supplemental appropriations may be less likely to be scrutinized in the
same manner as an annual appropriation.32
• Reliance upon emergency supplemental appropriations may result in
unnecessarily high funding levels, as early damage estimates may overstate
actual needs. Maintaining DRF funds at a level that accurately reflects the needs
would foster fiscal responsibility because all disaster response would have to be
budgeted with existing funds.
• Use of emergency supplemental appropriations may give the appearance of fiscal
irresponsibility on the part of the federal government, especially when they are
frequent and large. Peter Orszag, Director of the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) voiced this concern when he stated: “The first step in addressing
this very deep fiscal hole is honesty. This budget will not play the games that are
typically played in which you assume that there will never again be a hurricane
or disaster ...”33
• Emergency supplemental appropriations provide a vehicle for non-germane
provisions that may not pass on their own, or make the appropriation contentious,
thus slowing down federal recovery assistance after a disaster.
Comparative data on administration requests, annual appropriations, and supplemental
appropriations for the DRF are presented graphically in Figure 2, below, based on data presented
in Table 1 of this report.
Emergency Supplemental Appropriations:
FY1989 – FY200834
This section provides additional summary information on emergency supplemental appropriations
legislation enacted since 1989; it uses a broad concept of what constitutes emergency disaster
assistance. The funds cited include appropriations to all federal agencies that undertook disaster
32 U.S. Congress, Congressional Budget Office, Supplemental Appropriations in the 1990s, March 2001,
http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/27xx/doc2768/EntireReport.pdf.
33 CQ Financial Transcripts, “OMB Director Orszag and CEA Chair Romer Hold Briefing on the Fiscal 2010 Budget
Request,” press release, February 26, 2009, http://www.cq.com/display.do?dockey=/cqonline/prod/data/docs/html/
transcripts/financial/111/financialtranscripts111-000003061915.html@committees&pub=financialtranscripts&print=
true#speakers. The President’s request for the DRF for FY2010 was increased by $600 million over the FY2009
enacted amount of $1.4 billion.
34 This portion of the report is drawn from CRS report: CRS Report RL33226, Emergency Supplemental
Appropriations Legislation for Disaster Assistance: Summary Data, by Justin Murray and Bruce R. Lindsay.
Congressional Research Service
10


Disaster Relief Funding and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations
relief, repair of federal facilities, and hazard mitigation activities directed at reducing the impact
of future disasters. Funds used for activities such as research or administrative costs have been
omitted from this analysis in an attempt to focus solely on disaster relief and assistance.
Moreover, counterterrorism, law enforcement, and national security appropriations are not
included in this compilation. Unless otherwise noted, this report does not take into account
rescissions approved by Congress after funds have been appropriated for disaster assistance.
Since FY1989, Congress has appropriated roughly $322.7 billion for disaster assistance in 34
appropriations acts, primarily supplemental appropriations acts after significant catastrophes
occurred in the United States. The mean annual appropriation is approximately $15.4 billion
($322.7 billion / 21 years). The mean annual appropriation for all 34 bills is approximately $9.5
billion ($322.7 billion / 34 bills). Current dollar figures for each appropriation and totals for the
period appear in Table 2.
Figure 2. Disaster Relief Fund: Requests, Enacted Appropriations, Supplemental
Appropriations FY1989-FY2009
Source: Table 1 of this report, using data from columns C, F, and I.
Notes: Congress did not appropriate disaster relief funding in 1991 (and to date, 2009). Due to the scale of this
figure, some years could not be visual y depicted. This figure reflects supplemental appropriations for the DRF only.
Congressional Research Service
11
Table 2. Presidential Requests and Emergency Appropriations for Disaster Relief, All Agencies
FY1989 – Present (Dollars in Thousands)
Emergency
Assistance Funding
Disaster Event and
Total
and Percentage of
Date of Major
Administration
Date Signed into
Appropriation
Appropriation
Emergency
Disaster
Request, by Date
Law and P.L.
(current year
(current year
Assistance Funding
Fiscal Year
Declarationa
and Amountb
Number
dollars)
dollars)
(2009 dollars)
2008
Hurricane Katrina,
c
September 30, 2008
$1,089,608,000
$21,289,800
$21,606,377
Midwest
Flooding and the 2008
P.L. 110-329
1.95%
hurricanes, various
dates
2008
Hurricane Katrina and
d
June 30, 2008
$183,774,224
$7,004,928
$7,109,090
other
Hurricanes in the
P.L. 110-252
3.8%
2005 season
2008
Hurricane Katrina &
e
November 13, 2007
$467,728,563f g
$6,355,000
$6,449,498
California
Wildfires October 24,
P.L. 110-116
1.4%
2007
2007
Hurricane Katrina
Feb. 5, 2007
May 25, 2007
$120,000,000
$7,679,000
$8,246,498
Aug. 29, 2005
$3,400,000
P.L. 110-28
6.4%
2006
Hurricanes Katrina,
Feb. 16, 2006
June 15, 2006
$94,520,000
$19,340,000
$21,928,800
Rita, Wilma
Aug. - Sept. 2005
$19,800,000
P.L. 109-234
20.4%
2006
Hurricanes Katrina,
Oct. 28, 2005
Dec. 30, 2005
$453,500,000
$29,046,985
$32,935,135
Rita, Wilma
Aug. - Sept. 2005
$17,100,000h
P.L. 109-148
6.4%
2005
Hurricane Katrina
Sept. 7, 2005
Sept. 8, 2005
$51,800,000
$51,800,000
$62,635,047
Aug. 29, 2005
$51,800,000
P.L. 109-62
100%
2005
Hurricane Katrina
Sept. 1, 2005
Sept. 2, 2005
$10,500,000
$10,500,000
$12,696,293
CRS-12
Emergency
Assistance Funding
Disaster Event and
Total
and Percentage of
Date of Major
Administration
Date Signed into
Appropriation
Appropriation
Emergency
Disaster
Request, by Date
Law and P.L.
