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California Severe Winter Storms, Flooding, Landslides, and Mudslides
Periodo incidente: Dic 27, 2022 - Gen 31, 2023
Data dichiarazione: Gen 14, 2023
Link rapidi
- Risorse recupero: Statale e Locale | Nazionale
- Collegamento: Social Media | App mobile e testo
- Consulenza 24/7: Helpline Difficoltà per calamità
In questa pagina
Ora chiuso: Periodo per richiedere assistenza per i disastri
Ulteriori informazioni su questa calamità
Ora chiuso: Periodo per richiedere assistenza per i disastri
L'ultimo giorno per la richiesta di assistenza da parte di individui e famiglie dopo questo disastro è passato. Non è più possibile iniziare una nuova richiesta.
Per controllare lo stato di una richiesta precedentemente presentata, visitare DisasterAssistance.gov.
Dopo la presentazione della richiesta di assistenza.
Riceverete lettere di notifica dalla FEMA per posta o corrispondenza elettronica. Vi potrebbe essere chiesto di verificare l’identità o completare un controllo della casa. Tutti i controlli saranno condotti per telefono a causa della COVID-19 e la necessità di proteggere la salute dei nostri dipendenti e sopravvissuti.
Opuscoli “Assistenza dopo una calamità”
Tradotto in 27 lingue, l’opuscolo “Assistenza dopo una calamità” è uno strumento che può essere condiviso nella comunità per aiutare a capire i tipi di assistenza FEMA che potrebbero essere disponibili per sostenere gli individui e le famiglie nel recupero dopo una calamità.
Volontariato e donazioni
Il recupero da una calamità può richiedere molti anni. Vi sono molti modi per aiutare, come donazioni in denaro, articoli necessari o tempo. Come aiutare chi ha bisogno di assistenza.
Attività remunerate con FEMA
Se volete fornire servizi remunerati e merce per il recupero dopo calamità, visitate la nostra Pagina attività remunerate con FEMA. visitate la nostra Pagina attività remunerate con FEMA.
Risorse locali
Uffici locali
Notiziari e Media locali
La Pagina Notiziari e Media locali include eventi, schede informative, comunicati stampi e altre risorse multimediali.
Citizenship and FEMA Eligibility
FEMA is committed to helping all eligible disaster survivors recover from Hurricane Ian, including U.S. citizens, non-citizen nationals and qualified aliens.
Learn more about Citizenship and Immigration Status Requirements for Federal Public Benefits
Disaster Recovery Centers (DRC)
Impacted survivors from the approved designated counties can visit the nearest DRC for help to apply for assistance. Representatives from FEMA and U.S. Small Business Administration are available at these centers to explain disaster assistance programs, answer questions about written correspondence and provide literature about repairs and rebuilding to make homes more disaster resistant.
Residents who previously registered for assistance do not need to visit the DRC, but can ask questions or seek further information in person at the DRC in addition to online or by phone.
Save Your Family Treasures
FEMA and the Smithsonian Institution co-sponsor the Heritage Emergency National Task Force, a partnership of more than 60 national service organizations and federal agencies created to protect cultural heritage from the damaging effects of natural disasters and other emergencies.
The Task Force offers the following guidance to help you recover your family treasures from a disaster.
How Do I Appeal the Final Decision?
If you receive a letter stating that you are ineligible for assistance or that your application is incomplete, you can still complete the application or appeal the decision within 60 days of receiving a decision letter. The letter would either be mailed to you or placed into your Disaster Assistance Center account, if you have set up an account.
Frequently Asked Questions and Rumors
Learn more about common disaster-related rumors and how to report fraud. You can also get answers to frequently asked questions about emergency shelters, disaster assistance, flood insurance and more.
Additional Multimedia
Below you can find social media graphics and images with important safety messaging in various languages, including English, Chinese, Spanish and Vietnamese.
- Disaster Support Social Graphics
- American Sign Language (ASL): FEMA Registration Process - Registration
- American Sign Language (ASL): How to Register with Disaster Survivor Assistance
- American Sign Language (ASL): Reasons to Apply for an SBA Loan
- American Sign Language (ASL): Renters May be Eligible for Federal Help
- American Sign Language (ASL): Understanding Your Letter
Verifying Home Ownership or Occupancy
FEMA is required to verify you lived at the address in your application as your primary residence before providing most types of IHP Assistance. FEMA is also required to verify you owned your home before providing Home Repair or Replacement Assistance.
As part of our effort to make the disaster assistance process quicker and reduce the burden on applicants, we try to verify occupancy and ownership by using an automated public records search.
If we cannot verify you lived in or owned the home that you listed in your application, we will ask you to provide documents to prove occupancy and/or ownership to help us determine if you are eligible for assistance.
Obblighi di stanziamenti
Assistenza individuale | Amount |
---|---|
Total Housing Assistance (HA) - Dollars Approved | $33,668,593.98 |
Total Other Needs Assistance (ONA) - Dollars Approved | $3,005,855.20 |
Total Individual & Households Program Dollars Approved | $36,674,449.18 |
Individual Assistance Applications Approved | 7236 |