If you were impacted by the April 12 tornadoes, severe storms, winds or flooding in Covington, Jefferson Davis or Jones counties, you may be eligible for limited financial assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
That assistance is made possible after President Donald Trump approved a disaster declaration for those counties.
The financial assistance you may receive will help you get back on your feet. It may include assistance for housing and other essential disaster-caused and related needs such as out-of-pocket child care and uninsured and out-of-pocket medical, dental, and funeral expenses.
First:
- Ccntact your insurance company and file a claim for the disaster-caused damage you’ve suffered.
- You don’t have to wait to start cleaning up but be sure to take photographs or video of the damage and also keep all receipts for repair work.
If you have uninsured or underinsured losses:
- Contact FEMA. Go online to: disasterassistance.gov or call: 800-621-3362 (TTY 800-462-7585).
- Registering for assistance takes about 12 - 30 minutes.
Information that may be useful to have when you register includes:
- Address of the dwelling where the damage occurred (pre-disaster address)
- Current mailing address
- Current telephone number
- Insurance information if you have it
- Total household annual income
- Routing and account number for checking or savings account. (This allows FEMA to directly transfer disaster assistance funds into a bank account).
- A description of disaster-caused damage and losses.
If you reported that you cannot or may not be able to safely live in your home, it may be necessary for FEMA to perform an inspection of the damaged dwelling.
Due to the COVID-19 nationwide emergency and the need to protect the safety and health of all Americans, all FEMA field operations are suspended. Inspections will be conducted remotely by phone.
For remote inspections, FEMA inspectors will contact applicants by phone to answer questions about the type and extent of damage sustained.
April 19 tornadoes: More than 70 buildings damaged at Camp Shelby
Remote inspections provide a new way of evaluating damage — comparable to traditional, in-person inspections and expedite the delivery of recovery assistance to survivors based on their eligibility.
Survivors with minimal damage who can live in their homes will not automatically be scheduled for a home inspection when applying to FEMA. They may request an inspection if they find significant disaster-caused damage afterwards.
Remote inspections have no impact on the types of other needs assistance available that do not require an inspection. This includes child care, transportation, medical and dental, funeral expenses, moving and storage, and Group Flood Insurance Policy Assistance.
Questions?
Contact FEMA Helpline: 800-621-3362 For TTY call 800-462-7585.
If you use 711 or Video Relay Service (VRS) call: 1-800-621-3362.
Contact Ellen Ciurczak at eciurczak@gannett.com. Follow @educellen on Twitter.
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