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                                                               Order Code RS22239
                                                          Updated November 1,2005



 CRS Report for Congress

              Received through the CRS Web



 Emergency Supplemental Appropriations for

                  Hurricane Katrina Relief

                            Jennifer E. Lake
                     Domestic Social Policy Division

                             Ralph M. Chite
               Resources, Science, and Industry Division

Summary


     In response to the widespread destruction brought to the Gulf Coast by Hurricane
 Katrina, the 109'h Congress completed action on two separate emergency supplemental
 bills (P.L. 109-61/H.R. 3645 and P.L. 109-62/H.R. 3673), which together provide an
 additional $62.3 billion for emergency response and recovery needs. Both measures
 match the funding requested by the Administration - $10.5 billion in P.L. 109-61 and
 $51.8 billion in P.L. 109-62. Of the combined amount provided in the two measures,
 $60 billion enables the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to provide
 emergency food, shelter, and medical care to areas stricken by the hurricane and other
 disasters. In addition, $1.9 billion was appropriated to the Department of Defense to pay
 for damage to its facilities and personnel evacuation costs, and $400 million to the Army
 Corps for damaged flood control projects. On October 28, 2005, the Administration
 requested the reallocation of $17.1 billion primarily to pay for restoring damaged federal
 facilities, and submitted a rescission request of $2.3 billion from 17 accounts to pay for
 some of the disaster costs. This report will be updated as events warrant.


 Overview of Congressional Action'

     Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast of the United States on August 29, 2005,
causing widespread flooding and significant property and infrastructure damage to
Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. In response, the 109'h Congress completed action
on two emergency supplemental measures (P.L. 109-61/H.R. 3645 and P.L. 109-62/H.R.
3673), which together have provided $62.3 billion in emergency supplemental funding
for immediate relief and response needs. (See Table 1.) Both measures contain funding
levels as requested by the Administration in two separate submissions, and both were


Congressional Research Service x The Library of Congress


1 Other CRS analysts contributing to this report were Keith Bea (FEMA), Amy Belasco
(Defense), and Nicole T. Carter (Army Corps of Engineers).

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