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    6 years later, Katrina victims fight FEMA debts

    NEW ORLEANS (AP) — When the Federal Emergency Management Agency mailed out 83,000 debt notices this year to victims of Hurricane Katrina and other 2005 storms, one of the letters showed up in David Bellinger's mailbox. Bellinger, who is blind, needed a friend to read it and break the news that FEMA wants him to pay back more than $3,200 in federal aid he received after Katrina.

    "I nearly had a stroke," recalls the 63-year-old, who moved to Atlanta after the storm wrecked his New Orleans home. "I'm totally blind. I subsist entirely on a Social Security disability check. If I have to pay this money back, it would pretty much wipe out all the savings I have."

    Many other Gulf Coast hurricane victims are in the same position, angry and frustrated at the prospect of repaying money they spent years ago as they tried to rebuild their lives.

    FEMA is seeking to recover more than $385 million it says was improperly paid to victims of hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma. The debts, which average about $4,622 per recipient, represent slightly less than 5 percent of the roughly $8 billion that FEMA distributed after the storms. At least some of the overpayments were due to FEMA employees' own mistakes, ranging from clerical errors to failing to interview applicants, according to congressional testimony.

    But the agency says it is required by law to make an effort to recover improper payments, even if the recipient wasn't at fault. Last week, however, Congress approved legislation that would allow FEMA to waive many of the debts. President Barack Obama signed the measure — part of a $1 trillion spending package — into law last Friday.

    FEMA spokeswoman Rachel Racusen said the agency is reviewing the law's provisions and developing a plan to implement them. It remains to be seen how many recipients of FEMA money could benefit from the change.

    Sen. Mary Landrieu, a Louisiana Democrat who sponsored the provision, said disaster victims shouldn't be punished because FEMA was "dysfunctional."

    "They have significantly improved the process," Landrieu said. "This is very unlikely to happen again."

    Racusen said the agency has implemented "strong protections" to avoid making improper payments, reducing its error rate from about 14 percent after Katrina to less than 1 percent for more recent disasters.

    "We have also worked to significantly improve the recoupment process so that it is more understandable and provides due process for both disaster survivors and taxpayers," she said in a statement.

    FEMA's collection efforts aren't limited to the 2005 storms. The agency has mailed out more than 6,000 debt letters to survivors of other recent disasters, including floods.

    Approximately 2,500 recipients, including 930 victims of the 2005 hurricanes, have appealed their debt notices. FEMA says about 30 percent of those appeals successfully erased at least some of the debt. Recipients also can ask for a waiver due to economic hardship or seek to set up a payment plan.

    "It is important for any individual who has received a recoupment notice to know that these letters are the start of a conversation with FEMA, not the end," Racusen said.

    This isn't the first time Bellinger has tangled with FEMA over funds he received to pay for renting an apartment in Atlanta. He was a plaintiff in a class-action lawsuit over the agency's decision to end housing subsidies for storm victims and its efforts to recover alleged overpayments. FEMA later paid more than $2.6 million to settle the claims.

    That case had also delayed the debt collection process that Bellinger and other storm victims are now facing. Before the settlement, a federal judge in New Orleans ordered FEMA to suspend the effort in 2007 while it drew up new guidelines for the recoupment process. FEMA reinstituted the process earlier this year.

    "What a way to celebrate Christmas, knowing I've got another FEMA battle on my hands," Bellinger said last week.

    After Bellinger moved to Atlanta, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development covered some but not all of his rent. He says he relied on FEMA's aid to make up the difference. FEMA claims he received a duplication of benefits, but Bellinger said the agency is mistaken.

    "The fault is theirs, not mine, and they have to suffer the consequences," he said. "I submitted everything they required. As far as I know, I did nothing wrong."

    Lubertha Haskin, a Gulfport, Miss., resident who turned 80 on Dec. 27, received about $8,000 from FEMA to repair some of Katrina's damage to her home and replace belongings. In October, FEMA sent her a debt letter that said her insurer had covered the same costs, a claim Haskin denies.

    Haskin said she hadn't heard from the agency in five years and never suspected she could have to pay back the money.

    "I was knocked for a loop," she said. "I don't have that kind of money. I have a lot of doctor's bills and other bills to pay."

