Recovery
Latest Stories
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Providers in St. Louis were awarded the money through the Missouri Department of Health’s Crisis Counseling Program, which has for decades been funded by FEMA to help build hope and resiliency in disaster survivors.
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When Typhoon Halong devastated Western Alaska last month, the hardest-hit communities were accessible only by air or water. That complicated response efforts and makes rebuilding a challenge.
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In advance of the storm, volunteer drivers delivered two days’ worth of meals to clients.
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Governor says he understands the frustration and wants a more permanent housing solution.
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Property owners don't have to live in a floodplain to buy flood insurance. About 30 percent of claims come from outside high-risk zones.
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The 'biggest' storm in Scranton, Pa., in 150 years of the city, mayor says.
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The Starbuck Fire is the largest of three and has consumed hundreds of thousands of acres in Oklahoma and Kansas.
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The 19.5 inches breaks a previous one-day high of 18.7 inches recorded in 1993.
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'What does Gatlinburg plan to do to prevent emergency mistakes they made with this disaster?'
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Snow started falling before dawn Tuesday in York County Pa., part of a potentially crippling storm stretching from Washington, D.C., to Maine that will affect tens of millions of people by the time it moves out of the Northeast on Wednesday.
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City officials have been under fire for failing to warn residents about a rising creek.
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The declaration clears the way for the city to recoup the expense of dealing with the storm from FEMA.
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The National Weather Service is predicting 3 to 6 inches of snow in the Pittsburgh area beginning Monday night through Tuesday, but a foot or more could fall in Central and Eastern Pennsylvania.
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There is a growing chorus of state officials and water policy experts calling for a fresh look at reservoir operations following last month’s near-catastrophe.
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In trying to forecast how bad flooding might be, parish officials for the most part had to rely on anecdotal accounts from long-time residents who remembered where the water had risen in the past.
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Historic windstorm knocked out power to more than 1 million customers.
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Drying out areas parched by a dehydrated winter — with the potential to swirl sparks in any direction and stoke fires once they catch.