Back to Bills

Standing Disaster Recovery and Resilience Fund

Full Title:
Reforming Disaster Recovery Act

Summary#

This bill would set up a permanent federal fund to help communities rebuild homes, neighborhoods, and local economies after the most severe disasters. It would make HUD’s disaster recovery grants (often called CDBG‑DR) a regular program with clear rules, faster timelines, and strong oversight.

Key changes and impacts:

  • Creates a Long‑Term Disaster Recovery Fund at the U.S. Treasury for housing, infrastructure, economic recovery, and mitigation (risk‑reduction) projects.
  • Uses a set method (formula) to send money to the “most impacted and distressed” areas after a catastrophic disaster, with decisions due within 90–120 days.
  • Requires at least 70% of funds to benefit low‑ and moderate‑income people, unless HUD grants a specific waiver.
  • Allows small, early “preliminary” grants (up to $5 million) to jump‑start planning and speed aid.
  • Sets standards for building in hazard‑prone areas and requires insurance (like flood insurance) when rebuilding there.
  • Adds public planning, annual performance targets, a public dashboard, and rules to prevent fraud and duplicate payments.
  • Creates a new Office of Disaster Management and Resiliency at HUD to lead and coordinate this work.
  • Improves data‑sharing among HUD, FEMA, and SBA with privacy safeguards.

What it means for you#

  • Disaster survivors (homeowners and renters)

    • More help for repairing or replacing homes, including affordable rental housing, with a focus on people with lower incomes.
    • Aid may arrive faster because money sits in a standing fund and HUD must act on a set timeline.
    • If you rebuild in a floodplain or other risk zone, you may have to meet stronger building standards and carry insurance to qualify.
    • If you already got help from FEMA or other sources for the same cost, you can’t get paid twice (no “duplication of benefits”).
    • If projects cause displacement, grantees must have a relocation assistance policy and minimize moves.
  • Renters

    • More funds aimed at rebuilding and adding affordable rental units.
    • Programs must consider the needs of renters as well as homeowners, including people in public or federally subsidized housing.
  • Small businesses and workers

    • Funds can support local economic recovery (like fixing main streets and small business areas).
    • Money cannot be used to move businesses in a way that causes job loss elsewhere, but can help businesses that had to move because of the disaster.
  • Homeowners in risk zones

    • Expect tougher building rules and required insurance if you rebuild in areas prone to floods, wildfires, or high winds. These rules are meant to reduce future damage.
  • Local governments and Tribes

    • More predictable, formula‑based funding for long‑term housing, infrastructure, and mitigation after very large disasters.
    • Must publish a recovery plan within 90 days, take public comments (at least 14 days), meet spending targets, and report progress on a public dashboard.
    • Can adopt other federal environmental reviews to speed projects.
    • Must spread funds across housing, infrastructure, and economic recovery in line with unmet needs, unless HUD approves a different mix.
    • Can get technical help and limited funds to build staff capacity; unused funds are recaptured after 6 years (extensions possible).
    • May keep up to 10% after closeout to maintain minimal readiness for future disasters and do pre‑disaster planning.
  • Taxpayers

    • More transparency (public dashboards), performance checks, and data‑matching with FEMA/SBA to cut fraud, waste, and duplicate payments.
    • More focus on mitigation to lower future disaster costs.

Expenses#

Estimated annual cost: No publicly available information.

  • The bill creates a standing disaster recovery fund that would need future appropriations from Congress.
  • It also allows transfer of certain leftover past disaster funds into the new fund.
  • Up to 2% of money placed in the fund is set aside for HUD to support planning, technical help, and readiness.

Proponents' View#

  • Makes recovery faster and fairer: a standing fund and clear formula reduce delays and ad‑hoc politics after big disasters.
  • Centers equity: directing most funds to low‑ and moderate‑income people helps those who are hit hardest and have the least cushion.
  • Builds resilience: allows a significant share for mitigation so communities rebuild stronger and cut future losses.
  • Improves accountability: performance targets, recapture of idle funds, and a public dashboard add transparency.
  • Reduces red tape and fraud: data‑sharing with FEMA and SBA streamlines aid, prevents double payments, and eases the burden on survivors.
  • Strengthens capacity: a dedicated HUD office and technical assistance help states, Tribes, and cities manage complex recoveries.

Opponents' View#

  • Open‑ended cost: authorizing “such sums as necessary” could expand federal spending and the federal role in local recovery.
  • Complex rules: new planning, targets, and reporting may strain small or rural communities with limited staff.
  • Limited flexibility: the 70% low‑/moderate‑income requirement could restrict help for middle‑income families and some small businesses.
  • Rebuilding burdens: stronger hazard standards and required insurance may raise costs for homeowners or steer rebuilding away from familiar neighborhoods.
  • Program overlap: multiple agencies (HUD, FEMA, SBA) and the bar on paying FEMA‑covered costs could confuse survivors and slow help.
  • Privacy worries: broader data‑sharing, even with safeguards, may raise concerns about use of personal information.
  • Use‑it‑or‑lose‑it deadlines: recapturing unspent funds after set periods could rush spending or leave longer projects short.