Hurricane Harvey Damages Could Cost up to $180 Billion
U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Sunday challenged Congress to raise the government's debt limit in order to free up relief spending for Hurricane Harvey, a disaster that the governor of Texas said could require up to $180 billion.
Hurricane Harvey Could Be One of the Most Expensive Natural Disasters in U.S. History
Hurricane Katrina caused $160 billion in damages.
Harvey, which came ashore on August 25 as the most powerful hurricane to hit Texas
in more than 50 years, has killed an estimated 50 people, displaced
more than 1 million and damaged some 200,000 homes in a path of
destruction stretching for more than 300 miles (480 kms).
As the city of Houston
and the region's critical energy infrastructure edged back to normal
nine days after the storm first hit, the debate over how to pay for the
disaster played out in Washington.
Texas
Governor Greg Abbott estimated damage from Hurricane Harvey at $150
billion to $180 billion, calling it more costly than epic Hurricanes
Katrina or Sandy, which devastated New Orleans in 2005 and New York City
in 2012.
The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump has asked Congress for an initial $7.85 billion for recovery efforts, a fraction of what will eventually be needed.
Even that amount could be delayed unless Congress
quickly increases the government's debt ceiling, Mnuchin said, as the
United States is on track to hit its mandated borrowing limit by the end
of the month unless Congress increases it.
"Without
raising the debt limit, I am not comfortable that we will get money to
Texas this month to rebuild," Mnuchin told Fox News.
Republican
lawmakers, who control both houses of Congress, have traditionally
resisted raising the debt ceiling, but linking the issue to hurricane
relief could force their hand with people suffering and much of the
fourth-largest U.S. city under water.Beyond
the immediate funding, any massive aid package faces budget pressures
at a time when Trump is advocating for tax reform or tax cuts, leading
some on Capitol Hill to suggest aid may be released in a series of
smaller appropriations.
Katrina
set the record by costing U.S. taxpayers more than $110 billion. In
advocating for funds to help rebuild his state, Abbott said damage from
Harvey would exceed that.
But a federal official said state and local governments also needed to do their part instead of relying entirely on Washington.
"They
can't depend only on federal emergency management," Brock Long, head of
the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency, told CBS News.
95% Dry
Houston
Mayor Sylvester Turner said on Sunday the city was making progress on
several fronts, expecting most public services and businesses to be
restored by Tuesday, the first business day after Monday's Labor Day
holiday.
"Over 95% of the city is now dry. And I'm encouraging people to get up and let's get going," Turner told NBC News.
"This is a can-do city. We're not going to engage in a pity party," he said on CBS.
Even
so, the city mandated the evacuation of thousands of people on the
western side of town on Sunday to accommodate the release of water from a
pair of reservoirs that otherwise might sustain damage. The storm
stalled over Houston, dumping more than 50 inches (1.3 m) on the region
in a matter of days.
The city cut off power to homes on Sunday morning to encourage evacuations.
About
37,000 refugees stayed overnight in 270 shelters in Texas plus another
2,000 in seven Louisiana shelters, the highest number reported so far by
the American Red Cross.
Some
84,700 homes and businesses were without power on Sunday, down from a
peak of around 300,000, according to the region's major electric
companies.
Energy
disruptions pushed up gasoline futures to a two-year high ahead of the
holiday weekend, but major refineries started to come back online on
Friday.
Colonial Pipeline,
the biggest U.S. fuel system, expects to reopen a Texas segment of its
network on Monday, when it will resume transporting distillates from
Houston to Hebert, Texas, the company said on Sunday, adding that it
would be ready to start moving gasoline on Tuesday.
Those
repairs would restore to normal Colonial's entire 5,500-mile (8,850-km)
pipeline running from Houston to Linden, New Jersey, relieving
shortages between Texas and the U.S. Northeast.http://fortune.com/2017/09/03/hurricane-harvey-damages-cost/
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