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entitled 'Disaster Housing: FEMA Needs More Detailed Guidance and 
Performance Measures to Help Ensure Effective Assistance after Major 
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Report to Congressional Requesters: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

August 2009: 

Disaster Housing: 

FEMA Needs More Detailed Guidance and Performance Measures to Help 
Ensure Effective Assistance after Major Disasters: 

GAO-09-796: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-09-796, a report to congressional requesters. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Concerns over the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) Federal 
Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) provision of temporary housing 
assistance, including travel trailers at group sites, after the 2005 
hurricanes led to the development of the National Disaster Housing 
Strategy. GAO was asked to assess (1) the challenges households faced 
in transitioning to permanent housing, (2) the extent to which FEMA 
measured its performance in closing and transitioning households in 
group sites, (3) the strategy’s effectiveness in defining FEMA’s roles 
and responsibilities for closing and transitioning households in group 
sites, and (4) the alternatives to travel trailers in group sites and 
how well the strategy assessed them. GAO reviewed the strategy and 
interviewed officials from FEMA, state agencies, and selected nonprofit 
and housing research groups. 

What GAO Found: 

Households living in FEMA group sites encountered various challenges in 
transitioning to permanent housing. A significant challenge cited by 
several reports and officials GAO contacted was the availability of 
affordable rental housing. Other challenges that were cited included 
insufficient financing to fund repairs of homes, significantly higher 
insurance premiums, and the availability of full-time employment to 
support disaster victims’ return to permanent housing. 

FEMA’s overall effectiveness in measuring its performance in closing 
and transitioning households in group sites was limited because the 
agency’s measures do not provide information on program results that 
would be helpful in gauging whether the program is achieving its goal. 
Previously, GAO reported that performance measures should be aligned 
with program goals and cover the activities that an entity is expected 
to perform to support the purpose of the program. However, FEMA’s 
performance measures for Katrina and Rita group sites primarily 
describe program outputs and do not provide information on results, 
such as the timeliness or efficiency of closing group sites and 
transitioning households into permanent housing. Having such 
information could help identify potential problems in meeting goals and 
could be used to make decisions about resources needed and steps to be 
taken. 

The National Disaster Housing Strategy broadly defines FEMA’s roles and 
responsibilities for closing group sites and assisting households with 
the transition into permanent housing. Although the strategy states 
that FEMA is responsible for closing group sites and assisting 
households find permanent housing, the strategy does not reflect the 
key characteristics of effective national strategies and plans that GAO 
identified in prior work. For example, the strategy does not explain 
how FEMA will work with other agencies in closing these sites and 
transitioning households into permanent housing. A lack of a detailed 
plan that includes information on the steps FEMA needs to take to 
assist households with transitioning into permanent housing could lead 
to delays in the future in helping disaster victims return to more 
stable and conventional living arrangements. 

Officials contacted and reports reviewed by GAO identified a number of 
housing options that could serve as alternatives to travel trailers in 
group sites—for example, providing rental assistance for existing 
housing and repairing damaged rental housing. However, FEMA’s strategy 
does not assess alternatives, in part, because evaluations are ongoing. 
Also, it does not provide clear guidance on the specific temporary 
housing options that states can use instead of travel trailers while 
FEMA completes these evaluations. Without more specific information on 
what these temporary housing options are, including alternatives to 
travel trailers, state officials will not have the information needed 
to expedite the selection of temporary housing options. As a result, 
FEMA and the states may not be fully prepared to quickly respond to the 
temporary housing needs of those displaced by major disasters. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that the Secretary of the Department of Homeland 
Security direct FEMA to (1) develop results-oriented performance 
measures for assistance in group sites, (2) update its planning 
documents to reflect key characteristics of effective national 
strategies and plans, and (3) clearly describe in FEMA’s guidance how 
travel trailers or other options identified by the states can be 
deployed when other preferred options are not available. FEMA generally 
agreed with GAO’s recommendations. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-796] or key 
components. For more information, contact Mathew J. Scirè at (202) 512-
8678 or sciremj@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

Households in FEMA Group Sites Have Faced Various Challenges in 
Returning to Permanent Housing: 

FEMA Reports Basic Activities in Closing Group Sites, but Efforts to 
Measure Results Are Limited: 

The Housing Strategy Defines FEMA's Roles and Responsibilities for 
Closing Group Sites, but Does Not Have Key Characteristics of an 
Effective Strategy: 

FEMA's Strategy Does Not Identify Alternatives or Provide Clear 
Guidance on Using Currently Available Options: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security: 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Acknowledgments: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Examples of Manufactured Housing and Recreational Vehicles: 

Figure 2: Temporary Housing Unit Placed on a Private Site in New 
Orleans, Louisiana: 

Figure 3: Temporary Housing Units Placed at a FEMA Group Site in 
D'Iberville, Mississippi: 

Figure 4: Geographic Dispersion of FEMA Group Sites Following 
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita: 

Figure 5: Predisaster Tenure Status of Households Living in FEMA Group 
Sites: 

Figure 6: Comparison of Group Site Household Reported Average Income 
with Statewide Average Income in Calendar Year 2005: 

Figure 7: HUD Fair Market Rents for a Two-Bedroom Unit in Selected Gulf 
Coast Metropolitan Areas, Fiscal Years 2005-2009: 

Figure 8: Unemployment Rates in Selected Gulf Coast Metropolitan Areas: 

Figure 9: Performance Measurement Model: 

Abbreviations: 

AHPP: Alternative Housing Pilot Program: 

CDBG: Community Development Block Grant: 

DHAP: Disaster Housing Assistance Program: 

DHS: Department of Homeland Security: 

FEMA: Federal Emergency Management Agency: 

FRRATS: FEMA Response and Recovery Applicant Tracking System: 

GCRO: Gulf Coast Recovery Office: 

GO Zone: Gulf Opportunity Zone Act of 2005: 

GPRA: Government Performance and Results Act of 1993: 

HFA: Housing Finance Agency: 

HUD: Department of Housing and Urban Development: 

JHSG: Joint Housing Solutions Group: 

LIHTC: Low-Income Housing Tax Credit: 

MSA: metropolitan statistical area: 

NEMIS: National Emergency Management Information System: 

NIMBY: not in my backyard: 

OIG: Office of Inspector General: 

VA: Department of Veterans Affairs: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

August 28, 2009: 

The Honorable Joseph I. Lieberman: 
Chairman: 
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Mary L. Landrieu: 
Chair: 
Subcommittee on Disaster Recovery: 
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

In August 2005, Hurricane Katrina destroyed or made uninhabitable an 
estimated 300,000 homes, leaving thousands of people in need of 
temporary housing across the Gulf Coast region of the United States. 
Hurricane Rita added to the devastation in September 2005. The Federal 
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), whose mission includes leading the 
federal response to natural disasters, provided direct housing 
assistance to about 143,500 households affected by these storms-- 
primarily in the form of temporary housing units, such as travel 
trailers or manufactured homes. In most cases, FEMA placed households 
in units on private property near their homes so that they had a place 
to live close by while making repairs. However, FEMA also placed about 
25,000 households in units at more than 700 group sites, including 
temporary sites that the agency constructed on stadium grounds and 
school fields and preexisting trailer parks.[Footnote 1] More than 3 
years after the storms, FEMA has moved most households from nearly all 
of these sites, but 348 households continued to live in 101 group sites 
located in Louisiana and Mississippi as of June 18, 2009. 

In 2006, Congress enacted the Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform 
Act (Post-Katrina Act), which included several provisions related to 
FEMA's efforts to provide housing assistance to individuals affected by 
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and future disasters.[Footnote 2] The act 
also directed FEMA to develop a national disaster housing strategy to 
outline the most efficient and cost-effective federal programs for 
meeting the short-and long-term housing needs of individuals and 
households affected by a major disaster. 

You asked GAO to review several issues related to the federal 
government's efforts to assist households with recovering and 
rebuilding their lives following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, 
particularly its efforts for those households living in travel trailers 
in group sites. This report focuses on FEMA's efforts to help these 
households move to permanent housing.[Footnote 3] Specifically, this 
report examines (1) challenges that households living in group sites 
faced in transitioning to permanent housing[Footnote 4]; (2) the extent 
to which FEMA effectively measured its performance in closing group 
sites and assisting households with transitioning into permanent 
housing; (3) the National Disaster Housing Strategy's effectiveness in 
defining FEMA's roles and responsibilities for closing group sites and 
assisting households with transitioning to permanent housing; and (4) 
the alternatives to travel trailers in group sites when providing 
temporary housing after major disasters, how they compare with respect 
to identified policy factors, and how well FEMA's National Disaster 
Housing Strategy assessed these alternatives. 

