Title: Hazard Mitigation Grant Programs
1Hazard Mitigation Grant Programs
- Scott MacLeod, Hazard Mitigation Grants Manager
- Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency (MEMA)
- Rich Zingarelli, State Hazard Mitigation Officer
- Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR)
2Team Concept
- Massachusetts Department of Conservation
Recreation - Engineering Expertise
- Technical Assistance
- Resource Management
- Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency
- Administrative Capability
- Financial Management
- Local Community Contacts w/ Emergency Managers
3Managing Expectations
- What is mitigation
- HMGP vs. PDM vs. FMA
- PDM FMA grant program focus
- Program requirements/pre-requisites
- Eligible types of projects
- Application process/timeline(aggressive)
- Technical considerations
4What is Hazard Mitigation?
- Any sustained action taken to reduce or
eliminate long-term risk to people and property
from hazards and their effects.
5Breaking the Cycle!
DISASTER
RESPOND
REPAIR
Hazard mitigation results in long-term, cost-
effective, and environmentally-sound reduction of
hazard vulnerability.
6Is it Long-Term Hazard Mitigation?
- Is there an increased level of protection from
hazards??? - Do not simply restore condition to that which
existed before the event. Or the same damage
will occur - Mitigation grants cannot be used for maintenance,
repair or projects already in progress
7PDM vs. HMGP vs. FMA
- All (3) programs typically funded w/ 75 FEMA
share and 25 local - PDM provides funds for all-hazard mitigation
prior to a disaster (annual allocation) - PDM is a nationally competitive grant program
- Hazard Mitigation Grant Program (HMGP) provides
funds for hazard mitigation projects after a
disaster (not an annual allocation)
8PDM vs. HMGP vs. FMA (cont.)
- HMGP funds are made available for counties in the
federally declared disaster area may also be
requested statewide. - Flood Mitigation Assistance (FMA) provides funds
for mitigation of flood-related hazards (annual
allocation) - FMA focus on projects that reduce or eliminate
damage to structures insured under the National
Flood Insurance Program (NFIP).
9PDM - Who Can Apply???
- As Applicants State Emergency Management Agency,
Federally Recognized Indian Tribal Governments
that participate in the NFIP - As Sub-applicants State agencies other than
MEMA, Federally Recognized Indian Tribal
Governments that participate in the NFIP, Local
Communities that participate in the NFIP.
- (Private Non-Profit Organizations and individual
property owners are not eligible sub-applicants,
but a local community can apply for assistance to
benefit the private entity.)
10Pre-Disaster Mitigation Program
- Authorized by the federal Disaster Mitigation
Act of 2000 (DMA2000). - PDM is funded by FEMA to assist
states/communities/tribal governments in reducing
risks from hazards through hazard mitigation
planning and mitigation projects, prior to an
event. - Funding for the FY2008 PDM program is subject to
Congressional appropriationstay tuned. - Historically, 100 million available
nationwide. (500k set aside per State)
11Pre-Disaster Mitigation Program (cont.)
- For FY 2008 PDM-C projects, Locals must have
FEMA-approved Multi-Hazard Mitigation Plan by
FEMA Application deadline of January 31, 2008. -
- MEMA is the applicant and communities are the
sub-applicant. Deadline for local applications
to MEMA via eGrants is January 17, 2008.
Applications due to FEMA from applicant by
January 31, 2008. - Monitor MEMA webpage (www.mass.gov/mema) for
updated program information, funding levels,
application deadline changes, etc
12Eligible PDM Activities
- PDM GRANTS CANNOT DUPLICATE BENEFITS AVAILABLE
TO SUB-APPLICANTS FROM OTHER FEDERAL FUNDING
SOURCES. - MITIGATION PLANNING (EVALUATED SEPERATELY FROM
PROJECT APPLICATIONS) - MITIGATION PROJECTS (PRIMARY FOCUS ON NATURAL
HAZARDS) - SUB-GRANTEE MANAGEMENT COSTS (LIMITED TO 5 OF
TOTAL FUNDING REQUESTED, IS PART OF THE 3M CAP,
AND MUST BE INCLUDED AS SEPARATE LINE ITEM IN
APPLICATION) - PRE-AWARD COSTS (PRIOR TO GRANT AWARD BUT AFTER
PDM APPLICATION PERIOD OPENS Oct. 30, 2007 MAY
INCLUDE ITEMS SUCH AS BCA, ENV./HISTORIC DATA,
ENGINEERING DESIGN MUST BE INCLUDED IN
APPLICATION AS SEPARATE LINE ITEM SUBJECT TO
FEMA DISCRETION AVAILABLE FUNDING)
13Eligible PDM Planning Activities
- Mitigation planning grant deliverable must be a
locally adopted, FEMA-approved HM plan which
complies with 44 CFR Part 201 - No standalone feasibility, drainage, engineering
studies, etc. - Failure to meet deliverable reqt will result in
recoupment of FEMA funds - Primary focus on natural hazards, may also
address hazards caused by manmade events
14Eligible PDM Planning Activities
- PDM planning funds can only be used for
- Development of a new HM plan or,
- Comprehensive review and update of existing
FEMA-approved HM plan to meet 5-year requirement
and FEMA update guidance documentation.