(current year
(current year
Assistance Funding
Fiscal Year
Declarationa
and Amountb
Number
dollars)
dollars)
(2009 dollars)
Aug. 29, 2005
$10,500,000
Sept.2, 2005
100%
P.L. 109-61
2005
Hurricanes Ivan,
Sept. 14, 2004
Oct. 13, 2004
$14,500,000
$11,103,887 76.6%
$13,426,496
Jeanne, Sept. 1, 2004 $3,100,000
P.L. 108-324
2004
Hurricanes Charley,
Sept. 6, 2004
Sept. 8, 2004
$2,000,000
$2,000,000 100%
$2,580,413
Frances, Sept. 1, 2004 $2,000,000
P.L. 108-303
2004
Wildfires, various
i
Aug. 8, 2004
$417,500,000
$500,000 0.12%
$645,103
dates
P.L. 108-287
2004
Hurricane Isabel Sept.
$87,000,000
Nov. 6, 2003
$87,500,000
$813,000 0.93%
$1,048,937
18, 2003
Sept. 17, 2003j
P.L. 108-106
2003
Storms, various 2003
July 7, 2003
Sept. 30, 2003
$3,500,000
$820,700 23.4%
$1,115,363
dates
(continued from
P.L. 108-83
$1,900,000 request
below)
2003
Tornadoes, May 6,
July 7, 2003
Aug. 8, 2003
$983,600
$983,600 100%
$1,336,750
2003
$1,900,000
P.L. 108-69
2002
Terrorist attacks,
Mar. 21, 2002
Aug. 2, 2002
$26,600,000
$6,167,600 23.2%
$8,746,439
Sept. 11, 2001
$27,100,000
P.L. 107-206
2001
Terrorist attacks,
Sept. 12, 2001
Sept. 18, 2001
$40,000,000
$20,000,000 50%
$29,379,220
Sept. 11, 2001
$20,000,000k
P.L. 107-38
2001
Nisqual y Earthquake
l
July 24, 2001
$8,980,000
$365,700 4.9%
$537,199
P.L. 107-20
2000
Hurricane Floyd
Sept. 21, 1999
Oct. 20, 1999
$99,500,000
$2,480,425
$3,833,600
Sept. 16, 1999
$97,500m
P.L. 106-74
2.5%
1999
Tornadoes,
n
May 21, 1999
$13,100,000
$1,296,723
$2,113,349
various dates
P.L. 106-31
9.9%
1999
Hurricanes Georges,
$7,780,000o
Oct. 21, 1998
$21,000,000
$1,830,977
$2,984,056
Bonnie, flooding,
CRS-13
Emergency
Assistance Funding
Disaster Event and
Total
and Percentage of
Date of Major
Administration
Date Signed into
Appropriation
Appropriation
Emergency
Disaster
Request, by Date
Law and P.L.
(current year
(current year
Assistance Funding
Fiscal Year
Declarationa
and Amountb
Number
dollars)
dollars)
(2009 dollars)
various dates
P.L. 105-277
8.7%
1998
El Niño floods,
Mar. 24, 1998
May 1, 1998
$6,006,000
$2,602,173
$4,391,485
Feb. 9, 1998
$22,560,000
P.L. 105-174
43.3%
1997
Dakotas flooding,
Mar. 19, 1997
June 12, 1997
$9,163,000
$5,863,883
$10,172,124
Apr. 7, 1997
$3,480,000
P.L. 105-18
64%
1995
Oklahoma City
p
July 27, 1995
$7,453,000
$6,599,531
$12,502,741
bombing,
Apr. 25, 1995
P.L. 104-19
88.6%
1995
Northridge
$90,100,000
Sept. 28, 1994
$90,100,000
$417,500q $790,949
Earthquake,
Tropical Storm
P.L. 103-327
0.46%
Alberto,
various dates
1994
Midwest floods, CA
Sept. 28, 1994
Feb. 12, 1994
$11,535,000
$8,837,952
$17,580,276
fires, and
Northridge
$11,430,000
P.L. 103-211
76.6%
earthquake,
Jan. 17, 1994
1993
Midwest floods,
July 14, 1993
Aug. 12, 1993
$4,411,000
$3,494,750
$7,282,963
June 11, 1993
$3,980,000
P.L. 103-75
79.2%
1993
Hurricanes Andrew,
r
July 2, 1993
$3,500,000
$52,345
$109,085
Iniki,
various dates
P.L. 103-50
1.5%
1992
Hurricanes Andrew,
Sept. 8, 1992
Sept. 23, 1992
$12,775,000
$5,767,116
$12,659,034
Iniki,
Aug. 24, 1992
$6,530,000
P.L. 102-368
45.1%
CRS-14
Emergency
Assistance Funding
Disaster Event and
Total
and Percentage of
Date of Major
Administration
Date Signed into
Appropriation
Appropriation
Emergency
Disaster
Request, by Date
Law and P.L.
