The catch is the city will have to pay the costs up front and wait for the reimbursement later. The first step in the reimbursement process was for the city and state to declare states of emergency, which both did, with the state declaring it pre-preemptively with approval from President Joe Biden and the city declaring it last week. Though the costs seem insurmountable, if the state reaches its damage threshold of $4.5 million, which Smith expects, the city would be eligible for 75% reimbursement from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and another 10% from the state, obligating the city to pay the remaining 15%. Domain menu for The Enterprise Journal (main)
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