Home / Daily Dose / After Hurricane Michael’s Landfall …
Print This Post Print This Post

After Hurricane Michael’s Landfall …

hurricane storm surgeHurricane Michael, which made landfall on the Florida coast on Wednesday as a Category 4 storm has left a trail of destruction in its wake. The preliminary numbers from CoreLogic estimate that the total damage to insured residential and commercial property due to wind and storm surge after the hurricane’s landfall stood at $3 billion to $5 billion.

Around $0.5 billion to $1 billion is estimated from losses due to storm surge and includes properties covered by the National Flood Insurance Program.

With the estimated damage to properties rising, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) announced on Friday that it would speed federal disaster assistance to Florida by providing support to homeowners and low-income renters affected by the hurricane.

In particular, HUD said that it was offering foreclosure relief and other assistance to families living in Bay, Franklin, Gulf, Taylor, and Wakulla counties, where a major disaster declaration was issued by President Trump recently.

HUD plans to provide immediate foreclosure relief for homeowners with an FHA loan facing foreclosure due to the disaster in these counties. Additionally, HUD said that its Section 203(h) program provided FHA insurance to disaster victims whose homes were destroyed or damaged to such an extent that reconstruction or replacement is necessary “and are facing the daunting task of rebuilding or buying another home. Borrowers from participating FHA-approved lenders are eligible for 100 percent financing, including closing costs.”

For homeowners who have lost their homes, HUD said that its Section 203(k) loan program enabled such homeowners to finance the purchase or refinance of a house along with its repair through a single mortgage. “It also allows homeowners who have damaged houses to finance the rehabilitation of their existing single-family home,” HUD said.

While Florida was the hardest hit with $2.5 billion to $4 billion estimate in wind and storm surge damage, the destruction in Alabama and Georgia was estimated at $0.5 billion to $1 billion.

Read more about the assistance being offered by other agencies:

The Mortgage Industry Braces Itself for Hurricane Michael

About Author: Radhika Ojha

Radhika Ojha is an independent writer and copy-editor, and a reporter for DS News. She is a graduate of the University of Pune, India, where she received her B.A. in Commerce with a concentration in Accounting and Marketing and an M.A. in Mass Communication. Upon completion of her masters degree, Ojha worked at a national English daily publication in India (The Indian Express) where she was a staff writer in the cultural and arts features section. Ojha, also worked as Principal Correspondent at HT Media Ltd and at Honeywell as an executive in corporate communications. She and her husband currently reside in Houston, Texas.
x

Check Also

Federal Reserve Holds Rates Steady Moving Into the New Year

The Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee again chose that no action is better than changing rates as the economy begins to stabilize.