To identify challenges that households living in group sites faced in 
transitioning to permanent housing, we examined reports related to the 
federal government's response to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and its 
efforts to provide housing assistance in group sites. We also 
interviewed officials from federal, state, and local governments and 
nonprofit organizations to obtain their perspectives on the challenges 
that these households faced. To assess the extent to which FEMA 
effectively measured its performance in closing group sites and 
assisting households that lived in these sites with transitioning into 
permanent housing, we examined annual performance plans, weekly 
performance reports, and other documents related to the measures that 
FEMA developed to assess its performance and compared these measures 
with the key characteristics of successful performance measures 
identified in prior GAO work. To determine the National Disaster 
Housing Strategy's effectiveness in defining FEMA's roles and 
responsibilities for closing group sites and assisting households that 
lived in these sites with transitioning to permanent housing, we 
reviewed FEMA's strategies, policies and procedures, and relevant 
legislation that describe FEMA's authority to provide direct housing 
assistance. Additionally, we drew upon our prior work to compare the 
relevant sections of the strategy with the characteristics of an 
effective national strategy. To determine the alternatives to travel 
trailers in group sites and examine how they aligned with identified 
policy factors, such as cost-effectiveness and efficiency, we reviewed 
prior government and academic reports and interviewed officials from 
FEMA, state housing agencies in the Gulf Coast region, and selected 
nonprofit and housing research groups. We also reviewed the strategy to 
determine how well it assessed alternatives to group sites in terms of 
the identified policy factors. We tested the reliability of certain 
FEMA data we discuss in this report as part of a previous study and 
found the data to be reliable. We determined that the other data we 
discuss in this report were sufficiently reliable for our purposes. 

We conducted this performance audit from January 2008 through August 
2009, in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. Appendix I 
discusses our scope and methodology in more detail. 

Background: 

The Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act 
(the Stafford Act) grants the principle authority for the President to 
provide assistance in mitigating, responding to, and preparing for 
disasters and emergencies, such as earthquakes, hurricanes, floods, 
tornadoes, and terrorist acts.[Footnote 5] FEMA administers the 
Stafford Act and provides direct housing assistance (e.g., travel 
trailers and manufactured homes) under its Individuals and Households 
Program. FEMA provides these units at no charge to disaster victims who 
cannot use financial assistance to rent alternate housing because such 
housing is not available. The Stafford Act limits direct housing 
assistance to an 18-month period, after which FEMA may charge rents at 
the fair market rent levels established by the Department of Housing 
and Urban Development (HUD), but the President can also extend the 
initial 18-month period because of extraordinary circumstances. 
[Footnote 6] 

According to FEMA guidance, manufactured housing and recreational 
vehicles are the two most common forms of temporary housing units (see 
figure 1). Manufactured housing is factory-built housing designed for 
long-term residential use. The term "mobile home" is sometimes used to 
refer to manufactured homes. In addition, this type of housing must be 
located on sites that are not in a designated floodplain area. 
Recreational vehicles, which include park model and travel trailers, 
are designed for short-term use when no other options are available. 
Following a disaster, the units may be a short-term housing option for 
households wanting to remain on an existing property or nearby while 
permanent housing is being restored, but the terrain or lot size 
prevents deployment of manufactured housing. A park model, which is 
generally larger than a travel trailer, is built on a single chassis, 
mounted on wheels, and has 400-square feet or less of living space. 

Figure 1: Examples of Manufactured Housing and Recreational Vehicles: 

[Refer to PDF for image: three photographs] 

Two-bedroom manufactured (mobile) home; 
Park model; 
Travel trailer. 

Source: FEMA (top: Patsy Lynch; middle: Susie Shapira; bottom: Mark 
Wolfe). 

[End of figure] 

FEMA can place temporary housing units on a private site or in a group 
site configuration. 

* Private site: Temporary housing unit is placed on an individual's 
private property if the site is feasible and the local authorities 
approve. The unit can also be placed on individual private property 
that is not owned by the applicant, if the owner allows FEMA to place 
the unit at no cost to the agency (see figure 2). 

Figure 2: Temporary Housing Unit Placed on a Private Site in New 
Orleans, Louisiana: 

[Refer to PDF for image: photograph] 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] 

* Group site: Temporary housing unit is placed at a site that FEMA has 
built to house multiple households. FEMA built these sites in open 
space locations, including parks, playgrounds, ball fields, and parking 
lots following Hurricane Katrina (see figure 3). FEMA can also place 
units at a commercial manufactured housing or recreational vehicle park 
that already has utilities (water, electric, and sewer/septic) for 
existing lots. The park management must be willing to lease the lots to 
FEMA at a fair and reasonable cost for the area. According to FEMA, the 
agency's policy is to use existing commercial parks whenever possible, 
rather than to build sites. 

Figure 3: Temporary Housing Units Placed at a FEMA Group Site in 
D'Iberville, Mississippi: 

[Refer to PDF for image: photograph] 

Source: FEMA (Mark Wolfe). 

[End of figure] 

FEMA placed temporary housing units on private sites for about 115,400 
(80 percent) of the households that received direct housing assistance 
following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. FEMA placed about 25,000 
households that received such assistance in temporary housing units at 
group sites located across Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas. 
Figure 4 illustrates the geographic dispersion of these sites. 

Figure 4: Geographic Dispersion of FEMA Group Sites Following 
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita: 

[Refer to PDF for image: map] 

Map of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Eastern Texas, depicting 
the geographic dispersion of FEMA group sites, in the following four 
categories: 

0; 
1 to 10; 
11 to 20; 
21 or more. 

Sources: FEMA (data); MapInfo (map). 

[End of figure] 

Most of the households that FEMA placed in group sites following 
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita reported being predisaster renters. Figure 
5 shows that about 72 percent of group site households in Louisiana and 
an even higher percentage of group site households in Mississippi 
(about 84 percent) reported being predisaster renters. In comparison, 
renters made up less than one-third of all households in both states 
prior to the hurricanes. 

Figure 5: Predisaster Tenure Status of Households Living in FEMA Group 
Sites: 

[Refer to PDF for image: four pie-charts] 

Louisiana: Group sites; 
Predisaster renters: 71.9%; 
Predisaster homeowners: 28.0%. 

Louisiana: Statewide; 
Predisaster renters: 32.2%; 
Predisaster homeowners: 67.8%. 

Mississippi: Group sites; 
Predisaster renters: 83.5%; 
Predisaster homeowners: 16.3%. 

Mississippi: Statewide; 
Predisaster renters: 30.1%; 
Predisaster homeowners: 69.9%. 

Source: FEMA (group site data); Census Bureau (statewide data). 

[End of figure] 

Households in FEMA Group Sites Have Faced Various Challenges in 
Returning to Permanent Housing: 

Households living in FEMA group sites encountered a variety of 
challenges in transitioning to permanent housing. According to 
officials we contacted and reports we reviewed, many of the households 
that lived in group sites following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita had low 
incomes, were elderly, or had a disability.[Footnote 7] As a result, 
these households were likely to experience difficulties in finding and 
transitioning to permanent housing. FEMA expects disaster victims who 
receive housing assistance to take an active role in finding housing 
and rebuilding their lives. Specifically, FEMA requires households 
receiving this type of assistance to develop within a reasonable amount 
of time a plan for moving into permanent housing that is similar to 
their predisaster housing.[Footnote 8] However, according to some 
officials we contacted, households living in group sites were not able 
to plan their recovery and were likely to face difficulties in 
accessing aid from federal programs--a problem that was exacerbated by 
the disaster--because these households were the hardest to serve. 
According to these officials, these households generally required 
additional services or assistance to support their transition into 
permanent housing. 

Specifically, our prior work found that although the majority of heads 
of households reported being employed when they applied for FEMA 
assistance, approximately 65 percent reported earning less than 
$20,000.[Footnote 9] About one-fifth reported no income and some of 
these individuals were retired or had disabilities. As shown in figure 
6, the reported average income of households on group sites in 
Louisiana and Mississippi was about $24,000 and $30,000, respectively, 
or less than one-half of the Louisiana state average and less than two- 
thirds of the Mississippi state average. According to FEMA, these 
limited means led to concerns among some households about moving out of 
the sites and finding housing that they could afford. Furthermore, some 
of these households could not afford either security deposits for a 
rental unit or furniture. 