(current year
(current year
Assistance Funding
Fiscal Year
Declarationa
and Amountb
Number
dollars)
dollars)
(2009 dollars)
1992
L.A. riots/Chicago
s
June 22, 1992
$1,191,000
$469,650
$1,030,899
flood,
(cont.)
various dates
P.L. 102-302
39.4%
1992
Hurricane Bob,
June 28, 1991
Dec. 12, 1991
$6,849,000
$943,000
$2,069,920
various dates
$693,000
P.L. 102-229
13.8%
1990
Hurricane Hugo,
t
May 25, 1990
$4,300,000
$670,412
$1,680,183
Exxon Valdez,
various dates
P.L. 101-302
15.6%
1990
Hurricane Hugo,
u
Oct. 26, 1989
$2,850,000
$2,850,000
$7,142,656
Loma Prieta
P.L. 101-130
100%
Earthquake,
Oct. 18, 1989
1989
Hurricane Hugo,
v
Sept. 29, 1989
$1,108,000
$1,108,000
$3,035,626
Sept. 20, 1989
P.L. 101-100
100%
1989
Fires on federal lands,
w
June 30, 1989
$3,564,000
$348,969
$956,083
various dates
P.L. 101-45
9.8%
Total
$3,409,904,314
$335,903,606
$322,757,687
9.85%
Source: Supplemental funding totals based on compiled Congressional Research Service (CRS) data on emergency appropriations after disasters, FY1989 - FY2008. Other
supplemental funding totals obtained from Congressional Budget Office (CBO) Supplemental Appropriations series, including “CBO Data on Supplemental Budget Authority
for the 2000s,” http://www.cbo.gov/doc.cfm?index=6630&type=1. Totals for Administration requests were obtained from OMB correspondence to Congress and from the
House Appropriations Committee Budget Estimates volumes, Table VIIIa. Editions for recent Congresses through the 107th are on the Government Printing Office GPO
Access Congressional Documents site, http://www.gpoaccess.gov/serialset/cdocuments/budgets.html. FY2008 dollar conversions were calculated using GDP Chained Price
Index data in Table 10.1, FY2009 Budget Historical Tables volume.
a. Data in this column represent the date the President issued a major disaster declaration for the disaster that appeared to be the primary catalyst for the supplemental
appropriations legislation. In a series of disasters (such as the Midwest floods of 1993) this date represents the first of several declarations associated with that
particular disaster. In some instances, identifying which disasters were primarily associated with consideration of the supplemental appropriations was not possible.
CRS-15
b. Data in this column represent the date the President submitted a request to Congress for supplemental funds. In some instances, funding was not requested by the
White House, but was included by Congress in appropriations measures.
c. P.L. 110-329 was original y the FY2008 Homeland Security Appropriations Act (H.R. 2638) and was used as the vehicle for the Consolidated Security, Disaster
Assistance, and Continuing Appropriations Act, 2009.
d. In his February 2008 budget submission for FY2009, President George W. Bush requested total non-emergency discretionary budget authority for the fiscal year of
$987.6 billion.
e. The Administration did not request supplemental FY2008 funds for domestic disaster assistance in the budget amendments or supplemental requests submitted from
May 2, 2008 through the date of enactment. The June 9, 2008, amendment to the FY2009 budget request did include increased funding of $989,000 for the Office of
the Federal Coordinator for Gulf Coast Rebuilding for continued operations. See http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/amendments/amendment2_6_9_08.pdf.
f.
Supplemental funding was added to the Conference Report of the FY2008 Department of Defense Appropriations Act, P.L. 110-116 121 Stat. 1342-1343, in Division B
of the report. Disaster funding including FEMA Disaster Relief Funding, further Housing and Urban Development assistance funding, and wildland fire fighting
provisions.
g. On page 487 of the Conference Report, H.Rept. 110-434 for P.L. 110-116, total Department of Defense budget authority is listed at $4.6 billion. Also per the
conference agreement, Division B provided non-Defense budget authority of $7.7 billion, bringing the total budget authority for the measure for the purposes of this
table to $4.7 billion.
h. On October 28, 2005, the President submitted to Congress a request to “reallocate” $17.1 billion previously appropriated for FEMA. See http://www.whitehouse.gov/
omb/budget/amendments/rescission_package_10_28_05.pdf. Congress modified this request by redirecting roughly $12 billion in P.L. 109-148, the FY2006
Department of Defense Appropriations Act. Because Congress appropriated the rescinded funds, the funding is considered supplemental appropriations for the
purpose of this report. Some researchers, however, might contend that this appropriation does not represent an additional cost to the Treasury. The President also
submitted that same day a budget amendment that sought the rescission of “$2.3 billion from lower-priority federal programs and excess funds.” See also October, 28,
2005 Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, “Estimate No. 14,” http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/amendments/
rescission_package_10_28_05.pdf.
i.
FY2004 supplemental funds to meet wildfire suppression requirements were included in the FY2005 Department of Defense Appropriations Act, P.L. 108-287. For
more information on the statute, see CRS Report RL32783, FY2005 Supplemental Appropriations for Iraq and Afghanistan, Tsunami Relief, and Other Activities, by Amy
Belasco and Larry Nowels.
j.
The President submitted a supplemental request of $87 billion for ongoing military operations and for reconstruction assistance in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere.
During conference on H.R. 3289 (P.L. 108-106, the Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act for Defense and for the Reconstruction of Iraq and Afghanistan Act,
2004), $500 million for FEMA for disaster relief for Hurricane Isabel and the California wildfires was added to the legislation, bringing the total enacted funding for P.L.
