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NEW YORK - Governor Kathy Hochul has signed a request for a Major Disaster to be declared in New York after the devastation wrought by the remnants of Hurricane Ida.
If approved by President Joe Biden, the declaration would make federal relief funding available to local governments and New Yorkers affected by the storm.
Hochul said that as much as $50M in damage had been done to public property and infrastructure, while 1,200 homes in New York had seen serious impacts from the storm.
RELATED: State of Emergency in NYC, NY, NJ due to historic flooding
Assistance from a Major Disaster Declaration can include grants for temporary housing and home repairs, low-cost loans to cover uninsured property losses, and other programs to help individuals and business owners recover from the effects of the disaster.
According to Gov. Hochul, all displaced New Yorkers will be eligible for relief, regardless of insurance status.
Hochul is also allocated $378M in resiliency funding to assist the most vulnerable communities.
"We will take our engineering teams, our damage surveillance teas, and figure out a game plan to use this money as soon as humanly possible to start fixing the infrastructure," Hochul said.
The city has also opened up service centers in all 5 boroughs to support families impacted by the storm.
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Ida's floodwaters killed at least 11 people in New York. Most of the victims were drowned in basement apartments in New York City.
Biden will travel to New Jersey and New York City on Tuesday to survey damage caused by the storm.
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