Figure 6: Comparison of Group Site Household Reported Average Income 
with Statewide Average Income in Calendar Year 2005: 

[Refer to PDF for image: horizontal bar graph] 

Group site location: Mississippi; 
Average reported income: $45,000; 
Group site mean income: $28,000. 

Group site location: Louisiana; 
Average reported income: $50,700; 
Group site mean income: $24,000. 

Source: FEMA (group site income); Census Bureau (statewide income). 

[End of figure] 

FEMA also said that households facing these challenges may be more 
reluctant to find and pay for permanent housing. While FEMA does not 
update demographic data on households on group sites to reflect current 
employment status or income levels, agency officials stated that those 
who remained in the sites the longest were the hardest-to-serve people, 
including the unemployed, elderly, or persons with disabilities. 

In the following sections, we describe other challenges that households 
living in group sites may have likely faced in transitioning to 
permanent housing. Although these other challenges are not unique to 
group site households and affected disaster victims in the Gulf Coast 
region, many of these challenges would likely have a more acute impact 
on households living in group sites. 

Availability of Affordable Rental Housing Was a Key Challenge in 
Transitioning to Permanent Housing: 

According to several federal and state officials we contacted and 
reports we reviewed, one commonly cited challenge displaced households 
faced was finding affordable rental housing, since rents increased 
significantly following the storms in certain Gulf Coast metropolitan 
areas. For example, HUD's fair market rent for a two-bedroom unit in 
the New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner metropolitan area increased from $676 
to $1,030, or about 52 percent, between fiscal years 2005 and 2009 (see 
figure 7). In addition, HUD's fair market rent for a two-bedroom unit 
in the Gulfport-Biloxi metropolitan area increased from $592 to $844, 
or about 43 percent, over the same time period. Figure 7 also shows 
that the Beaumont-Port Arthur and Mobile metropolitan areas experienced 
relatively smaller increases in fair market rent between fiscal years 
2005 and 2009 (about 22 and 20 percent, respectively). Rents did not 
increase as much as in Beaumont-Port Arthur as they did in New Orleans- 
Metairie-Kenner or Gulfport-Biloxi, because relatively high vacancy 
rates prior to fiscal year 2005 likely softened the effect of the 
permanent loss of rental units and temporary removal of rental units 
from the market following Hurricane Rita.[Footnote 10] In comparison, 
average rents in cities nationwide increased by about 12 percent from 
fiscal years 2005 through 2008 (the last year for which data are 
available), according to the Consumer Price Index. 

Figure 7: HUD Fair Market Rents for a Two-Bedroom Unit in Selected Gulf 
Coast Metropolitan Areas, Fiscal Years 2005-2009: 

[Refer to PDF for image: vertical bar graph] 

Fiscal year: 2005; 
Metropolitan area: Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: $554; 
Metropolitan area: Mobile, Alabama: $561; 
Metropolitan area: Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: $592; 
Metropolitan area: New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: $676. 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
Metropolitan area: Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: $570; 
Metropolitan area: Mobile, Alabama: $567; 
Metropolitan area: Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: $615; 
Metropolitan area: New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: $696. 

Fiscal year: 2007; 
Metropolitan area: Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: $593; 
Metropolitan area: Mobile, Alabama: $590; 
Metropolitan area: Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: $640; 
Metropolitan area: New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: $978. 

Fiscal year: 2008; 
Metropolitan area: Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: $645; 
Metropolitan area: Mobile, Alabama: $628; 
Metropolitan area: Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: $811; 
Metropolitan area: New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: $990. 

Fiscal year: 2009; 
Metropolitan area: Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: $676; 
Metropolitan area: Mobile, Alabama: $671; 
Metropolitan area: Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: $844; 
Metropolitan area: New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: $1,030. 

Source: HUD. 

[End of figure] 

Two key factors that contributed to these higher rents were a decreased 
supply of affordable rental units and an increased demand for undamaged 
rental units. Specifically, according to estimates by FEMA, Hurricanes 
Katrina and Rita caused major or severe damage to 112,000 rental units 
across the Gulf Coast region. According to HUD, 75 percent of the 
damaged rental units were occupied by low-income households. An 
increased demand for rental units also contributed to rent increases. 
According to The Urban Institute, this demand was driven by 
construction workers who moved to the area to accelerate recovery and 
by displaced renters and homeowners who needed temporary rental units 
in the area while their homes were being repaired.[Footnote 11] 

FEMA staff working to assist households living in group sites cited 
additional difficulties that group site households faced in finding 
permanent housing following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. For example, 
some households reported to FEMA that there was a lack of available 
affordable rental housing in areas where they wanted to remain, 
particularly in some small towns. Other households reported to FEMA 
that while they were able to find rental housing, the units were either 
not habitable or located in unstable or abandoned neighborhoods. 

Limitations in Developing Affordable Rental Housing with Federal 
Subsidies: 

Also affecting the limited supply of rental housing were the following 
two factors: the slow pace of rental housing construction under key 
federal programs and the decision by states to focus the majority of 
federal funds on repairing homeowner units, rather than rental units. 
The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) program provides an incentive 
for the development of rental housing that is affordable to low-income 
households and has been a major source of such housing. State housing 
finance agencies (HFA) must award credits to developers of qualified 
projects, and developers either use the credits or sell them to 
investors to raise capital (i.e., equity).[Footnote 12] The equity 
raised by the tax credits reduces the need for debt financing, and, as 
a result, these properties can offer lower, more affordable rents. 
After the 2005 hurricanes, Congress passed the Gulf Opportunity Zone 
Act of 2005 (GO Zone), which temporarily increased the amount of 
allocated tax credits for the five states along the Gulf Coast by a 
total of about $330 million.[Footnote 13] 

We reported in July 2008 that although the Gulf Coast states had 
awarded nearly all of their GO Zone LIHTCs, few of the units funded by 
these credits were in service as of April 2008.[Footnote 14] Since that 
time, Louisiana and Mississippi, which received the largest amounts of 
GO Zone authority, have each placed additional units in service. 
However, neither state had placed more than 35 percent of planned units 
in service as of December 2008. While LIHTC-funded units are generally 
required to be placed in service within 2 years of credit allocation, 
Congress extended this requirement for units funded with GO Zone 
LIHTCs, which must be placed in service before January 1, 2011. 
According to HFA officials, the declining market value of tax credits 
has reduced the amount of equity developers receive from investors for 
each dollar in tax credit awarded.[Footnote 15] As a result, developers 
must seek additional funding sources to make up for the equity 
shortfall, contributing to significant delays in closings, according to 
state officials. Other issues that have impeded the timely development 
of LIHTC units include the need to address environmental issues and 
increases in the total costs to develop projects because of the high 
costs of labor, materials, insurance, and land. 

Much of the disaster assistance provided through HUD's Community 
Development Block Grant (CDBG) program, which provides flexible relief 
and recovery grants to devastated communities, was targeted to 
homeowners, with a small percentage of program funds set aside for 
owners of rental properties.[Footnote 16] Between December 2005 and 
November 2007, Congress appropriated a total of $19.7 billion in 
disaster CDBG funds to states affected by the 2005 hurricanes, of which 
not less than $1 billion was designated to repair or replace the 
affordable rental housing stock, including public and HUD-assisted 
housing.[Footnote 17] Local and state officials exercise a great deal 
of discretion in determining the use of the funds under this program. 
Three states (Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas) used most of the CDBG 
funds to implement homeowner assistance grant programs to help 
homeowners cover the gap between their available financial resources 
and the cost to repair and replace their damaged dwellings. For 
example, as of January 2009, Louisiana had targeted $10.5 billion in 
CDBG funds (out of the total $13.4 billion) to housing assistance 
programs, and, of this amount, the state targeted about $8.6 billion, 
or 86 percent, to the Road Home Program (the state's Homeowner 
Assistance Program). In contrast, the state set aside about $1.3 
billion, or 13 percent, of its housing allocation for programs that 
targeted rental housing. Furthermore, while about 7 percent of the 
Homeowner Assistance Program funds remained unexpended as of the 
beginning of 2009, 80 percent of the funds set aside for rental housing 
had not been spent. 

