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Disaster Relief Fund State of Play: In Brief (CRS Report for Congress)

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Release Date Revised Oct. 9, 2024
Report Number R47676
Report Type Report
Authors William L. Painter
Source Agency Congressional Research Service
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  • Premium   Revised Aug. 13, 2024 (14 pages, $24.95) add
  • Premium   Revised July 25, 2024 (13 pages, $24.95) add
  • Premium   Revised Oct. 16, 2023 (14 pages, $24.95) add
  • Premium   Revised Sept. 19, 2023 (11 pages, $24.95) add
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Summary:

The Disaster Relief Fund (DRF) is one of the most-tracked single accounts funded by Congress each year. It is the primary source of funding for the federal government’s domestic general disaster relief programs. The DRF receives appropriations in excess of the annually requested level through annual and supplemental appropriations on a frequent basis. Even so, FEMA has projected that the unobligated balance available to pay the costs associated with major disaster declarations would be inadequate from the beginning of the fiscal year. This occurred both in FY2023 and in FY2024. On August 7, 2024, FEMA announced the implementation of immediate needs funding (INF) restrictions, slowing obligations for long-term recovery and mitigation projects in favor of preserving resources for response and recovery activities. The last time these restrictions were implemented was on August 29, 2023. FEMA had, from the beginning of FY2023, projected a shortfall in funding for major disaster costs. Delaying more than $8 billion of long-term recovery and mitigation obligations prevented depletion of the DRF before then end of the fiscal year. After the DRF received interim budget authority for FY2024, and a supplemental appropriation of $16 billion, the INF restrictions were lifted on October 2, 2023. Three weeks later, the Biden Administration requested $9 billion in supplemental appropriations for the DRF, to cover another anticipated shortfall, caused in part by catastrophic disaster activity and the shift of delayed project costs into the next fiscal year. It would also restore a $2 billion reserve intended to pay immediate response costs from an otherwise unanticipated large incident. The Administration’s request was not addressed before the enactment of FY2024 annual appropriations in March 2024. Once the annual level of appropriations was set for the fiscal year, FEMA reported a projected shortfall of nearly $7.4 billion for the DRF major disasters subaccount, with the subaccount being depleted in August 2024. While the size of the estimated end-of-year shortfall has declined slightly to $6.77 billion as of July 31, disaster activity remains unpredictable and additional large and recent disasters, such as Hurricane Debby, are not included in the projections. This report summarizes • what the DRF is used for, and how its structure reflects that; • how it is funded; • its recent funding history; and • why it remains reliant on supplemental appropriations even when its budget request is met or exceeded, as was the case in FY2023. More detailed history and policy discussion of the DRF is included in CRS Report R45484, The Disaster Relief Fund: Overview and Issues.