108-106 to $87.5 billion.
k. P.L. 107-117 al ocated funds appropriated in P.L. 107-38, which was enacted shortly after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Under P.L. 107-38, $20 billion
was available immediately, whereas the remaining $20 billion became available when allocated in P.L. 107-117, enacted on January 10, 2002. Of the second half of the
$40 billion, $11.579 billion was provided for emergency disaster assistance.
l.
An OMB supplemental request for the Nisqual y earthquake could not be identified.
m. The appropriations associated with Hurricane Floyd were not supplemental appropriations but were incorporated into the regular FY2000 appropriations legislation,
P.L. 106-74, Department of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development, and Independent Agencies Appropriations Act, 2000. These data are included
because Congress increased FY2000 DRF funding primarily in response to Hurricane Floyd.
CRS-16
n. The initial Administration request of $687 million was submitted on February 16, 1999 (see discussion in H.Rept. 106-64, p. 7) for relief funding for Hurricanes
Georges and Bonnie. However, additional emergency disaster funding was later sought in P.L. 106-31 to address tornado damage and other natural disasters during
1999.
o. Emergency relief funding for flooding caused by Hurricanes Georges and Bonnie was included in P.L. 105-277, the FY2000 Consolidated Appropriations Act.
p. P.L. 103-211 provided $11.53 billion in DRF appropriations largely in response to the Northridge earthquake in California. See White House press release from FEMA
Director James Lee Witt, Jan. 12, 1995, http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/archives/whitehouse-papers/1995/Jan/1995-01-12-fema-director-witt-on-california-flood-relief.text.
Administration supplemental request correspondence to Congress for subsequent funding for Northridge and Oklahoma City could not be identified. An OMB
supplemental request, or requested Administration funding level for Tropical Storm Alberto could not be identified. Tropical Storm Alberto disaster funding was
included in P.L. 103-327, the FY1995 Department of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development, and Independent Agencies Appropriations Act.
q. The CBO scored supplemental funding as $357.0 million.
r. An OMB supplemental request for Hurricanes Andrew and Iniki could not be identified.
s. An OMB supplemental request for the Los Angeles riots and Chicago flood could not be identified.
t. An OMB supplemental request for Hurricane Hugo and the Exxon Valdez incident could not be identified.
u. No OMB request for this funding could be identified. Disaster funding in P.L. 101-130 was enacted as a continuing resolution, which amended the previous continuing
resolution enacted as P.L. 101-100 to extend its provision until November 15, 1989.
v. No request could be identified.
w. An OMB supplemental request for the 1989 fires on federal lands or the requested Administration funding level could not be identified.
CRS-17
Disaster Relief Funding and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations
Disasters that occurred between FY2001 and FY2005 were especially costly. In FY2001 and
FY2002 supplemental appropriations for disaster assistance exceeded $26 billion, most of which
went toward recovery following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. After the 2005
hurricane season, supplemental appropriations for disaster assistance increased significantly.
From FY2005 through FY2009, Congress appropriated over $130 billion for disaster relief
administered by many federal agencies. The majority of this funding was directed toward
damages sustained from the 2005 hurricane season.
As reflected in Table 2, supplemental appropriations have generally been enacted as stand-alone
legislation. In some instances however, emergency disaster relief funding has been enacted as part
of regular appropriations measures, continuing appropriations acts (continuing resolutions), or as
a part of omnibus appropriations legislation. Requested funding levels noted in the third column
of Table 2 reflect House Appropriations Committee data on total requested funding for the entire
enacted bill. Where possible, OMB data taken from correspondence to Congress requesting
emergency supplemental funding have been used to identify dates of Administration requests for
supplemental funding.35
Recent Emergency Supplemental Appropriations
To date, the 111th Congress has not passed a supplemental appropriation for disaster assistance. In
the 110th Congress, President George W. Bush signed into law four measures (P.L. 110-28, P.L.
110-116, P.L. 110-252, and P.L. 110-329) that provided roughly $41 billion in supplemental
appropriations for disaster relief and recovery (most of it for the DRF). P.L. 110-28, signed on
May 25, 2007, included an appropriation of $7.6 billion for disaster assistance, $3.4 billion of
which was classified for Hurricane Katrina recovery. P.L. 110-116, signed into law on November
13, 2007, provided a total of $6.4 billion for continued recovery efforts related to Hurricanes
Katrina, Rita, and Wilma, and for other declared major disasters or emergencies. This total
included $500 million for firefighting expenses related to the 2007 California wildfires. P.L. 110-
252, signed into law June 30, 2008, provided $7 billion in disaster assistance, most of which was
directed at continuing recovery needs resulting from the 2005 hurricane season.
P.L. 110-329, signed into law on September 30, 2008, included an appropriation for emergency
and disaster relief of $21.4 billion. Of this amount, roughly $2 billion was continued disaster
relief for the 2005 hurricane season. The largest share of the funding (just over $8.8 billion),
however, was for a string of disasters that occurred in 2008 including Hurricanes Gustav and Ike,
wildfires in California, and the Midwest floods. One of the largest funding components in P.L.
110-329 was designated for the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD)
Community Development Fund, which received $6.5 billion specifically for disaster relief, long-
term recovery, and economic revitalization for areas affected by the 2008 disasters. Other funding
in the law included $135 million for wildfire suppression, and a $100 million direct appropriation
for the American Red Cross for reimbursement of disaster relief and recovery expenditures
associated with emergencies and disasters that took place in 2008.36
35 The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Website on Supplementals, Amendments, and Releases
http://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/omb/budget/amendments.htm contains a list of the presidential
submission transmittals from FY2008 and FY2009(calendar year 2008). Prior fiscal year submissions back to FY2003
are available.