Public housing agencies have faced considerable challenges in obtaining 
funding for the recovery of public housing units. Public housing is an 
important source of affordable housing for low-income households in the 
Gulf Coast region. The Gulf Coast states experienced a decline in the 
number of available units as a result of the storms, especially in the 
New Orleans area. Prior to Hurricane Katrina, the Housing Authority of 
New Orleans managed over 7,000 units of public housing in 10 different 
developments. Hurricane Katrina damaged about 80 percent of these units 
(approximately 5,600 units). In the aftermath, HUD officials stated 
that the department did not have sufficient program funds to repair and 
rebuild these units, and that the public housing agencies did not have 
sufficient insurance to cover the costs.[Footnote 18] 

A large portion of households that were displaced by the Gulf Coast 
hurricanes were renters, and given the challenges faced in developing 
affordable rental housing with federal subsidies, concerns have been 
raised about differences in the treatment of homeowners and rental 
property owners. GAO is conducting a separate review to (1) identify 
the federal assistance for permanent housing that was provided to 
rental property owners and to homeowners affected by the Gulf Coast 
hurricanes, (2) examine the extent to which federally funded programs 
responded to the needs of rental property owners and homeowners, and 
(3) describe the differences in the challenges faced in utilizing 
federal assistance for permanent housing and the options to mitigate 
these challenges. 

Community Resistance to the Development of Affordable Housing: 

According to many officials we contacted, another significant obstacle 
to building affordable rental housing was opposition to the development 
of such housing by local communities--a problem typically referred to 
as "not in my backyard" or "NIMBY." Opposition by local residents and 
public officials to specific types of housing in their neighborhood or 
communities is a long-standing issue in the development of affordable 
housing. Communities typically resist the development of affordable 
rental housing because of concerns about potential adverse impact on 
property values and community characteristics. Such opposition can 
manifest itself in restrictive land-use and development regulations 
that add to the cost of housing or discourage the development of 
affordable housing altogether. During the period after the Gulf Coast 
hurricanes, some officials we contacted and reports we reviewed 
explained that local opposition had slowed and, in some instances, 
stopped the development of affordable rental housing. For example, a 
nonprofit organization had planned to use LIHTCs to build an apartment 
complex for low-income elderly households in New Orleans to replace a 
complex destroyed by the hurricanes. However, according to an official 
from a New Orleans nonprofit organization, the local government passed 
a resolution that prohibited LIHTC developments and also engaged in a 
land-use study at the site of the proposed development that appeared to 
be timed to terminate the project. A report on the status of 
Mississippi's housing recovery efforts since the Gulf Coast hurricanes 
cited NIMBY as one of the key barriers to addressing the state's 
projected shortfall in the number of affordable rental housing units 
that it had planned to restore under the LIHTC program.[Footnote 19] 

Rebuilding Costs, Escalating Insurance Premiums, and Unemployment Also 
Affected Disaster Victims' Efforts to Return to Permanent Housing: 

On the basis of our discussions with officials and review of reports, 
we found that disaster victims encountered other challenges in 
returning to permanent housing, including households living in group 
sites. First, several sources indicated that disaster victims who owned 
homes faced significant challenges in financing repairs. For example, 
according to a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Office of 
Inspector General (OIG) report, a December 2007 survey of FEMA field 
staff in Louisiana indicated that homeowners faced financial obstacles, 
including insufficient insurance coverage and limited Road Home Program 
funding, in repairing their homes.[Footnote 20] Similarly, a 2008 study 
of the post-Katrina housing recovery in Louisiana found that nearly 
three-fourths of Road Home applicants would still face a gap between 
their rebuilding resources and the cost to rebuild, leaving them short 
of the resources needed to repair their dwellings.[Footnote 21] The DHS 
OIG report also found that high construction costs, competition for 
available contractors, and new disaster mitigation requirements 
compounded these financial problems.[Footnote 22] According to some 
sources, the longer time frames and increased construction costs to 
repair damaged dwellings also impacted landlords, which in turn 
increased housing costs for renters. 

A second commonly cited challenge that disaster victims faced in 
returning to permanent housing was significantly higher insurance 
premiums. According to a report from the Louisiana Housing Finance 
Agency, premiums for homeowners insurance escalated to as much as four 
times their pre-Katrina level for certain areas in Louisiana that were 
severely impacted by the storm, putting insurance out of reach for most 
low-and moderate-income households.[Footnote 23] According to some 
officials we contacted, some landlords passed the escalating costs of 
insurance to rental households through increased rents. In addition, 
some insurance companies suspended sales of new homeowner policies in 
all or parts of the Gulf Coast region following Hurricanes Katrina and 
Rita, making it increasingly difficult for households to obtain 
insurance coverage in these areas. 

Finally, many households faced challenges in finding full-time 
employment to support a return to permanent housing. Following 
Hurricane Katrina in late August 2005 and Hurricane Rita in September 
2005, unemployment rates increased significantly across the Gulf Coast 
region. For example, the unemployment rate in the New Orleans-Metairie- 
Kenner metropolitan area increased from 4.9 percent in August 2005 to 
more than 15.2 percent in September 2005, and the unemployment rate 
remained above pre-Katrina levels until March 2006 (see figure 8). In 
the Gulfport-Biloxi metropolitan area, the unemployment rate increase 
following the storm was more significant, since the rate increased from 
5.8 percent in August 2005 to more than 23.2 percent in September 2005. 
Moreover, the unemployment rate remained above pre-Katrina levels for 1 
year following the storm. 

Figure 8: Unemployment Rates in Selected Gulf Coast Metropolitan Areas: 

[Refer to PDF for image: multiple line graph] 

Date: August, 2005; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 7.1%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 5.8%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 4.5%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 4.9%; 
United States: 4.9%. 

Date: September, 2005; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 7.1%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 23.2%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 4.9%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 15.2%; 
United States: 5%. 

Date: October, 2005; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 11.5%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 21.9%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 4.1%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 15.5%; 
United States: 5%. 

Date: November, 2005; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 8.3%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 19.4%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 3.7%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 15.9%; 
United States: 5%. 

Date: December, 2005; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 7.2%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 16.9%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 3.5%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 8.1%; 
United States: 4.8%. 

Date: January, 2006; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 6.9%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 16.5%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 4%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 6.5%; 
United States: 4.7%. 

Date: February, 2006; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 6.4%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 14.2%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 3.9%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 5.1%; 
United States: 4.8%. 

Date: March, 2006; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 6.1%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 12.1%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 3.4%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 4.7%; 
United States: 4.7%. 

Date: April, 2006; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 5.8%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 12%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 3%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 4%; 
United States: 4.7%. 

Date: May, 2006; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 5.8%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 11.3%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 3.1%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 4.1%; 
United States: 4.7%. 

Date: June, 2006; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 5.8%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 10.2%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 4.2%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 4.9%; 
United States: 4.6%. 

Date: July, 2006; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 6.5%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 10%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 4.3%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 3.9%; 
United States: 4.7%. 

Date: August, 2006; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 6%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 8.3%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 4.3%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 4%; 
United States: 4.7%. 

Date: August, 2007; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 5.5%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 4.9%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 4.1%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 3.6%; 
United States: 4.7%. 

Date: August, 2008; 
Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas: 6.7%; 
Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi: 6.3%; 
Mobile, Alabama: 5.5%; 
New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana: 4.7%; 
United States: 6.2%. 

Source: Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics. 

[End of figure] 

In 2008, we reported that approximately 21 percent of those households 
living in group sites reported no source of employment, and that some 
of those households reported having a disability or being retired. 
[Footnote 24] While FEMA did not update data on group site residents to 
reflect current employment status, some state and FEMA officials we 
contacted said that those who remained in the sites the longest were 
those with limited income and limited choices to find stable 
employment, including the elderly and persons with disabilities. 
Similarly, according to an April 2007 survey of FEMA group sites in 
Louisiana, more than two-thirds of the respondents were unemployed, and 
most of these respondents were not looking for employment.[Footnote 25] 
Most of those respondents not looking for employment said they were 
disabled or had major health limitations. 

