Daily Press (Sunday)

Trump signs $19.1B bill, takes credit for aid to Puerto Rico

- By Colby Itkowitz The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump signed a $19.1 billion disaster relief bill Thursday and took credit for aid to Puerto Rico — assistance he had opposed for months that caused long delays in getting help to states.

The package provides billions of dollars to areas struggling to recover from wi l d f i re s, h u r r i c a n e s, flooding and other natural disasters. The House passed the bill Monday and sent it to Trump for his signature.

Trump tweeted a photo of himself holding the signed bill and wrote, “Just signed Disaster Aid Bill to help Americans who have been hit by recent catastroph­ic storms. So important for our GREAT American farmers and ranchers. Help for GA, FL, IA, NE, NC, and CA.”

“Puerto Rico should love President Donald Trump. Without me, they would have been shut out!” he added.

The areas of the country ravaged by natural disasters have waited months for the assistance because Trump pushed back against including more money for Puerto Rico.

Throughout negotiatio­ns, the president accused the Puerto Rican government of mismanagin­g the aftermath of Hurricane Maria in 2017 and claimed the island received more money from the government than it really had.

Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello said that he tried to meet privately with the president to discuss disaster aid, but that Trump refused. Since January, Rossello lobbied hard against the White House’s stonewalli­ng, at one point telling CNN, “If the bully gets close, I’ll punch the bully in the mouth.”

After Hurricane Maria, which Puerto Rico says killed 3,000 people, the Trump administra­tion was criticized for not responding as quickly as it did to Hurricane Harvey in Texas several weeks earlier.

In the disaster relief package, Puerto Rico will receive $1 billion in aid, including $600 million for its food stamp program and $300 million for community block grants.

The legislatio­n, typically bipartisan, was also delayed by internal squabbles among Republican­s, a fight over immigratio­n and, finally, after the Senate passed the bill last month, objections by a handful of conservati­ves in the House who prevented the bill from passing while Congress was out of town for Memorial Day.

As the months passed, additional natural disasters hit and the bill had to be rewritten to address some of them, particular­ly flooding in the Midwest.

In its final form, the legislatio­n will fund numerous federal programs that provide aid and rebuilding assistance to local communitie­s, farmers, service members and others nationwide.

Among many other provisions, the disaster legislatio­n contains $2.4 billion for community developmen­t block grants to address disasters that have occurred since 2017, $3 billion for the Agricultur­e Department to cover producers’ losses from those disasters, and $720 million for the Forest Service to repay money spent fighting last year’s wildfires.

The bill is among the most sweeping pieces of disaster legislatio­n to have been considered by Congress, in the scope of aid and the multitude of disasters addressed.

These included Hurricanes Maria, Florence and Mi c h a e l ; Typhoon Mangkhut, Super Typhoon Yutu and Tropical Storm Gita; wildfires in California; volcanic eruptions in Hawaii; and an earthquake in Alaska.

The magnitude of the legislatio­n underscore­s the recent frequency of extreme weather events in the country.

The bill also extends the National Flood Insurance Program through Sept. 30, and includes a provision pushed by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., to ensure that industrial hemp will be covered by federal crop insurance.

 ?? CARLOS GIUSTI/AP ?? Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello pushed to get President Trump to stop stalling on funding after Hurricane Maria.
CARLOS GIUSTI/AP Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello pushed to get President Trump to stop stalling on funding after Hurricane Maria.

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