36 Congress did not meet the full request of the American Red Cross, which requested $150 million for reimbursement
(continued...)
Congressional Research Service
18
Disaster Relief Funding and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations
Emergency Supplemental Appropriations for Hurricanes Katrina,
Rita, and Wilma
Measures Enacted in FY2005
In response to the widespread destruction caused by three catastrophic hurricanes at the end of the
summer of 2005, Congress enacted four emergency supplemental appropriations bills. Two of the
bills were enacted as FY2005 emergency supplemental appropriations after Hurricane Katrina
devastated parts of Florida and Alabama and resulted in presidential major disaster declarations
for all jurisdictions in Louisiana and Mississippi. The two emergency supplemental
appropriations (P.L. 109-61 and P.L. 109-62) together provided $62.3 billion for emergency
response and recovery needs; most of the appropriations in these two bills funded the DRF.
Measures Enacted in FY2006
Later, when Hurricanes Rita and Wilma struck, Congress enacted two additional emergency
supplemental appropriations; the costs of both were offset by rescissions. The FY2006
appropriations legislation for the Department of Defense (P.L. 109-148) rescinded roughly $34
billion in funds previously appropriated (almost 70% of which was taken from funds previously
appropriated to DHS) and appropriated $29 billion to other accounts primarily to pay for the
restoration of federal facilities damaged by the hurricanes).37 Also in FY2006, Congress agreed
to an Administration request for further funding—$19.3 billion was appropriated in supplemental
legislation (P.L. 109-234) for recovery assistance, with roughly $64 million rescinded from two
accounts ($15 million from flood control, Corps of Engineers, and $49.5 million from Navy
Reserve construction, Department of Defense).
Measures Enacted in FY2007
On May 25, 2007, the President signed into law P.L. 110-28, which appropriated $120 billion in
emergency supplemental funding for Iraq, Afghanistan, and other matters, including $6.9 billion
for continued Gulf Coast relief and waived cost-shares for the Gulf Coast states. The measure was
a successor to previous emergency supplemental legislation in the 110th Congress, H.R. 1591,
which had been vetoed by the President on May 1, 2007. This was the fifth supplemental measure
enacted in the 110th Congress containing disaster assistance specifically provided in response to
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The sixth supplemental measure enacted as part of P.L. 110-116 on
November 13, 2007, provided an additional $5.9 billion for emergency assistance, most, but not
all of which, can be attributed to the Gulf Coast recovery. The $3 billion appropriated for HUD’s
Community Planning and Development Fund can only be used for the Louisiana Road Home
program,38 but the $2.9 billion appropriated for the DRF can be used not only for the Gulf Coast
but for other declared disasters as well.
(...continued)
of disaster relief and recovery expenditures as a result of disasters occurring in 2008. This is not the first time Congress
appropriated funds for the organization. In 2004, Congress gave $70 million in aid to the American Red Cross after
four hurricanes hit Florida (118 Stat, 1251-1252).
37 In requests to Congress, President Bush termed the sequence of events as a “reallocation” of funds.
38 See CRS Report RL34410, The Louisiana Road Home Program: Federal Aid for State Disaster Housing Assistance
(continued...)
Congressional Research Service
19
Disaster Relief Funding and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations
After the enactment of P.L. 110-252, the total amount appropriated by Congress in supplemental
funding after the 2005 hurricanes surpassed the $130 billion mark. In addition to these rescissions
and appropriations, Congress enacted other funding changes by transferring $712 million from
FEMA to the Small Business Administration for disaster loans (P.L. 109-174).
Measures Enacted in FY2008
On June 30, 2008, Congress enacted the Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2008 (P.L. 110-252).
Some of the funding in P.L. 110-252 includes $100 million for the Economic Development
Administration’s economic development assistance programs, $73 million for the Louisiana Road
Home Program, and $300 million for HUD’s Community Development fund. The majority of
disaster assistance funding (over $4 billion) in P.L. 110-252 was directed to the Corps of
Engineers for projects aimed at repairing damages incurred during the 2005 hurricane season, as
well as programs designed to mitigate against future hurricanes.39
Another supplemental, the Consolidated Security, Disaster Assistance, and Continuing
Appropriations Act of 2009, was passed three months later on September 30, 2008 (P.L. 110-
329). P.L. 110-329 includes ongoing disaster relief for destruction resulting from the 2005
hurricane season, including $85 million for the Disaster Housing Assistance program
administered by HUD. The program enables families to settle in areas across the United States
that were not affected by Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, or Wilma. The amount provided in the statute
for disaster relief as a result of the 2005 hurricane season is roughly $1.3 billion.40
Summary of Recent Emergency Supplemental Appropriations
The primary recipient of emergency supplemental appropriations related to Hurricanes Katrina,
Rita, and Wilma is DHS, which has received 57% of emergency supplemental funding for
disaster assistance. HUD received 16%, DOD Army Corps of Engineers received 13%, the DOD
received another 7% for miscellaneous activities, and the Department of Transportation received
3%.41 Table 3 and Figure 3 provide information on the appropriations made in the eight
emergency supplemental appropriations enacted largely to address losses associated with
Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma and identify the departments and agencies that received
funding for disaster relief.
(...continued)
Programs, by Natalie Keegan.
39 See CRS Report RL33188, Protecting New Orleans: From Hurricane Barriers to Floodwalls, by Nicole T. Carter.
40 Some of the funding in P.L. 110-329 was directed at the 2005 hurricanes and hurricanes, flooding, and other disasters
occurring in 2008. An exact amount for each of these events could not be identified from the legislative text.