15Types of Mitigation Projects
- Voluntary property acquisition/relocation of
hazard-prone property for conversion to open
space - Structural non structural retrofitting (e.g.
storm shutters, hurricane clips, elevate
structures and/or utilities, etc.) of existing
structures for hazards - Localized flood control projects, such as
floodwall systems to protect critical facilities
and are not a section of a larger flood control
system - Minor structural hazard control or protection
projects that may include flood control projects,
vegetation management, stormwater management or
shoreline/slope stabilization
16Mitigation Project Requirements
- Cost-effective (Benefit-Cost ratio of greater
than 1.0) and substantially reduces the risk of
future damage, hardship, loss from a major
disaster and is the best alternative given
effectiveness and available funding - Consistent with a FEMA-approved Local and State
Hazard Mitigation Plan Goal - Must solve a problem independently (no phased
projects) - Conforms with 44 CFR Parts 9 10 (Floodplain
Mgmt. and Protection of Wetlands/Environmental
Considerations) - Must be able to be permitted under federal, state
and local permit procedures (permits not required
prior to application approval)
17Mitigation Project Requirements (cont.)
- Cannot duplicate benefits available from other
Federal sources for same purpose (EPA, ACOE,
NRCS) - Be located in a community participating in the
NFIP in good standing - Cannot be located in a coastal barrier area as
defined by Coastal Barrier Resources Act (CBRA) - Meet the requirements of federal, state and local
laws - Property acquisition/relocation projects have
additional requirements and assurances that must
be submitted with the application. - Voluntary acquisition (no eminent domain)
- Deed restrictions
- Maintenance reporting
18What Projects are Ineligible?
- Maintenance and/or repair projects (dredging,
debris removal, bridge/dam repair or rehab) - Completed Projects or Projects that are
in-progress - Major flood control projects such as
construction, demo or repair of dams, dikes,
levees, seawalls, etc. - Design, feasibility, and/or drainage studies not
integral to project - Phased or partial projects
- Flood studies or flood mapping
- Generators and related equipment for non-critical
facilities - Warning or alert notification systems Response
or communication equipment.
19Application Process
- State Notifies Potential Sub- Applicants
8. FEMA R1 is notified of awards and works with
State to begin implementation
2. Sub-applicants submit projects through
e-grants to State (by 500pm Thursday January 17,
2008)
7. FEMA HQ forwards top ranked applications to
National Evaluation Phase
3. State Reviews Applications and ranks them
6. FEMA R1 forwards complete applications to FEMA
HQ for ranking
4. Applications submitted to FEMA R1 through
e-grants by Thursday January 31, 2008
5. FEMA R1 Reviews applications for completeness
20PDM Funding
IF PROJECT COSTS END UP EXCEEDING THE ESTIMATED
AMOUNTS PROVIDED IN THE APPLICATION THEN THE
SUB-GRANTEE MUST FUND THE OVER-RUN. FEMA WILL
NOT PROVIDE ADDITIONAL FUNDING BEYOND WHAT IS
REQUESTED IN THE APPLICATION.
- 3 million federal cap (share) per application
- FEMA will fund up to 75 of eligible project
costs - Sub-grantee (local) responsible for a minimum of
25 of the eligible project costs.