FEMA Reports Basic Activities in Closing Group Sites, but Efforts to 
Measure Results Are Limited: 

FEMA's overall effectiveness in measuring its performance in closing 
group sites and transitioning households into permanent housing was 
limited. While FEMA made some efforts to measure its progress, its 
measures did not provide the information on program results that was 
needed to assess the agency's performance in achieving its goal of 
"helping individuals and communities affected by federally declared 
disasters return to normal functioning quickly and efficiently." Under 
the provisions of the Government Performance and Results Act of 1993 
(GPRA), federal agencies are required to measure and report the 
performance of their programs.[Footnote 26] GPRA was designed to inform 
congressional and executive decision making by providing objective 
information on the relative efficiency and effectiveness of federal 
programs and spending. Previously, we have reported that for 
performance measures to be useful, they should be linked or aligned 
with program goals, cover the activities that an entity is expected to 
perform to support the program's purpose, and have a measurable target. 
[Footnote 27] These measures can capture several aspects of 
performance, including activities, outputs, outcomes, and impact (see 
figure 9). Based on our past work, federal agencies have faced 
challenges in identifying program goals and performance measures that 
go beyond summarizing program activities (e.g., the number of clients 
served) to distinguishing desired outcomes or results (e.g., improving 
economic self-sufficiency among clients served).[Footnote 28] As figure 
9 shows, having measures that describe outcomes and impact helps 
describe the extent to which the program is effective in achieving its 
policy objectives. In the past, we have found that performance measures 
are an important results-oriented management tool that can enable 
managers to determine the extent to which desired outcomes are being 
achieved. Results-oriented measures further ensure that it is not the 
task itself being evaluated, but progress in achieving the intended 
outcome.[Footnote 29] 

Figure 9: Performance Measurement Model: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

Policy and program content: 
* Government policies and priorities; 
* Department/Agency mission, goals; 
* Program mandate and objectives. 

Five measurable aspects of performance: 

Inputs: 
* Dollars; 
* Staff; 
* Technology; 
* Capital. 

Activities: 
* Work tasks; 
* Functions; 
* Program support. 

Outputs: 
* Goods and services
* Other products directed at external clients. 

Outcomes: 
* Client benefits
* Program consequences. 

Impact: 
* Direct or indirect effects or consequences. 

Underlying dimensions of performance measurement: 

Measures of economy: 
* Budget variance; 
* Resource utilization. 

Measures of productivity/efficiency: 
* Quantity (input/output ratios); 
* Quality (according to standards); 
* Cost (unit cost of output). 

Measures of effectiveness: 
* Client reach; 
* Client satisfaction; 
* Social/Economic impacts; 
* Contribution to objectives. 

Source: Adapted from the Office of Management and Budget. 

[End of figure] 

FEMA's Performance Measures Focus on Program Activities at Group Sites, 
but Do Not Convey Information on Results: 

FEMA's performance measures for group sites are output measures that 
focus on the core program activity of closing group sites. But the 
measures do not provide the information on program results that is 
needed to assess the agency's performance in achieving its goal of 
"helping individuals and communities affected by federally declared 
disasters return to normal functioning quickly and efficiently." 
[Footnote 30] The Post-Katrina Act required that FEMA develop 
performance measures to help ensure that it provided timely and 
efficient housing assistance to individuals and households displaced by 
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.[Footnote 31] In September 2007, FEMA began 
publicly reporting data on a weekly basis to provide information on the 
housing assistance that the agency provided, including at group sites. 
Specifically, FEMA reported general data on the aggregate number of 
households that moved out of travel trailers, park models, or mobile 
homes and into other types of FEMA housing assistance or that were no 
longer in FEMA's program. However, these data do not provide 
information on whether households moved to permanent housing and are 
not reported by the specific type of site (e.g., group site). FEMA also 
reported data specific to group sites showing, for example, that FEMA 
provided temporary housing to 24,960 households, at one point, at these 
sites. These measures indicated that as of April 9, 2009, 577 
households continued to live in group sites located in Louisiana and 
Mississippi.[Footnote 32] 

These measures describe program outputs--that is, information on the 
number of sites established, current number of sites, number of 
households that lived in group sites, and current number of households--
but do not provide information on results, such as successfully moving 
households to permanent housing, or on qualitative factors, such as the 
timeliness or efficiency of the assistance FEMA provided at group 
sites. The difficulties experienced in closing group sites and 
transitioning households to permanent housing--as we have previously 
discussed--underscore the need to develop measures that describe how 
efficiently and effectively the program is addressing its goal of 
"helping individuals and communities affected by federally declared 
disasters return to normal functioning quickly and efficiently." 
[Footnote 33] For example, one potential measure could capture 
information on the amount of time households live in group sites before 
returning to permanent housing, and FEMA could establish a numerical 
target that facilitates the future assessment of whether its overall 
goal and objective were achieved. Having such information can help 
identify potential problems in meeting program goals and could be used 
to make management decisions about resources needed and steps to be 
taken. 

In its annual performance plans, FEMA also reports the percentage of 
customers that are satisfied with its disaster assistance programs. 
Although this measure may be a useful overall metric for assessing 
agency efforts on the quality of assistance provided to program 
beneficiaries, it is of limited use in assessing the agency performance 
in operating group sites because it is not reported separately for 
assistance provided through group sites. In the absence of other 
performance indicators to measure the efficiency or effectiveness and 
numeric targets, it is not possible to determine whether the disaster 
assistance programs are achieving the program goal of "helping 
individuals and communities affected by federally declared disasters 
return to normal functioning quickly and efficiently." 

According to FEMA officials, the agency has not developed results- 
oriented performance measures, in part, because of the uniqueness and 
unpredictable circumstances of each disaster. We recognize that the 
circumstances can vary significantly from one disaster to another, and 
that FEMA generally provides housing assistance in group sites as a 
last resort and following catastrophic disasters, such as Hurricanes 
Katrina and Rita. Nevertheless, FEMA could leverage its experiences and 
lessons learned from its responses to past major disasters to identify 
potential measures of the agency's performance in closing group sites. 
Such measures could be modified as needed to reflect actual conditions 
and types of assistance deployed. In fact, FEMA has designed 
performance measures for other types of assistance that may vary from 
one disaster to another. Specifically, according to FEMA officials, the 
agency has developed some potential outcome measures for other 
activities (such as case management services). For example, FEMA 
reports on the number of households that have achieved their recovery 
plans and, therefore, no longer need case management. 

FEMA officials also told us that they recognized the importance of 
results-based measures and would like to develop them for measuring 
housing assistance provided at group sites. Furthermore, the National 
Disaster Housing Strategy recognizes that it is important to develop 
performance measures to achieve the agency's national goals, and that 
feedback on performance will enable those involved in the national 
effort to assess progress, adopt best practices, and make course 
corrections.[Footnote 34] Nonetheless, FEMA has yet to specify whether 
and when it will develop outcome measures for group site assistance. 
Without performance measures that reflect program results and that are 
clearly linked to the agency's goals, FEMA cannot demonstrate program 
results and progress in achieving intended policy objectives. Although 
not all disasters may require the use of group sites, future major 
disasters that involve protracted recovery efforts may have to rely on 
such sites to provide temporary housing. As the experience from the 
2005 hurricanes show, there will be a strong demand for results- 
oriented measures on the part of Congress in fulfilling its oversight 
responsibilities and holding FEMA accountable for its performance. 

The Housing Strategy Defines FEMA's Roles and Responsibilities for 
Closing Group Sites, but Does Not Have Key Characteristics of an 
Effective Strategy: 

The Post-Katrina Act was enacted to address various shortcomings 
identified in the preparation for and response to Hurricane Katrina. 
[Footnote 35] Among other things, the Post-Katrina Act required the 
FEMA Administrator, in coordination with specified federal and 
nonfederal government agencies--including the American Red Cross, HUD, 
the National Advisory Council, and the National Council on Disability-
-to develop, coordinate, and maintain a national disaster housing 
strategy to help plan and protect the nation against future 
catastrophes. Among other things, FEMA was to outline the most 
efficient and cost-effective federal programs that will best meet the 
short-and long-term housing needs of individuals and households 
affected by a major disaster and describe plans for the operation of 
group sites provided to individuals and households. FEMA was to provide 
the strategy to Congress by July 1, 2007. On July 21, 2008, FEMA 
released a draft strategy, with a 60-day comment period. However, the 
draft strategy did not include seven annexes that were to describe, 
among other things, the agency's plans for operating group sites. 
Instead, the draft included seven blank pages of annexes marked "Under 
Development."[Footnote 36] 

On January 16, 2009, FEMA released the final version of the National 
Disaster Housing Strategy, with annexes attached containing the 
information that had been omitted from the draft strategy. The strategy 
states that it serves two purposes--to describe how the nation 
currently provides housing to those affected by disasters and, more 
importantly, to chart a new direction that disaster housing efforts 
must take to better meet the emerging needs of disaster victims and 
communities. The strategy includes a discussion of key principles, 
roles and responsibilities, current practices, and future directions 
for the three phases of disaster housing (sheltering, interim housing, 
and permanent housing).[Footnote 37] 

As we have previously mentioned, the Post-Katrina Act mandated that 
FEMA develop a disaster housing strategy, including plans for operating 
group sites. In earlier work, we identified certain key characteristics 
of effective national strategies and plans. For example, in 2007, we 
assessed the federal government's preparedness to lead a response to an 
influenza pandemic and reported that effective national strategies and 
plans should contain certain key characteristics. Among these are: 
[Footnote 38] 

* the agencies responsible for implementing the strategy or plan, the 
roles of the lead and supporting agencies, and mechanisms for 
coordination among the agencies; 

* the types of resources required--funding, staffing, and training--to 
effectively implement the strategy or plan and the means of acquiring 
these resources; and: 

* the constraints and challenges involved in implementing the strategy 
or plan. 