41 See Table 3 and Figure 3.
Congressional Research Service
20
Table 3. FY2005-FY2008 Supplemental Disaster Appropriations After Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma
(thousands of current dollars)
FY2005
FY2006
FY2007
FY2008
TOTAL
Department
P.L. 109-61 P.L. 109-62 P.L. 109-148 P.L. 109-234 P.L. 110-28 P.L. 110-116 P.L. 110-252 P.L. 110-329 Department
Agriculture
$1,183,000
$152,000a
$38,000 $1,373,000
Department of Commerce
$55,000
$150,000
$110,000
$100,000
$481,000
$896,000
Defense-Military
$500,000
$1,400,000
$5,754,000 $1,488,000b
$9,142,000
Defense-Civil/Corps of Engineers
$400,000
$2,900,000
$3,686,000c $1,433,000
$6,366,988 $1,621,200 $16,407,188
Education and related agencies
$1,600,000
$285,000
$60,000
$1,945,000
Health and Human Services
$640,000
$12,000
$600,000d $1,252,000
Homeland Security
$10,000,000 $50,000,000
$285,000
$6,662,000
$4,110,000
$2,900,000
$20,000
$73,977,000
Housing and Urban Development
$11,890,000
$5,200,000
$7,000
$3,000,000
$373,000
$150,000
$20,620,000
Interior
$70,000
$256,000
$10,000
e
$336,000
Justice
$229,000
$9,000
$50,000
$288,000
Labor
$125,000
$16,000
$141,000
Transportation
$2,798,000
$702,000f
$906,020
$4,406,020
Veterans Affairs
$658,000
$586,000
$14,500
$1,258,500
Armed Forces Retirement Home
$176,000
$176,000
Corp. for National and Community Service
$10,000
$10,000
Environmental Protection Agency
$8,000
$13,000
$21,000
General Services Administration
$38,000
$37,000
$75,000
Historical y Black Colleges Capital Financing
$15,000
$15,000
National Aeronautics and Space Admin.
$350,000
$35,000
$20,000
$405,000
Judiciary
$18,000
$18,000
Smal Business Administration
$446,000
$542,000
$181,070
$164,939
$1,334,009
Total
$10,500,000
$51,800,000
$29,047,000 $20,032,000 $6,901,590 $5,900,000 $7,004,927 $2,910,200 $134,095,717
Source: Congressional Research Service.
CRS-21


a. Does not include authority for $500 million in direct assistance to be drawn from the Commodity Credit Corporation, authorized in Title III of P.L. 109-234.
b. Includes rescissions and military construction accounts.
c. Includes rescissions.
d. This funding amount is divided between the 2005 hurricane season, and hurricanes, floods, and other disasters that occurred in 2008.
e. In Division B of P.L. 110-116, 121 Stat. 1342-1343, Section 157 provides $329 million for Forest Service Wildland Fire Management and $171 million for Bureau of
Land Management Wildland Fire Management. This funding is not included in the table since the funding was for wildland firefighting activities and not related to Gulf
Coast hurricane relief and recovery.
f.
Department of Transportation funds derived from Highway Trust Fund rescission.
Figure 3. FY2005 – FY2008 Supplemental Disaster Appropriations, Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma
(In thousands of current dollars)
CRS-22
Disaster Relief Funding and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations
Issues for Congress
Authorizing the DRF
As mentioned earlier in this report, the DRF has not been authorized explicitly by Congress.
Authorization measures are generally used to establish, continue, or modify an agency or program
for a fixed or an indefinite period of time. The measures are also used to explicitly name accounts
or programs.42 Authorizations also establish the duties and functions of an agency or program, its
organizational structure, and the responsibilities of agency or program officials. One function of
such legislation is to authorize subsequent spending in appropriations bills for specific agencies,
programs, projects, accounts, or funds; such authorizations may include spending ceilings.43
It may be argued that a large account such as the DRF should be authorized specifically by name
to ensure these functions are formally established. Others may view this as unnecessary because
they believe the Stafford Act, which authorizes appropriations to carry out disaster relief,
preparedness, and hazard mitigation activities is sufficient.44
If authorizing the DRF became an issue of active debate, Congress could consider legislation
similar to Section 106 of H.R. 6658 (introduced in the 110th) to authorize explicitly the DRF, or it
could elect to maintain the DRF as authorized under 42 U.S.C. 5197e of the Stafford Act.
Restructuring Budgetary Procedures
Some proposals have been advanced to reduce the need for emergency supplemental
appropriations. For example, the Bipartisan Task Force on Funding Disaster Relief45 offered
several policy options for changing budgetary procedures for funding disaster assistance. Some of
these options for restructuring the budgetary process include the following.
• Eliminate any Nonemergency Funding in a Bill. Many emergency
supplemental bills include a variety of funding and other needs in a single bill.
Eliminating nonemergency (or nongermane) elements from legislation could
prevent the passage of legislation that might not pass Congress if it were not
attached to an emergency supplemental appropriation. Such action may make
emergency supplemental appropriations less controversial and ensure expedited
enactment.
• Strengthening Criteria. In general, the Senate criteria for requesting emergency
funding stipulate that the situation be essential, sudden, urgent, or unforeseen.46
42 CRS Report RS20371, Overview of the Authorization-Appropriations Process, by Bill Heniff Jr..
43 A ceiling arguably limits the amount of funding an account may receive. The ceiling however, is not binding,
Congress may appropriate funds at levels above the authorization.