21Grant Cost-Share
25
75
90(fed)/10(local) split for small,
impoverished communities
22Grant Cost Share
- Local share must be in direct support of the
proposed activities - Cash
- -local, state, private cash payments (federal
funds cannot be used except CDBG, SBA, Bureau of
Indian Affairs, USDA Loan funds) - IN-KIND Contributions
- -force account labor (e.g. DPW staff), equipment,
materials, contract labor (e.g. engineering
contract), donated labor - Local share must be committed and identified in
the application
23Pre-Award Costs
- Applicants MAY be reimbursed for project costs
incurred prior to grant award, but after the
application period has opened (Oct. 30, 2007) for
activities directly related to the proposed
project e.g. Benefit-Cost Analysis
environmental/historic data engineering design,
etc. - FEMA MAY provide pre-award costs at their
discretion and as funds are available. These
costs must be submitted as a separate line item
in the sub- application budget. Pre-award costs
will not be reimbursed if the application is not
selected for award.
24Important Considerations
- Benefit-Cost Analysis (BCA) A BCA will be
required for all mitigation projects. If the BCA
is not performed or it is calculated to be below
1.0 then the application will not be considered.
The higher the ratio the more competitive the
application will be. - Benefits are damages/losses avoided, e.g.
- damages to buildings, infrastructure, contents
- economic impacts of loss of building, public
services, net business income and costs for
temporary quarters - economic impacts of loss of function of roads,
bridges, utilities, and travel costs - death and injury.
- All data must be clearly documented and that
documentation must be provided in support of the
application. - Benefit Cost Helpline is available-
1-866-222-3580 or bchelpline_at_dhs.gov
25Important Considerations
- Environmental/Historic Review - Funds will not be
awarded and the project cannot be initiated if
FEMA environmental review or assessment is
required and has not been completed. - Regional FEMA Offices will conduct environmental
review but sub-applicants need to provide
information in the form of consultations to make
Region aware of potential issues. - FEMA needs complete answers to the application
Environmental/ Historical Preservation questions
supporting documentation in the
sub-application. - To expedite application, identify and analyze
potential environmental/historic impacts to
determine if they would result in scope, budget
or location changes, or require mitigation that
would affect the budget. Keep these in mind when
formulating the budget as they will only be part
of the cost share if submitted as part of the
sub-application.
26Important Considerations
- Engineering Feasibility - Technical info that the
sub-applicant believes is pertinent to the review
should be included in the application. Photos,
sketches and drawings may help as well - Basis of Design - If project has a potential
effect on hazards elsewhere, these should be
identified increasing a culvert upstream causes
a small increase in flood levels downstream and,
therefore, flows, frequency of event and
standards should be included
27Important Considerations
- Scope of Work Cost Estimates -
- Sub-applications should include a detailed scope
of work, line item cost estimates and project
schedule - Avoid lump sum cost items provide specific
quantities and unit costs - Contingencies are not a FEMA eligible line item
do not include in cost estimate/budget - Be conservative with cost estimates (consider
grant award date future construction costs) - Be as detailed as possible identifying the work
to be done and the materials, labor and other
costs that are identifiable.
28FEMAs Role
- Reviews Approves applications
- FEMA is available for technical assistance on
e-grants, BCA, engineering feasibility,
environmental/historic preservation compliance - FEMA will not complete the application or the BCA.
National Evaluation
National Ranking
National Technical Review
29National Ranking Factors
30National Evaluation Factors
31National Technical Review
- FEMA will conduct a national Technical Review for
the highest scoring project sub-applications,
representing 150 of available funding focusing
on two (2) areas - Benefit-Cost Analysis (Technically correct
thoroughly documented) - Engineering Feasibility (Feasible and/or
effective adequate documentation)
32IMPORTANT
- FEMA will not consider changes to the scope of
work after applications are submitted and before
awards are made. Scope changes after the awards
may be allowed if they do not change the nature
of the project. - For acquisition projects changes in the
properties of an approved mitigation project may
be approved if they were identified as alternates
in the original application and a BCA was
completed. - Planning Project performance period may not
exceed 3 years. Sub-applications that propose a
work schedule in excess of 3-years will not be
approved.
33Is it the Best Alternative?
- FEMA regulations require that each applicant
consider a range of alternatives to address the
natural hazard problem that you wish to mitigate. - 3 Alternatives are required
- - proposed project is alternative 1
- - two (2) other feasible alternatives must be
described/discussed
34Is it the Best Alternative?
- Local Project Review Criteria
- Socially Acceptable
- Technically Feasible
- Administratively Possible
- Politically Acceptable
- Legal
- Economically Sound
- Environmentally Sound
35Is the Proposed Project Cost-Effective?
- Are project benefits gt project costs?
- (benefitsestimated value of future avoided
damages)
COSTS
BENEFITS
36Is the ProjectTechnically Feasible?
