Many are complaining that the Federal Emergency Management Agency is denying too many claims, but the vast majority of refusals are because they're missing documents and can't reach claimants to get them, coordinating officer Brett Howard told Adams. He said the agency has approved 73 percent of overall relief applications and 63% of emergency housing applications. Part of the problem is poor phone reception and demolished roads and bridges.
In a press conference on Monday, Gov. Andy Beshear said many people aren't answering the phone when FEMA agents try to contact them, perhaps because they don't want to answer calls from an unfamiliar number, Josh James reports for WUKY. "Thus far, FEMA has tried to call 4,006 applicants. 1,508 have picked up," Beshear said. "We are talking to them about the numbers of times that they call, but please pick up your phone."
In the meantime, "Howard said FEMA has 800 people on the ground in eastern Kentucky now and 22 teams are going door to door to help people complete applications that are missing information," Adams reports. The agency has also given personnel in Disaster Assistance Centers the authority to approve applications on-site.
Howard advised people whose claims have been denied to appeal. Since most denials are due to missing documents, "the state has placed employees from Cabinets that can help in the Disaster Assistance Centers with FEMA to streamline the process of appeals," Adams reports. Those state employees can probably print needed documents for claimants to submit to FEMA, Howard said.
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/WHpS96J FEMA, state government mobilize to help Ky. flood survivors get claims approved; number of homeless still unknown - Entrepreneur Generations
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