* The Disaster Housing Community Site Operations Annex, which is one of 
seven attachments of the National Disaster Housing Strategy, states 
that FEMA is responsible for closing group sites and assisting 
households in transitioning to permanent housing, but it did not fully 
address these key characteristics of an effective national strategy. 

The Strategy and Community Site Operations Annex Partially Address 
Roles and Responsibilities: 

We previously reported that a national strategy should address which 
organizations would implement the strategy, their roles and 
responsibilities, and mechanisms for coordinating their efforts. The 
strategy should answer the fundamental questions about who is in 
charge, not only during times of crisis, but also during all phases of 
emergency management, as well as the organizations that will provide 
the overall framework for accountability and oversight. This 
characteristic entails identifying the specific federal agencies and 
offices involved and, where appropriate, the different sectors, such as 
state, local, and private. 

The National Disaster Housing Strategy's Disaster Housing Community 
Site Operations Annex, which discusses the issue of closing group 
sites, partially addresses this characteristic. The annex contains 
information on FEMA's roles and responsibilities for closing group 
sites and assisting households in transitioning to permanent housing. 
[Footnote 39] Specifically, it states that FEMA will assist with 
finding and matching rental resources to households living at these 
sites that were renting homes or apartments before the event and track 
the progress of repairs to damaged or destroyed homes owned by affected 
households. The annex also states that FEMA will provide access to 
local, state, and federal agencies that could help affected households 
with their unmet needs. 

However, the annex does not explain how other federal or state agencies 
will be involved in completing the tasks associated with transitioning 
a group site household to permanent housing and what mechanisms will be 
used to coordinate with these agencies in ensuring that victims can 
find a permanent housing unit. Furthermore, the annex does not reflect 
some of the experience that FEMA gained in responding to Hurricanes 
Katrina and Rita regarding coordinating with other agencies. For 
example, in response to widespread concerns about both the long periods 
that displaced households were living in group sites and the health 
issues associated with the trailers on those sites, FEMA developed the 
2007 FEMA Gulf Coast Recovery Office Housing Action Plan, which states 
that the agency would work with HUD to identify households that were 
receiving HUD assistance prior to the 2005 hurricanes. The plan also 
states that FEMA would transition the remaining households living in 
group sites into HUD's Disaster Housing Assistance Program (DHAP), 
which is a pilot federal housing assistance grant program that provides 
temporary rental assistance through local public housing agencies that 
are experienced in administering other federal housing assistance. 
[Footnote 40] According to the National Disaster Housing Strategy, 
HUD's and FEMA's experience with DHAP demonstrates that rental 
assistance administered through HUD's existing network of public 
housing agencies is an effective way to meet the long-term housing 
needs of displaced families following a disaster. Nonetheless, the 
National Disaster Housing Strategy does not specify HUD's role in 
transitioning households out of group sites and into permanent housing. 

The Strategy and Annex Do Not Address Resources Required: 

An effective national strategy should identify and describe the sources 
and types of resources required, such as funding, staff, and training, 
to effectively implement the strategy. Guidance on the costs and 
resources needed helps implementing parties allocate resources 
according to priorities, track cost, and shift resources, as 
appropriate, among other competing demands. Furthermore, the National 
Disaster Housing Strategy itself states that effective strategies 
identify the means or resources to achieve the strategies' goals. 
However, we found that neither the strategy itself nor the Disaster 
Housing Community Site Operations Annex contained these elements. 
Specifically, the documents do not address the cost of helping 
households transition to permanent housing, the staffing resources that 
would be needed to complete this task, the type of training that should 
be provided to staff assigned to this task, and the sources (e.g., HUD; 
FEMA; or other federal, state, local, or private agencies) of the 
resources necessary to achieving FEMA's goal of closing group sites and 
transitioning households into permanent housing. 

Again, the annex does not reflect some of the experience that FEMA 
gained in responding to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. For example, in 
response to these hurricanes, FEMA's Mississippi and Louisiana 
Transitional Recovery Offices developed housing plans that discussed 
some of the resources needed to assist households with transitioning 
out of group sites and into permanent housing.[Footnote 41] The 
Louisiana Transitional Recovery Office's housing plan's staffing 
strategy was designed to create a more effective labor force and labor 
mix to meet specific needs of the disasters, including mobilizing more 
experienced individuals with targeted functional skills sets. 
Similarly, the Mississippi Transitional Recovery Office's housing plan 
provides information on the number of staff available to help 
households transition to permanent housing and states that no 
additional staff will be needed to complete this task. Furthermore, 
both of these plans emphasize the importance of providing training to 
their staffs to successfully assist affected households transition to 
permanent housing. In contrast, the National Disaster Housing Strategy 
does not identify and describe the resources needed, including staffing 
and training, to effectively transition group site households into 
permanent housing. 

The Strategy and Annex Do Not Address Constraints and Challenges: 

Finally, an effective strategy should reflect a clear description and 
understanding of the problems to be addressed, their causes, and 
operating environment. A disaster housing strategy should discuss the 
constraints and challenges involved in closing group sites in the 
aftermath of a catastrophic incident, such as potential shortages in 
available permanent housing, and anticipate solutions to these 
challenges. However, the National Disaster Housing Strategy does not 
describe or anticipate challenges associated with helping people find 
permanent housing after a catastrophic event. In the past, FEMA has 
recognized the need to do so in order to help households move out of 
group sites. For example, FEMA's November 2007 Gulf Coast Recovery 
Office Housing Action Plan described the specific challenges involved 
in closing the sites that were established after Hurricanes Katrina and 
Rita and the mechanisms available to address these challenges. For 
example, the plan states that households that have been living in group 
sites would be reluctant to move to unfurnished rental units, and that 
FEMA was to work with voluntary or other governmental agencies to 
provide furniture to the households. 

According to FEMA officials, the annex and strategy did not include the 
characteristics that we have previously discussed because these 
documents were meant to provide an overarching framework of FEMA's 
process. Furthermore, officials said that it was difficult to outline 
the specific resources needed and the particular challenges FEMA could 
face in closing group sites and assisting households with the 
transition into permanent housing, mainly because each disaster 
presents unique needs and challenges. We previously identified the need 
for documents supporting a key strategy or plan, such as an annex, to 
contain detailed and robust information on how these plans are going to 
be implemented. For example, in February 2006, we reported that 
although the National Response Plan--which was revised in March 2008 
and is now known as the National Response Framework--envisions a 
proactive national response in the event of a catastrophe, the nation 
did not yet have the types of detailed plans needed to better delineate 
capabilities that might be required and how such assistance will be 
provided and coordinated.[Footnote 42] We agree that no national 
strategy can anticipate and specify the precise resources and 
responsibilities appropriate for every circumstance. Nonetheless, this 
does not preclude FEMA from identifying the range of resources and 
responses appropriate for most circumstances. FEMA could leverage its 
experiences and lessons learned from responses to past major disasters 
in order to anticipate the types of challenges that could arise and the 
resources needed to address them. 

In 2007, we reported that the resources of certain federal agencies 
were not fully addressed in the National Response Plan, and that this 
hampered the ability of FEMA to provide leadership in coordinating and 
integrating overall federal efforts associated with housing assistance. 
[Footnote 43] The absence of detailed information in the housing 
strategy and its Disaster Housing Community Site Operations Annex on 
the partnerships that FEMA needs to form, the resources it needs, and 
the mechanisms that FEMA is to use to address the challenges specific 
to a catastrophic disaster when closing group sites and transitioning 
households to permanent housing can lead to delays in helping disaster 
victims return to more stable and conventional living arrangements. 
Lack of such plans may have contributed to the fact that more than 3 
years after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, 348 households continued to 
live in group sites as of June 18, 2009.[Footnote 44] 

FEMA's Strategy Does Not Identify Alternatives or Provide Clear 
Guidance on Using Currently Available Options: 

Although several temporary housing options could offer alternatives to 
travel trailers, FEMA's National Disaster Housing Strategy does not 
identify alternatives to travel trailers or provide clear guidance on 
what other temporary housing options are available to states. In our 
discussions with officials and reports we reviewed, we identified 
various alternatives to travel trailers in group sites, many of which 
are already authorized under the emergency and temporary housing 
provisions of the Stafford Act that FEMA has used in recent disasters, 
including Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. FEMA's National Disaster Housing 
Strategy does not assess alternatives to travel trailers because 
evaluations are ongoing, nor does it provide clear guidance on what 
other temporary housing options states should use instead of travel 
trailers while FEMA completes these assessments. Such assessments could 
be useful to states that are responsible for identifying and selecting 
temporary housing options after a major disaster. 

