Pritzker declares 11 county disaster over storms; state wants federal aid
(The Center Square) – Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker issued a disaster declaration late Tuesday covering 11 counties across the state that received particularly destructive severe weather this spring and early summer.
A disaster declaration by the governor makes available state aid, and opens the possibility of federal aid.
The declaration covers communities in Coles, Cook, Effingham, Jefferson, Kankakee, Lasalle, McClean, Stephenson, Warren, Winnebago and Woodford counties for storms that occurred between March 10 and June 21.
Subsequent to the declaration, Pritzker visited impacted communities in Effingham and Jefferson Counties Wednesday.
“Our state department, our emergency management agency, state police and our department of transportation have been heroic, but nobody more heroic than the local law enforcement, local first responders, and local emergency management.,” Pritzker said. “We’re going to continue the recovery process with them and make sure that we’re accessing all the federal resources that we can along with the state resources that we’ve already provided.”
According to the declaration, the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity’s Community Development Block Grant program has funds available through Disaster Response, a program funded by the federal Housing and Urban Development department.
Local governments can apply for funding, capped at $250,000, to help with costs stemming from a disaster.
The governor’s proclamation may also allow for state workers to assist in recovery efforts, if requested by impacted communities.
While surveying damage Wednesday in Teutopolis, Pritzker said the state will pursue aid from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which has the ability to approve federal funds to assist after disasters in U.S. states and territories.
“I hope that we can work in a bipartisan fashion to get those resources from FEMA and get a good response from them to help our counties. There are thresholds that they’ve set which are set in regulation at those departments sometimes set in law,” Pritzker said.
In February, officials announced FEMA denied the state’s last disaster declaration request and appeal. The request would’ve allowed thousands of residents to apply for federal assistance after a major storm produced widespread damage last August.
A separate source of federal relief less discussed is the Small Business Administration, which typically assists by providing low-interest loans to businesses and homeowners to help pay rebuilding costs.
Brad Cole, director of the Illinois Municipal League, recently told The Center Square that many of the costs associated with damage for local governments don’t impact taxpayers, but other costs might.
“A lot of things are covered by insurance, whether it’s private insurance or the city government’s insurance. So that will settle itself out. That gets sorted out later. But the real cost of things is in the overtime, the extra labor, whether that’s public works, or first responders like fire and police,” Cole said.
The IML itself insures around 60 to 65% of all municipalities in Illinois, Cole said.
Latest News Stories
FBI probes Michigan synagogue attack as targeted violence, antisemitism
Iran to see ‘highest volume of strikes’ yet on Friday
Illinois Quick Hits: One confirmed dead from Kankakee tornado
Four service members killed in KC-135 crash
U.S. military jet goes down over Iraq; incident not attributed to hostile fire
Casey-Westfield Explodes for 12 Runs in Third Inning, Downs Neoga 17-5
Pritzker: ‘God was looking out for people’ in storm-damaged Kankakee County
Illinois Quick Hits: Correctional officer charged with sexual misconduct
Costco faces lawsuit as consumers seek refunds from invalid tariffs
Insurer won’t back Gori defense vs asbestos lawsuit fraud claims
With teachers union support, committee approves charter school mandates
Allstate can’t delete class action over alleged secret app tracking
Chicago voters view housing affordability as bigger issue than crime
New Illinois gun bill aims at glock switches; critics say it misses the real problem