44 42 U.S.C. 5197e.
45 U.S. Congress, Senate Bipartisan Task Force on Funding Disaster Relief, Federal Disaster Assistance, Report of the
Senate Task Force on Funding Disaster Relief, 104th Cong., 1st sess., March 15, 1995, No. 104-4 (Washington: GPO,
1995), pp. 69-74.
46 U.S. Congress, House Committee on the Budget, Concurrent Resolution on the Budget for Fiscal Year 2010,
(continued...)
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The Bipartisan Task Force offered the use of more strict criteria as a policy
option. If specific criteria were enforced, it is argued, Congress and the President
would have to issue written justifications for designating appropriations as
emergencies. Proponents of rewriting the criteria say the measure would open the
debate on the use of emergency supplemental appropriations by adding an
additional layer of scrutiny to the emergency appropriation process. Opponents
may argue that changing the criteria may create unnecessary delays for
appropriating needed emergency funding.
• Increase Funding to the DRF. As mentioned earlier in this report, Congress
may decide to increase the funding level of the DRF through annual
appropriations. Doing so could eliminate, or at least greatly decrease, the need
for emergency supplemental funding.
• The Creation of a Rainy-Day Fund. A rainy-day fund, also known as a reserve
account, would be financed by cuts in other discretionary accounts, or by
instituting new taxes. Spending from this fund would then be allowed only when
needed for expensive disasters. Proponents of this policy option would likely
argue a rainy-day fund carries several advantages. For one, in contrast to
emergency supplemental appropriations which increase the federal deficit
through borrowing funds, rainy-day accounts do not add to the federal deficit
because they are funded through savings and/or new taxes. Furthermore, the
balance for a rainy-day fund would increase during periods in which there are
few, or relatively small disasters. Another advantage would be that a rainy-day
fund would not require a restructuring of the process of administering disaster
relief.
• The Creation of a Contingency Fund. A contingency fund based on a cost
analysis of previous disasters could be created for use after large a disaster
occurs. A contingency fund could be funded at a level sufficient for large
disasters, while relatively routine disasters would still be funded through the
DRF. As the contingency fund is drawn down, the account would be replenished
through regular appropriations, obviating the need for emergency supplemental
appropriations. During congressional testimony, James Lee Witt, who was the
Director of FEMA during the Clinton Administration, summarized the fund as
follows.
What we did and what worked so well with Congress and with OMB was we were able to
use that five year cost analysis to set up a contingency fund that was under OMB that was
budgeted, that you did not have to go back for supplementals every time you had a disaster
declaration. And then all we would do then is go to OMB and say we have a Presidential
disaster declaration that’s going to cost $400 million.47
• Model Federal Disaster Funding on State Statutes. In the majority of states,
the first recourse for funding disaster relief is to reallocate departmental
(...continued)
Conference Report to Accompany S.Con.Res. 13, 111th Cong., 1st sess., April 27, 2009, H.Rept. 111-89 (Washington:
GPO, 2009), p. 34.
47 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Hearing on Disaster Relief and Access to Capital Legislation,
110th Cong., 1st sess., March 8, 2007, 110-6.
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appropriations to meet emergency needs. Should the reallocation prove
insufficient, the legislature may be called into special session to approve the
appropriation of additional funds. In some states, local agency funds must be
exhausted before state financial assistance is requested.
In other states, state statutes impose limits on the amount that may be expended on a given
disaster. For example, the governor of Alaska may use up to $1 million in state funds per year for
disaster assistance. Another example is Hawaii which caps the amount of funding for a single
disaster at $1 million.48
Proponents of applying the model used by some states may claim that such measures would
reduce the amount needed to fund the DRF. Opponents of the measure, on the other hand, may
claim that reallocating funds from other accounts would jeopardize programs that already struggle
with tight budgets. They may also argue that should the reallocation of funds for disaster relief
become a standard practice, there would be a need to fund potential donor accounts at higher
levels, defeating the purpose of reallocating funds to save money. Finally, they may argue that its
usage would be impractical for large events such as Hurricane Katrina, which would still require
an emergency supplemental appropriation for disaster relief.
If there is interest in changing current practices in funding disaster relief, Members of Congress
may wish to further explore other policies for reforming the disaster funding budgeting process
such as the ones discussed above, or formulate other strategies that may potentially reform federal
disaster relief funding.
Additional Approaches for Funding Federal Disaster Relief
Should Congress become concerned that disaster relief negatively affects the federal deficit, or
that the federal share of disaster relief has become disproportionate, other avenues exist for
decreasing the amount of federal funding. Two of these include the following:
• Decrease the Federal Cost Share. Generally, when the president declares a
disaster the federal government reimburses 75% of a state’s disaster relief
expenses. The cost share could be altered so that states pay for more of their
disaster activities. For example, prior to the Midwest floods in 1993, the federal
cost share for mitigation was 50%. Reducing the federal cost share could
significantly decrease the amount the federal government pays for disaster relief.
• Strengthen Declaration Criteria. It may be argued that the current declaration
process allows what some call “marginal” disasters to receive federal funding. A
marginal disaster is an event that some argue could be handled by the state
without federal assistance. A set of standardized criteria could be developed to
ensure that only events meeting a certain criteria would be eligible for federal
disaster relief. Proponents would further argue that scaling back federal funding
may be beneficial because states may trim investments in mitigation if federal
assistance is too generous.49
48 CRS Report RL32287, Emergency Management and Homeland Security Statutory Authorities in the States, District
of Columbia, and Insular Areas: A Summary, by Keith Bea, L. Cheryl Runyon, and Kae M. Warnock.
