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HUD secretary says administration seeks to get Jersey Shore open for business

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Donovan also told the subcommittee that media reports the administration is prepared to make a $50 billion request to Congress for supplemental funding to help states recover were not true and the administration is still trying to refine its request.

FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate said in an interview the initial request would only cover projects that would be finished in the current fiscal year.

“Our annual appropriation is not always the total figure for a disaster,” he said. “It’s what we tend to expend.”

Lautenberg and U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., joined Sens. Charles Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, both New York Democrats, in a statement saying $50 billion would be insufficient.

“While $50 billion is a significant amount of money, it unfortunately does not meet all of New York and New Jersey’s substantial needs,” they said. “While we know there will be additional supplements, the administration needs to come as close as possible to meeting our states’ needs in the first request.”

Christie’s office released a $36.9 billion storm damage estimate last week, which included $7.4 billion for “mitigation and prevention.” The estimate includes broad descriptions — $5.5 billion for parks and the environment and $8.3 billion for businesses — and offers no information on how the administration came up with that number or specifics on what it covers.

Christie’s office has declined to release details.

Mary Goepfert, a spokeswoman for the New Jersey Office of Emergency Management, said the figure is compiled with input from local officials and the county emergency management offices, which submit breakdowns of how many homes, businesses and public properties were damaged. She said each state department is responsible for assessing damages for areas they oversee.

Because of the severity of the damage, Goepfert said aerial photographs were used to assess losses in places that were inaccessible.

The state Office of Emergency Management monitors projects along with FEMA and is in charge of taking federal funds sent to the state and reimbursing local governments when work is completed.

Christie and Cuomo’s figures include costs that will be covered by insurance, some that will be covered by FEMA’s flood insurance program and others that have already been reimbursed by the agency. That’s what Obama’s administration is trying to wade through as it comes up with a request for supplemental funding from Congress.

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