Landslides and Slope Stabilization
Landslides and Slope Stabilization – Result of Declared Incident – Project Documentation and Closeout
Ossining (Town of)
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The Stafford Act 406 allows funding for the repair of public roads damaged by a major disaster. The item of work must be required as a direct result of the major disaster and FEMA must determine the stability of the site where the damaged facility is located before it can approve funding to repair the facility and its integral ground. The Applicant did not provide documentation to show that either the slope instability or the retaining wall construction was directly tied to the performance of eligible disaster-related work or disaster-caused damage. Section 705(c) of the Stafford Act bars FEMA from recovering obligated funds to a state or local government if: (1) the payment was authorized by an approved agreement specifying the costs; (2) the costs were reasonable; and (3) the purpose of the grant was accomplished. FEMA is not prohibited from deobligating funds for ineligible work because the Applicant did not draw down all obligated funds and therefore a payment was not authorized by an approved agreement.

Landslides and Slope Stabilization, Result of Declared Incident, Financial Accounting and Reconciliation
2021

HeadnotesThe Stafford Act § 406 allows funding for the repair of public roads damaged by a major disaster. The item of work must be required as a direct result of the major disaster and FEMA must determine the stability of the site where the damaged facility is located before it can approve funding to repair the facility and its integral ground. The Applicant did not provide documentation to show that either the slope instability or the retaining wall construction was directly tied to the performance of eligible disaster-related work or disaster-caused damage. Section 705(c) of the Stafford Act bars FEMA from recovering obligated funds to a state or local government if: (1) the payment was authorized by an approved agreement specifying the costs; (2) the costs were reasonable; and (3) the purpose of the grant was accomplished. FEMA is not prohibited from deobligating funds for ineligible work because the Applicant did not draw down all obligated funds and therefore a payment was not authorized by an approved agreement.Conclusion

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