Several Temporary Housing Options Could Offer Alternatives to Travel 
Trailers: 

Alternatives to the use of travel trailers can be grouped into three 
broad categories of options, including (1) utilizing existing available 
housing, (2) repairing damaged rental housing, and (3) providing direct 
housing. 

Utilizing Existing Available Housing: 

Current FEMA programs utilize existing available housing through 
emergency and financial assistance under sections 403 and 408 of the 
Stafford Act. Under section 403, FEMA provides direct grants to state 
and local governments, which use the grants to provide emergency 
shelter to households displaced from their residences following major 
disasters. Emergency shelters can include hotels and apartment rentals. 
The Stafford Act does not impose specific time limits on section 403 
assistance, and FEMA's regulations generally restrict the amount of 
time to a maximum of 6 months. Although the purposes of emergency 
sheltering and temporary housing are different,[Footnote 45] according 
to several sources, when the availability of temporary housing options 
is limited, allowing households to remain in emergency shelters until 
they can move to more suitable temporary or permanent housing options 
may be preferable.[Footnote 46] Under section 408, FEMA has the 
authority to provide assistance for households to rent an apartment or 
other housing accommodations. 

Such assistance is also being provided through a pilot program modeled 
after HUD's Housing Choice Voucher program, a rental subsidy program 
that serves more than 2 million low-income, elderly, and disabled 
households nationwide and is administered by local public housing 
agencies. In the summer of 2007, FEMA and HUD entered into an 
interagency agreement to pilot a federal housing assistance grant 
program, DHAP, to temporarily extend rental assistance for victims 
displaced by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The program is funded by 
FEMA, but is administered by selected public housing agencies that are 
currently administering a HUD-funded housing choice voucher program. In 
the fall of 2008, FEMA deployed a modified DHAP following Hurricanes 
Ike and Gustav. While DHAP is a pilot program, in the National Disaster 
Housing Strategy, FEMA recommended that Congress give HUD legislative 
authority to create a permanent DHAP-like program. According to the 
strategy, HUD's and FEMA's experience with the DHAP pilot demonstrated 
that rental assistance administered through HUD's existing network of 
local public housing agencies is an effective way to meet the long-term 
housing needs of displaced families following a disaster. 

Citing HUD's experience with rental assistance programs, some of the 
officials we contacted and reports we reviewed have found that 
temporary rental housing assistance should be modeled after HUD's 
Housing Choice Voucher program. In particular, several of these sources 
noted HUD's experience with its voucher program in responding to 
disaster victims displaced by the 1996 Northridge Earthquake in Los 
Angeles, California. Vouchers allowed households displaced by this 
disaster to live in existing rental apartments of their choice. One 
report cited that if this specific temporary housing option had been 
deployed after the 2005 Gulf Coast hurricanes, FEMA could have deployed 
fewer travel trailers.[Footnote 47] The choice and mobility that the 
housing voucher program has to offer to disaster victims and the help 
that the victims receive in locating rental housing were the reasons 
generally cited by the sources for using this type of program for 
providing temporary housing after a major disaster. However, this 
option is not currently authorized under the Stafford Act provisions. 
[Footnote 48] 

Repairing Damaged Rental Housing: 

Because of the limited number of rental units available following a 
major disaster and the amount of time required to construct new rental 
housing, a vital component of quickly bringing disaster victims back to 
the area is to repair damaged rental properties. Helping rental 
property owners quickly make repairs to existing properties could 
increase the number of available rental units.[Footnote 49] In past 
disasters, FEMA has been reluctant to be directly involved in the rapid 
repair of damaged rental housing, partly because the agency does not 
view housing construction as part of its core mission. However, the 
extent of destruction to the housing stock following the Katrina and 
Rita disasters highlighted the need to increase the availability of 
rental housing. As a result, the Post-Katrina Act established a pilot 
program authorizing FEMA to repair rental housing located in areas 
covered by a major disaster.[Footnote 50] The rental pilot, known as 
the Individuals and Households Pilot Program, permits FEMA to enter 
into lease agreements with owners of multifamily rental properties and 
to repair damaged properties to meet federal housing quality standards. 
The repaired apartments are to be rented to displaced households for at 
least 18 months (or longer, if necessary). 

In response to the midwest floods and Hurricane Ike, in September and 
December 2008, FEMA implemented pilots in Iowa and Texas, respectively. 
Specifically, FEMA selected apartments in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and 
within this property funded the repair of seven two-bedroom units and 
in Galveston, Texas, funded the repair of 32 units. FEMA's authority 
for the pilot program expired at the end of 2008. In accordance with 
the act, FEMA was to evaluate the effectiveness of the program and to 
report its findings to Congress at the end of March 2009, including any 
recommendations to continue the pilot program or to make the program a 
permanent housing option. In May 2009, FEMA issued a report on the 
pilot program, which stated that additional analysis and 
recommendations on whether to make the program permanent would be 
provided at a later date. Some officials we contacted and reports we 
reviewed mentioned that the federal government needs to do more to 
rapidly repair existing rental housing damaged during a major disaster 
to increase the rental stock available to disaster victims in the 
immediate area. An official from a nonprofit organization we contacted 
viewed the rapid repair of damaged rental units as an effective way to 
help households transition back to permanent housing more quickly, 
potentially reducing the need for longer stays in temporary housing 
options, such as travel trailers in group sites, which are not meant to 
be a long-term option. 

Providing Direct Housing: 

When rental housing is unavailable, FEMA has traditionally provided 
direct housing assistance to households displaced by major disasters, 
as it did after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Such assistance has 
included trailers and manufactured housing units that can be placed on 
homeowners' property or on group sites. Travel trailers had been an 
important means of providing temporary housing after major disasters 
because the magnitude of these events limits the effectiveness of other 
options. FEMA can provide such assistance under section 408 of the 
Stafford Act and may also provide housing units owned or subsidized by 
other federal agencies, such as HUD and the Department of Veterans 
Affairs (VA), through agreements with these agencies. 

Travel trailers as direct housing assistance have been a standard part 
of FEMA's recovery operations in disasters prior to the 2005 hurricanes 
and were intended for short-term use, but safety concerns involving the 
travel trailers used after the 2005 disasters led FEMA to change its 
policy.[Footnote 51] The agency's 2008 disaster housing plan and the 
National Disaster Housing Strategy indicate that FEMA will no longer 
use group sites for the placement of travel trailers.[Footnote 52] 
Under current policies, FEMA will authorize the use of travel trailers 
only upon the request of the affected state when no other form of 
temporary housing is available. FEMA will also impose other 
restrictions on travel trailers, including that they be used only on 
private sites for no longer than 6 months and only after the state has 
determined that the trailers meet acceptable formaldehyde levels. In 
2008, FEMA developed new performance specification requirements for all 
future temporary housing units purchased, including travel trailers, to 
eliminate the use of materials that emit formaldehyde.[Footnote 53] 
Finally, FEMA will continue to authorize group sites as a last resort 
for the placement of manufactured housing units. Although FEMA's policy 
restricts trailers on group sites, several sources agreed that FEMA 
should use travel trailers or trailers on group sites as a last resort 
and only for a short period of time. Lots where these sites are located 
should be small and close to the displaced victims' communities, with 
access to needed services. 

Utilizing government-owned or subsidized housing following a major 
disaster is another possible alternative, but this form of assistance 
tends to play a supportive role to other temporary housing options, 
since the number of units that could be utilized in a disaster tends to 
be relatively small. Under the Stafford Act, FEMA will enter into an 
agreement with other federal agencies, such as the U.S. Department of 
Agriculture, HUD, and VA, that own or subsidize property that could be 
used to provide temporary housing to disaster victims. For example, in 
response to Hurricane Katrina, about 10,000 federally owned or 
subsidized units were used to house disaster victims, including 5,600 
HUD-owned single-family properties. According to FEMA, it encountered 
difficulties verifying that housing units offered by support agencies 
after Hurricane Katrina were indeed available for disaster victims. The 
National Disaster Housing Strategy indicates that since Katrina, the 
federal government has made some progress in cataloging available 
housing inventory through a number of online databases, potentially 
making it easier for FEMA to identify available units following a 
disaster. 