    Law firms and legal aid groups have volunteered to help Haskin, Bellinger and many others challenge FEMA's recoupment efforts.

    "It's really unfair that the government waited this long to come after this lady," said Haskin's lawyer, Beau Cole. "They didn't deliberately do it, but the effect is the same."

    The New Orleans office of Southeast Louisiana Legal Services, which offers free legal aid, has fielded more than 100 calls since September from people who want to challenge their FEMA recoupment letter. Rowena Jones, a lawyer for the group, said she hasn't seen the appeals process yield any "actual results."

    "Our clients just don't seem to be getting a fair opportunity to contest the notices and get a hearing on it," she said.

    The provision signed into law last week allows FEMA to completely waive the debt for somebody who earns less than $90,000 a year if the money was mistakenly awarded due to an error by FEMA. A debt involving fraud cannot be waived. Racusen said FEMA is "committed to applying the law to the fullest extent possible."

    U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., said the recoupment process is flawed. Many debt letters have been returned as "undeliverable," meaning some people moved and don't even know they owe money, he said.

    "Most of these individuals went through a lot of trauma," Thompson said. "For our government to all of a sudden say, 'We made a mistake, you owe us money,' that's not how it should be done."

    ___

    Anyone with questions about the recoupment process, including appeals, can contact FEMA at 1-800-816-1122.

     
    • Thomas  •  4 mths ago
      The gov. will spend $500 mil trying to recover the $385 mil.
      • fedup 4 mths ago
        You're probably right!
      • bebay grrl 4 mths ago
        LOL **nods** ... **sighs**
      • mickey 4 mths ago
        They will argue it is their way of stimulating the economy by paying the federal employees more to collect the money!!! What a bunch of morons!!! ;O
    • wibawa  •  4 mths ago
      $385 million is peanut compared to what the government has squandered in "aid" to Pakistan.
      • hollander 4 mths ago
        Or Iraq. Good point.
      • Dark Angel 4 mths ago
        Wibawa: That is a valid point; however, does it make fraud more acceptable because the people receiving the money are US citizens? Not in my book it doesn't.
      • Right U R Ken 4 mths ago
        And yet they are so many people who want to reelect Obama. Billions to terrorist countries. Billions to illegals. Hundreds of millions to companies that get shut down. Right this wrong and vote Obama out.
    • Larry H  •  Humble, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      My wife and I lost everything we owned in Katrina...and got zippo from FEMA. We had no insurance on our townhouse, because we had just moved into it, and the insurance company would not sign our insurance into effect until the gulf was free of storms for 30 days. Never mind that we had insurance with them for over 20 years. We ended up in a hotel in Houston and paid for everything ourselves, we got no help from FEMA for our housing....no help getting an apartment...nothing. We moved into our apartment with just a bed and the clothing on our backs...and rebuilt our lives here in Houston...all with any help from FEMA. In 2 years, we worked and saved enough money to buy a home and furnish it without any help from anyone. Sometimes you just need to do things yourself...because you cannot trust anything the government says they are going to do.
      • LisaO 4 mths ago
        You should be proud! You are a real American! God Bless you and I wish you prosperity!
      • BENWIN 4 mths ago
        True American!!!! Congratulations on having pride and striving for a better life.
      • Ronny 4 mths ago
        Too bad all the lazy, good for nothin's waiting for handouts cant follow your example.
    • john  •  Lima, Ohio  •  4 mths ago
      385 million is a drop in the bucket, why not try to recover the 20 billions that was spent on fraud and graft.
      • Johnny Seed 4 mths ago
        What do you think most of the money they are trying to collect is. The writer of this article should be ashamed at the disinformation.
      • knotyboy 4 mths ago
        Johnny Seed, do you even know what you're talking about? Wher are the letters that the fraudulent contractors who bilked the goverment (me and you) out of millions, where are those letters and thos stories? We should be ashamed of ourselves for what we allowed fellow Americans to endure in a time of need and dire circumstances because our government is so short sighted and reckless.
      • Dave 4 mths ago
        That would make sense, and the gov't has never been known to make sense.
        Johnny... u are about as dumb as they come. Go take ur meds and get back to sleep.
    • Kevin  •  Middelfart, Denmark  •  4 mths ago
      Sounds like a bank error in their favor. How about trying to collect on the billions in undeserved foreign aid? It's pretty sad when U.S. citizens can't get money from the U.S. government but Pakistan can.
      • Pablo 4 mths ago
        I thought we stopped giving monetary aid to Pakistan six months ago
      • DON P 4 mths ago
        America keeps voting for politicians that don't give a rats #$%$ about you.
      • Bill 4 mths ago
        And sadly, most of the money we spent over there ended up in Haliburton's pocket, thanks to that crooked bum - Cheney.
    • TREE  •  4 mths ago
      Pres. Obama signed a check last week for emergency aid in the amount of $113 million to the Horn Of Africa. This amount is on top of the $870 million already sent to them. We need the money here in America to help AMERICANS.
    • Rob  •  4 mths ago
      1 trilltion dollar spending package?? where is this money coming from?
    • z  •  4 mths ago
      I lost my home in Katrina, but i had flood insurance. I know so many people that used that money to go on vacation, buy boats, cars, went to the casino's. I also know a lady that got 250 thousand on her insurance and got a grant for 85 thousand. The home was valued at 150 thousand. So much government waste.
    • hideyodogs  •  4 mths ago
      "They have significantly improved the process," Landrieu said. "This is very unlikely to happen again."
      OH thats funny! FEMA has always screwed up and probably always will as long as it is run by the government. I hav\e worked on numerous diasters over numerous yrs and FEMA screw ups have always been the source of entertainment and jokes
    • A Yahoo! User  •  4 mths ago
      Having been in Houston when Katrina hit and seeing first hand the way that some of the former NOLA residents took advantage of the aide they were being given the call for change doesn't surprise me. They lived in Houston rent free for over 1 year, reduced light bills, welfare recipients, FEMA card with thousands of dollars on it and I can tell you it was absolutely disgusting. I get it they had nothing and had lost everything but in the case of 4 of my neighbors did they really need those 72" plasma TV's? Most of them went crazy purchasing things that they never had the opportunity to afford. However, can we really blame them? Most come from nothing and now we expect them to manage their money? They should have been given help in different ways. Supporting the residents efforts to rebuild their lives is one thing but throwing money at them is another. I also saw the same thing the next year with Rita so many people I know took the insurance and FEMA money to buy whatever they wanted instead of repairing that house or using it to do what it was intended for...crazy!
    • Todd  •  San Francisco, California  •  4 mths ago
      Bring our troops home, quit bailing out banks, and stop giving foreign aid to countries that hate us. We'd have more than enough money to take care of our own backyard before looking over the fence.

