Louisiana Recovery Authority - Paul Rainwater, Executive Director - State of LouisianaThe mission of the Louisiana Recovery Authority is to ensure that Louisiana rebuilds safer, stronger and smarter than before.
Governor Bobby Jindal - State of Louisiana

Recovery Resources for Parishes

Contaminated Drywall Information





Information for Road Home Applicants

Statewide Initiatives
Get A Game Plan
Louisiana Family Recovery Corps - Driving Human Recovery

Home About Us Recovery Task Forces News & Events Facts & Figures Gustav & Ike
E-Mail Print Share
News & Events

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 21, 2009
Contact: Christina Stephens, christina.stephens@la.gov

LRA Board Advances Aid for Road Home Applicants with Contaminated Drywall
Public, affected homeowners invited to comment on $5 million program

BATON ROUGE, La. - The Louisiana Recovery Authority's Board of Directors Wednesday approved a plan to reserve $5 million in federal recovery funding for victims of hurricanes Katrina and Rita who rebuilt under the state's Road Home program and now are affected by contaminated drywall in their homes.

Under the plan, once the federal government has released its testing and remediation protocol for dealing with these drywall problems, Louisiana will use $5 million in federal Community Development Block Grant funds allocated after hurricanes Katrina and Rita to aid homeowners in the Road Home program who now have contaminated drywall problems.

"The problem of contaminated drywall is a national problem, not a Louisiana problem, and we need federal action before the state can move forward to aid Road Home applicants. Without federal guidance on how to test for this drywall and how to remediate a home affected by it, we have no way to effectively move an aid program forward," said Paul Rainwater, LRA executive director. "Our action today allows us to start the state and federal approval process for our plan, which can take several weeks or months, so that we are ready to aid homeowners when the federal government puts forth testing and remediation protocols."

The Road Home program has provided more than $8 billion in rebuilding aid to 125,164 applicants since 2006. Numerous homeowners across the country, including Louisiana residents who rebuilt their homes after hurricanes Katrina and Rita, are affected by contaminated drywall, which can cause health problems and severe damage to air conditioners and other appliances.

Following board approval, the public now can comment on the plan. Citizens, community leaders and elected officials can access the plans and submit comments online by visiting http://www.doa.louisiana.gov/cdbg/dractionplans.htm and opening "Action Plan Amendment No. 37." A copy of the plans can be requested by calling (225) 219-6900.

The public can submit comments several ways:

The board will take up final approval of the action plan amendment at its November meeting, before forwarding it for approval to the Louisiana Legislature and, then, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development for final approval.

FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT CONTAMINATED DRYWALL:

Created in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita in 2005, the Louisiana Recovery Authority (LRA) is the coordinating and planning body leading the most extensive rebuilding effort in American history. The central point for hurricane recovery in Louisiana, the LRA works closely with the Governor's Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness (GOHSEP) and partners with state and federal agencies to oversee more than $20 billion worth of programs, speed the pace of rebuilding, remove hurdles and red tape and ensure that Louisiana recovers safer and stronger than before. 

###

Related Info


Add RSS Feed