Noticias y medios de comunicación: Desastre 4332

Comunicados de prensa y hojas informativas

3

AUSTIN, Texas – La noche del 25 de agosto de 2017, el huracán Harvey llegó a Texas como huracán de la categoría 4, dejando devastado lo todo que encontró en su camino. Tres años después, aún hay trabajo por hacer para reparar los daños ocasionados por Harvey, pero con gran determinación y perseverancia, las comunidades de Texas han logrado gran progreso en su recuperación.

illustration of page of paper Comunicado de Prensa |

AUSTIN, Texas – Muchas de las familias que fueron afectadas por el Huracán Harvey en agosto de 2017 no contaban con el seguro contra inundaciones.

Como parte de la asistencia por desastre que ofreció, la Agencia Federal para el Manejo de Emergencias (FEMA, por sus siglas en inglés) proporcionó Pólizas Grupales de Seguro contra Inundaciones (GFIP, por sus siglas en inglés) para 6,704 familias en los condados afectados por Harvey.

illustration of page of paper Comunicado de Prensa |

PDF, gráficos y multimedios

View the Disaster Multimedia Toolkit for social media and video content to help communicate about general disaster recovery.

file icon
Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) for City of Houston Inwood Forest Stormwater Detention Basin Project, signed 2/11/2021

file icon
Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) City of Seabrook Wastewater System Infrastructure Retrofit, signed 6/16/2021

file icon
Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) for Ditch 609 South China Relief Project, signed 11/16/2020

Hurricane Harvey 5 Years Later By The Numbers Graphic
Hurricane Harvey 5 Years Later By The Numbers Graphic

file icon
Fort Bend County Levee Improvement District, NO. 7 Brazos River Bank Stabilization Project

file icon
DR-4332-0035-TX Draft Public Notice

file icon
2017 Hurricane Season FEMA After Action Report

file icon
Texas; FEMA-4332-DR

Reported mandated by Congress on Preliminary Damage Assessment (PDA) information for FEMA-4332-DR- Texas for Hurricane Harvey during the period of August 23 to September 15, 2017.

Man in a light blue vest with FEMA imprinted in the back faces the crowd of survivors waiting for help
Disaster Recovery Center in Houston

Houston TX -Paul Chaney is part of the FEMA Surge Capacity Force working at a Disaster Recovery Center in Houston. During a declared disaster, FEMA deploys designated personnel from select DHS components, and other federal agencies, to the response. These volunteers leave their regular Federal agency jobs to deploy for up to 45 days to a disaster location (Photo by Steve Zumwalt/FEMA)

A Team Rubicon volunteer dumps a wheelbarrow full of debris on a debris pile in front of a home
Team Rubicon Help Hurricane Harvey Survivors

Friendswood TX - Team Rubicon volunteer from Australia dumps a wheelbarrow full of debris on a debris pile in front of a home. Team Rubicon is an American non-government organization (NGO) bringing the skills and experiences of military veterans with first responders to rapidly deploy emergency response teams. (Photo by Steve Zumwalt/FEMA)