      Oh, that would make sense--something our government is unfamiliar with.
    • James  •  Longview, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      Fema wants their money back. Ha! I want the money back we send to all forgien countries, we paid to the banking bailout, and all the money that went to CEO multi million dollars bonuses. Make them pay that back then talk to those who lost their homes.....
    • West  •  4 mths ago
      We all know many 'victims' fraudulently filed claims, and FEMA is trying to collect 'less than 5%' of the money put out. I've talked to 3 people who had a friend or family member 'git some of dat free money', basically admitting they scammed the feds. Of course, now they whine when they're caught.
    • Rebel353  •  St Augustine, Florida  •  4 mths ago
      It sounds like the director of FEMA and Social Security are the same person. When is Social Security going to recover all the money given to illegal aliens and others who never paid into the system, but bleed it for all they can get?
    • Jeff  •  Sarasota, Florida  •  4 mths ago
      This shows the mentality of our society. Those were our tax dollars wasted. The people who knew they were not supposed to receive them and spent the money make me sick. They should have to pay it back.
    • B.Daddy  •  4 mths ago
      Good luck FEMA. Try selling all those trailers no one ever lived in.
    • SA  •  Richardson, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      When Japan had the earthquake/tsunami, you didn't see the Japanese sitting on the curb waiting for government handouts. They went to work to clean up and rebuild. What does that say about Americans?
    • wiser  •  Holyoke, Colorado  •  4 mths ago
      But we can ship millions to hati without expectation of repayment wth is wrong with this?
    • Liberals hate the USA  •  4 mths ago
      Storms don't care who you are, but the real world does. There are only 2 kinds of people.
      Responsible and Irresponsible.
    • Liberals hate the USA  •  4 mths ago
      Rebuilding New Orleans below sea level was irresponsible.
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