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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Recently, an independent investigation found the Puerto Rico death toll from the storm was estimated at 2,975 people — a much larger number than the previous official estimate of 64.
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When Sandy tore through Preston County, it blocked major roads and left thousands without electricity for weeks.
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The National Weather Service says the amount of rain dumped on Mountain View by Hurricane Lane is the third-highest rainfall total from a tropical cyclone in the country since 1950.
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Why spend a hefty chunk of money providing a family with a mobile home for just 18 months if there’s another permanent solution that’s cheaper?
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The workshops were covered by a grant from the Economic Development Administration for areas affected by last year's hurricane.
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Post-storm Houston has become a kind of case study on the effects of a construction labor shortage in its most extreme form.
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Post-storm Houston has become a kind of case study on the effects of a construction labor shortage in its most extreme form.
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The mobile 911 dialing systems went down for Beaufort and Jasper counties on Sunday evening, according to alerts from the Sheriff’s Offices for both counties.
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The only larger wildfire season in Colorado in terms of acres burned was in 2002, when 926,502 acres were destroyed.
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Many homes still need to be rebuilt after Hurricane Harvey, but how many?
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A meteorologist said it’s the most unhealthy days in Oregon since air quality records have been kept, starting in 2000.
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As some 14,000 firefighters wrap up their second week battling more than a dozen destructive wildfires across the state, fatigue is setting but the fires show few signs of letting up.
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As set forward initially, the state’s action plan for flood recovery estimated that some 1,000 housing units would be needed statewide.
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The National Weather Service confirmed yesterday afternoon that a tornado hit the town of nearly 17,000 people packing 110 mph winds.
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The state already has disbursed more than $739 million in disaster-relief money but is only now beginning to tap into what will become more than $400 million in block grant funding.