FEMA allows churches to apply
retroactively for disaster aid
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[January 03, 2018]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S.
Federal Emergency Management Agency said on Tuesday that churches may
apply for aid relating to disasters declared after Aug. 23, 2017,
following pressure from President Donald Trump and a lawsuit by Texas
churches.
The federal disaster relief agency was sued in September by three Texas
churches severely damaged in Hurricane Harvey, over what they called its
policy of refusing to provide disaster relief to houses of worship
because of their religious status.
Trump had said in a tweet that Texas churches should be able to receive
money from FEMA for helping victims of Hurricane Harvey. It was not
clear whether the three churches provided aid to victims.
The churches that sued are the Rockport First Assembly of God in
Rockport, which lost its roof and steeple and suffered other structural
damage, and the Harvest Family Church in Cypress and Hi-Way Tabernacle
in Cleveland, which were both flooded.
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Interstate highway 45 is submerged from the effects of Hurricane
Harvey seen during widespread flooding in Houston, Texas, U.S.
August 27, 2017. REUTERS/Richard Carson
In a complaint filed in federal court in Houston, the churches said they
would like to apply for aid but it would be "futile" because FEMA's
public assistance program "categorically" excluded their claims,
violating their constitutional right to freely exercise their religion.
They said FEMA's ban on providing relief where at least half a
building's space is used for religious purposes, a policy also
enforced after Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and Hurricane Sandy in
2012, contradicted a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision making it
easier for religious groups to get public aid.
(Reporting by Chris Sanders; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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