Imperial Valley Press

Texas housing program aims to rebuild faster after disaster

- BY JUAN A. LOZANO

HOUSTON — For Houston resident Scenacia Jones, the experience of getting her new home through an innovative way of building post-disaster housing was like an experiment.

Jones and her two children had been living in a shelter for single parents when Hurricane Harvey’s devasting flooding hit the Houston area in August 2017.

All the family’s possession­s were lost after the storage facility they were in flooded.

Desperatel­y looking for a permanent place to live, Jones was approached by organizati­ons behind the housing program known as Rapido, Spanish for fast. Under the program, a temporary modular core unit made up of interlocki­ng wall, roof and floor panels would be built. Jones, her 10-year-old son Nyjel, who is disabled, and 12-year-old daughter Nnaji would live there while the rest of the house was built around them.

The core is about the size of a Federal Emergency Management Agency trailer.

The process took about eight months, and Jones and her children now have a new, three-bedroom home, which looks like any other house.

“It has definitely been an experiment. We tried to keep a positive attitude because at the end of this experiment, we get to live in this beautiful house,” Jones said this week as she gave a tour of her home, the first such Rapido house built in Houston.

The 1,200 to 1,300-square-foot home with a front yard has three bedrooms, a ramp in the front for her son’s wheelchair and a bathroom designed to be handicappe­d-accessible.

Jones’ home, which was built on an empty lot, looks like a newer version of the other bungalow-style homes in the neighborho­od.

The groups behind the Rapido program say their approach will save money and get people into housing more quickly. They’re hopeful a bill signed this week by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott related to disaster planning will be a boost to their efforts.

The Texas General Land Office, in charge of short-term housing recovery efforts in the state after Harvey , says the agency strongly backs new housing innovation­s like Rapido but rule changes would need to occur to free up federal funding to support such ideas.

John Henneberge­r, co-director of Texas Housers, an Austin-based nonprofit that’s one of the groups behind the Rapido program, said funding would be better spent on their program as opposed to FEMA trailers or hotel vouchers, which are typically used to temporaril­y house people after a disaster. Each Rapido home costs about of $145,000 to $150,000, while a FEMA trailer can cost up to $100,000 to buy and set up, Henneberge­r said. At some point, trailers are taken away and the hotel vouchers end, he said.

“If we can build more houses with the same amount of money, it just means more families get a home,” Henneberge­r said. “It’s a win-win.”

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