- Clearly Defined Problem
- Feasible and Effective Objective
- Sufficient Scope
- Project can be completed timely
37Is Project in Compliance with Environmental Rules
Regulations?
Enhance environmental protection through
mitigation
Sub-grantee must obtain all applicable permits
Project complies with NEPA and MEPA Rules
Regulation
38FEMA PDM Resources
FY08 PDM Info http//www.fema.gov/government/gr
ant/pdm/fy2008.shtm E-Grants website
https//portal.fema.gov/famsVuWeb/home E-Grants
Helpdesk (866)476-0544 mtegrants_at_dhs.gov Benefit
-Cost Analysis Helpline (866)222-3580
bchelpline_at_dhs.gov Engineering Helpline
(866)222-3580 enghelpline_at_dhs.gov Env./Historic
Helpline (866)222-3580 ehhelpline_at_dhs.gov
39Flood Mitigation Assistance (FMA) Program
- Created by the Natl Flood Insurance Act of 1968,
as amended. - Funding to States, Indian tribal governments and
communities for cost-effective mitigation
measures to reduce flood damage to buildings,
manufactured homes and other structures insured
under the National Flood Insurance Program
(NFIP). - FY2008 Priority is to fund flood mitigation
activities that reduce or eliminate the long-term
risk of flood damage to structures currently
insured under the NFIP.
40Flood Mitigation Assistance (FMA) Program (cont.)
- Rep Loss any property for which two or more
flood insurance claims have been paid for more
than 1,000 within any rolling 10-year period
since Jan. 1, 1978. - Annual allocation formula based on total of
NFIP policies of Rep Loss properties per
State. - FY2008 allocations for MA subject to
Congressional appropriation - 400,000 for flood mitigation projects
- 35,000 for flood planning
41Flood Mitigation Assistance (FMA) Program (cont.)
- For FY2008 FMA, Locals must have FEMA-approved
Flood Mitigation Plan by FEMA application
deadline (March 31, 2008) - - A FEMA-approved Multi-Hazard Mitigation Plan
(consistent with 44 CFR Part 201) also meets this
requirement. - Application via eGrants Deadline for local
applications to MEMA by Mon. March 17, 2008. - Monitor MEMA website for updated program
information (www.mass.gov/mema)
42Eligible Types of FMA Projects(Must focus on
flood hazards)
- Voluntary property acquisition/relocation of
NFIP-insured flood-prone structures for
conversion to open space - Elevation of NFIP-insured structures and/or
retrofit utilities - Minor physical flood mitigation projects that
reduce localized flooding problems and do not
duplicate the flood prevention activities of
other Federal agencies. At least 50 of the
structures directly benefiting from the project
must be NFIP-insured structures
43Eligible Types of FMA Projects(Must focus on
flood hazards)
- Properties must be insured thru the NFIP at the
time of FMA application (3/31/2008) - For projects related to improved structures that
remain sited in the SFHA (e.g. elevation
utility retrofits), property owners must maintain
flood insurance in perpetuity (deed requirements).
44What Projects are Ineligible?
- Maintenance and/or repair projects (dredging,
debris removal, bridge/dam repair or rehab) - Completed Projects or Projects that are
in-progress - Major flood control projects such as construction
or repair of dikes, levees, seawalls, dams, etc. - Design, feasibility, and/or drainage studies not
integral to project - Mitigation reconstruction (demo/rebuild)
- Phased or partial projects
- Flood studies or flood mapping
- Generators and related equipment for non-critical
facilities - Response or communication equipment Warning or
alert notification systems.
45Other FMA Items
- Similar/same e-Grants application process as PDM
- Benefit-Cost Analysis supporting documentation
required with sub-application - Detailed scope, budget schedule (no
contingencies) - Environmental/Historic Preservation compliance
- 75 FEMA / 25 Local Funding
- Not more than ½ of local funding can be from
in-kind sources - Property acquisition/relocation projects require
additional documentation (see FEMA Guidance) - FEMA FMA Guidance and related info
http//www.fema.gov/government/grant/fma/fma2008.s
htm
46Scott MacLeodHazard Mitigation Grant
ManagerMassachusetts Emergency Management
AgencyScott.MacLeod_at_state.ma.us(508)
820-1445Rich ZingarelliActing State Hazard
Mitigation OfficerDepartment of Conservation
RecreationRichard.Zingarelli_at_state.ma.us(617)
626-1406