49 James F. Miskel, Disaster Response and Homeland Security: What Works, What Doesn't (Westport, CT: Praeger
Security International, 2006), p. 126.
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Oversight on Reporting
A 2006 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report indicated there was a need to improve
the information in FEMA’s weekly reports on the status of hurricane relief, and that OMB should
take action to improve transparency and accountability regarding the status of hurricane related
funding.50 Both OMB and FEMA agreed that these improvements were needed and would be
forthcoming. Congress could authorize oversight mechanisms to investigate the extent to which
FEMA has made such improvements. For example, section 203 of H.R. 5351 (introduced in the
109th Congress) would have required each state, local, tribal, and non-profit entity that received
federal assistance funds in response to catastrophic events or other emergencies to report to the
pertinent federal agency six months after the initial disbursement of resources. Furthermore, the
legislation would have also required any agency that disbursed federal assistance funds to report
to the Inspector General of the Department the purpose for which resources were provided, the
amounts disbursed, allocated, and expended, and the status of reporting by agencies that received
disbursements.
Concluding Policy Questions
Since the 1950s, the level of financial assistance given to states for disaster relief by the federal
government has steadily increased. In light of the federal deficit, the increased federal
involvement has raised policymaking questions concerning how disaster relief should be
equitably funded. Some of these questions include the following.
• The model for emergency and disaster response is built on the premise that
emergencies and disasters are local. Requests for assistance from the next level of
government are made only if that unit of government is overwhelmed. Some
would argue that some incidents funded by the federal government do not meet
this requirement. An example might be snow removal or repairs after minor
flooding. Is the federal government funding emergencies and major disasters that
do not meet the criterion of the states being overwhelmed before requesting
assistance? Are states using federal funding for disaster relief to protect their
budgets?
• Should federal disaster relief be subject to thresholds and maximums? For
example, an emergency or major disaster might not receive federal funding
unless damage estimates reach a certain level. As another example, the total
amount of federal relief for an event could be capped at a certain amount. After
this level has been reached, the state would then be responsible to pay for the rest
of recovery.
• Should the state’s fiscal capability factor into disaster relief? In 1986 FEMA
proposed measures to reduce the amount the agency contributed toward disaster
relief. One of the proposals argued that funding allocations should be made
according to each state’s ability to fund its own disaster relief. The determination
would be based on a comparison of the state’s per capita income with the national
50 U.S. Government and Accountability Office, Disaster Relief: Governmentwide Framework Needed to Collect and
Consolidate Information to Report on Billions in Federal Funding for the 2005 Gulf Coast Hurricanes, GAO-06-834,
Washington DC, September 2006.
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per capita income.51 The calculation would then be used to create a sliding scale
for assistance. Communities capable of funding their own disaster relief would
receive limited or no assistance. In contrast, struggling communities would be
eligible to receive more federal assistance.52
• Some may argue that federal funding for disaster relief has become entrenched to
the point that it has contributed to unintended consequences. For example, it has
been argued that some states do not properly fund mitigation measures because
there is a presumption that federal funding is virtually guaranteed should an
emergency or major disaster occur. 53 Those advocating this position could
arguably point out that federal involvement in disaster relief will continue to
increase and that in order to be fiscally responsible, changes should be made in
the way in which disaster relief is funded. Others may claim the function of the
federal government is to help states in their time of crisis. Withholding, or
limiting the amount of funding a state could receive for an incident would be
neglectful of that state’s needs.
• OMB’s A New Era of Responsibility projects that spending for disaster costs for
FY2010 will be $11 billion dollars. By 2019 disaster costs are projected to rise to
$30 billion dollars.54 This represents an increase of 173% in disaster costs. On
what basis did the Administration calculate this increase in disaster costs?
• Congress requires FEMA to submit a monthly status report on the DRF.55 The
reports must detail obligations, allocations, and expenditures for Hurricanes
Katrina, Rita, and Wilma. Other than the DRF report, scant data exists on other
federal funding for emergencies and major disasters. In light of the amount of
federal funding going to these incidents, could better transparency be achieved by
requiring the same level of reporting for all declared emergencies and major
disasters?
These and other questions may be raised should Congress elect to debate the past and future
funding of disaster relief.
51 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Public Works and Transportation, Subcommittee on Investigations and
Oversight, The Federal Emergency Management Agency’s Proposed Disaster Relief Regulations (Budget Driven
Rulemaking), committee print, 100th Cong., 1st sess., August 1987, 75-963 (Washington: GPO, 1987), pp. 4-5.
52 Under current law (42 USC 5163) areas cannot be precluded from receiving assistance solely on the basis of a sliding
scale or formula. Congress amended the Stafford Act in this fashion as a response to the 1986 proposed regulation.
53 See James F. Miskel, Disaster Response and Homeland Security: What Works, What Doesn't (Westport, CT: Praeger
Security International, 2006), or Rutherford H. Platt, Disasters and Democracy: The Politics of Extreme Natural Events
(Washington DC: Island Press, 1999) for arguments against increased federal involvement in disaster assistance.
54 Office of Management and Budget, A New Era of Responsibility: Renewing America’s Promise, Washington DC,
February 26, 2009, p. 117.
55 P.L. 110-161, also 42 USC 5208.
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Author Contact Information
Bruce R. Lindsay
Justin Murray
Analyst in Emergency Management Policy
Information Research Specialist
blindsay@crs.loc.gov, 7-3752
jmurray@crs.loc.gov, 7-4092
Congressional Research Service
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