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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Preliminary figures estimate the recovery effort will cost South Carolina county roughly $17.5 million.
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Emergency management director says recovery from the hurricane is far from over.
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The lack of rain has encouraged wildfires, with more than 1,700 reported since Oct. 1.
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Lawmakers should demand that the commission — the state's chief oil and gas regulator, with a long history of cozy ties with the industry — be restructured to put public safety ahead of industry profits.
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Because the storm blew debris into the water indiscriminately, officials don't know exactly what the debris is.
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For businesses and residents, the last day to file an application for physical property damage is December 16.
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Like many kids, Dabasinskas wanted to be a fireman when he grew up. Unlike most kids, he never changed his mind.
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As estimated, about 60 percent of its total land area and 71 percent of its population were at risk of cyclones and floods.
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The governor’s office says nearly 80,000 residential structures in the state were damaged or destroyed by the storm across 48 counties, and about half of them sustained uninsured losses.
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North Carolina fire's growth rate has slowed over the past couple of days, but is expected to ramp back up later this week due to high winds.
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The area's Scanner Talk page on Facebook keeps consistent rules: no names, no house addresses and no disrespect.
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In the event of a disaster, disaster response teams cordon off the affected area and grant access only to emergency response team and necessary officials.
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This year to date, 1,211 fires have burned 34,633 acres in Tennessee.
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The flooding forced an immediate draw on the 59.2 million the school system had in the bank: Ten schools and four administrative buildings were severely damaged.
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The organizers pulled together a diverse array of businesses, religious groups, the city of Raleigh and other municipal organizations to 'fight the floods with a fork.'