04/24/2024
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femaIf you are getting rental assistance from FEMA and repairs to your flood-damaged North Carolina home are taking longer than expected, you may be eligible to receive continued temporary housing assistance. The aid is available to eligible homeowners and renters. If you are interested in finding out more, you might be interested in looking pa landlord tenant law to learn more.

You may qualify for continued assistance if you demonstrate your need and develop a longer-term or permanent housing plan or demonstrate progress toward one. A contractor’s estimate on repairs or a report on repairs can point to progress. You need to keep rental receipts, canceled checks or money orders showing proper use of previous rental assistance. Recovery progress can be marked by accepting the first offer of adequate, alternate housing when it becomes available.

Two ways to search for alternate housing online:

NCHousingSearch.org helps people locate available, affordable rental housing. This free service can be accessed online 24 hours a day and through a toll-free, bilingual call center, Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., at 877-428-8844.

The FEMA Housing Portal (https://asd.fema.gov/inter/hportal/home.htm) is intended to help individuals and families who have been displaced by a disaster find a place to live. The portal consolidates rental resources identified and provided by federal agencies, such as the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S. Veterans Administration, private organizations, and the public to help individuals and families find available rental units in their area.

Two weeks after you receive your initial rental assistance you will get an application from FEMA for continued temporary housing. The application reaffirms that you have an ongoing financial need for temporary housing, either because disaster-related repairs have not been completed or you have not been able to find permanent replacement housing.

You will need to submit the following documents with the completed application:

A copy of your current lease or rental agreement signed by you and the landlord

Rental receipts, canceled checks or money orders showing you used the previous rental assistance from FEMA for temporary housing

Proof of pre-disaster housing costs

Proof of pre-disaster and post-disaster current income for household members over the age of 18

Based on your financial need, FEMA will evaluate the information to determine if you qualify for ongoing federal aid.

To request an application for continued temporary housing assistance, call the FEMA Helpline at 800-621-3362 for voice, 711 and Video Relay Service. If you are deaf, hard of hearing or have a speech disability and use a TTY, call 800-462-7585.

How HUD can help you:

You can get disaster assistance from HUD if you lived in public housing, a Section 8 unit or had a Housing Choice Voucher before Hurricane Matthew. Contact the housing provider that assisted you before the disaster and contact HUD at 336-851-8058 or email at hudhelpingu@hud.gov.

If you need homeowner information and assistance from HUD regarding foreclosure or questions about the next steps with your home, contact a HUD approved housing counseling agency by calling 800-569-4287. You do not have to have a FHA loan to meet with a HUD approved housing counseling agency, and there is never a fee for foreclosure prevention counseling.

For more information on the North Carolina recovery, visit fema.gov/disaster/4285 and readync.org. Follow FEMA on Twitter at @femaregion4 and North Carolina Emergency Management @NCEmergency.

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