With Each Temporary Housing Option Involving Trade-offs, a Mix of 
Options Will Likely Be Needed to Respond to a Major Disaster: 

Temporary housing options involve trade-offs that policymakers should 
consider in providing temporary housing assistance. The limitations 
involved in these trade-offs are magnified during a major disaster--for 
example, when much of the existing housing stock is severely damaged or 
destroyed and recovery efforts take years to complete. FEMA's National 
Disaster Housing Strategy points to several key factors that should be 
considered when assessing the relative efficiency and effectiveness of 
temporary housing options, such as total cost and deployment time. We 
identified three key factors that we used to assess how trailers in 
group sites compared with possible alternative temporary housing 
options: cost, availability, and suitability. 

Cost: 

Cost involves the total cost to the government for purchasing, 
installing, maintaining, and (if applicable) deactivating the housing 
unit over the period of use. Based on information presented in a 2008 
DHS OIG report, the average unit cost for trailers in group sites 
ranged from about $75,000 to $84,000, depending on whether FEMA 
purchases units that have to be manufactured or units that already 
exist.[Footnote 54] Based on reports we reviewed, utilizing existing 
rental housing is generally considered to be a cost-effective approach 
for providing housing assistance, and, according to FEMA, it is less 
costly when compared with trailers in group sites. The principal cost 
to the government of existing housing is the monthly rents, which, 
under the section 408 program, are based on the fair market rent-level 
established by HUD. According to several sources, when compared with 
trailers, repairing damaged housing could cost less, and furthermore 
the benefits of repairs would be realized over a longer period of time. 
In a May 2009 report, FEMA estimated that completing rapid repairs and 
making monthly operating payments to two sites in Iowa and Texas were 
substantially less expensive than deploying and operating manufactured 
units over a similar period of time.[Footnote 55] 

Availability: 

Determining whether temporary housing options are available after a 
disaster occurs is a key consideration in assessing the viability of 
the options. Although utilizing existing housing is generally FEMA's 
preferred way of providing temporary housing after a major disaster, 
there may not be sufficient housing available in the affected area to 
house displaced victims. At the same time, although disaster victims 
could be relocated to areas outside of the disaster area, FEMA 
officials said that victims generally prefer to remain near the 
affected area. Another obstacle that affects the availability of 
utilizing existing housing is the willingness of landlords to 
participate in the program. No information is available on the time 
required to repair damaged housing, and the current pilot program is 
not permanently authorized and may not be available in future 
disasters. If authorized, rental repair programs could potentially be 
deployed quickly, provided that funding was available and property 
owners were willing to participate. As we have previously stated, FEMA 
will no longer place travel trailers on group sites following a major 
disaster. However, the extent to which FEMA will still use travel 
trailers in other sites and the availability of trailers is unclear. 
Specifically, while the strategy and FEMA policy state that trailers 
will be used as a last resort when other temporary housing options are 
unavailable, a recent report by the Senate Ad Hoc Subcommittee on 
Disaster Recovery included an acknowledgment by FEMA officials that the 
agency will continue to use trailers in large numbers in responding to 
temporary housing needs following a catastrophic disaster.[Footnote 56] 
One FEMA official also acknowledged that the agency did not currently 
have sufficient housing resources to meet the demands of a large-scale 
event. Although FEMA awarded four contracts in April 2009 for the 
manufacture of low-emission travel trailers, the number of units 
contracted may not be sufficient to address housing needs after a major 
disaster, based on the number of units that were required in the Gulf 
Coast after the 2005 hurricanes.[Footnote 57] 

Suitability: 

Temporary housing options must also meet the needs of affected 
households, including proximity to work and access to health and social 
services. Existing housing generally provides the households with a 
choice of housing units that meet their needs and generally allows for 
longer stays. Furthermore, as it does with the DHAP program, FEMA could 
use existing administrative networks (such as public housing agencies) 
to help find suitable housing. When sufficient existing housing is not 
available, rapid repair of damaged rental housing offers some of the 
same advantages of using existing housing, including the possibility of 
longer stays. In terms of suitability, trailers in group sites are the 
least-preferred option. Concerns about trailers in group sites after 
the 2005 hurricanes often focused on the long-term use of this option 
in sites that were isolated and lacked access to needed services. 
[Footnote 58] Although FEMA plans not to use trailers in group sites, 
several sources stated that these trailers are most suitable when they 
are used for a short period of time in proximity to the victims' 
communities, allow for access to needed services, and do not pose 
health and safety risks to the occupants. 

While the temporary housing options discussed in this report can serve 
as possible alternatives to travel trailers in group sites, several of 
the officials we contacted and reports we reviewed agreed that no 
single alternative was best suited to providing temporary housing after 
a major disaster. According to some of these sources, officials should 
consider a mix of housing options that are determined to be most 
efficient, effective, and specific to the circumstances of the 
disaster. 

FEMA's Disaster Housing Strategy Neither Assesses Alternatives to 
Trailers Nor Provides Clear Guidance on What Options States Can Use 
Instead of Trailers: 

FEMA's National Disaster Housing Strategy does not assess alternatives 
to trailers because evaluations are ongoing, nor does it provide clear 
guidance on what other temporary housing options states should use 
instead of trailers while FEMA completes these assessments. Such 
assessments could be useful to states that are responsible for 
identifying and selecting temporary housing options after a major 
disaster. In accordance with the Post-Katrina Act and as part of the 
strategy, FEMA was to identify the most efficient and cost-effective 
federal programs for meeting the short-and long-term housing needs of 
households affected by a major disaster. In describing these programs 
in the strategy, FEMA: 

* identified currently available options for providing temporary 
housing after a major disaster under the housing assistance provision 
of FEMA's section 408 program, such as rental assistance to disaster 
victims in existing privately owned rental properties and temporary 
housing units, such as mobile homes; 

* described a number of factors that were relevant in selecting and 
deploying temporary housing options, including relative costs, 
implementation time, and program funding levels; and: 

* provided a broad framework of how states were to consider these 
factors in selecting specific temporary housing options--for example, 
FEMA characterized the section 408 rental assistance provision as more 
efficient as long as rental housing was available and the direct 
assistance provision as less efficient due to the time needed to 
activate units, such as mobile homes. 

The strategy describes ongoing initiatives that FEMA has undertaken 
since Hurricanes Katrina and Rita to identify alternative forms of 
temporary housing. These initiatives include the Alternative Housing 
Pilot Program (AHPP), which was created in 2006 to identify, implement, 
and evaluate disaster housing alternatives to travel trailers.[Footnote 
59] According to FEMA officials, the evaluation process will continue 
through 2011, at which time FEMA will issue a final report to Congress. 
FEMA also established in 2006 the Joint Housing Solutions Group (JHSG) 
to identify, among other things, viable alternatives to travel trailers 
and manufactured homes by working with manufacturers of these units. 
[Footnote 60] FEMA has not established an estimated completion date for 
this effort. 

The strategy is unclear regarding when travel trailers could be used 
following a major disaster or what other temporary housing options 
states should use instead of trailers while FEMA completes its 
assessments. Specifically, the strategy indicates that travel trailers 
will continue to be used as a last resort; however, it does not 
describe the specific conditions where trailers would be a viable 
option or those situations where trailers should not be used. In 
addition, the strategy does not recommend an option (or options) that 
would replace trailers and would be deployable on the scale needed to 
respond to a major disaster while it considers alternatives to 
trailers. In its March 2008 report, DHS OIG also raised concerns about 
how FEMA plans to temporarily house disaster victims for future 
catastrophic events.[Footnote 61] According to the OIG, FEMA needs to 
develop and test new and innovative catastrophic disaster housing plans 
to deal with the large-scale displacement of households for extended 
periods of time. In addition, in its February 2009 report on the 
federal government's disaster housing response after Hurricanes Katrina 
and Rita, the Senate Ad Hoc Subcommittee on Disaster Recovery concluded 
that FEMA has not planned sufficiently to replace travel trailers. 
[Footnote 62] According to the report, FEMA does not offer a substitute 
for mass trailers when other forms of temporary housing are 
unavailable, as can happen after major disasters. 

Not only did the January 2009 strategy not specify what other temporary 
housing options states should use instead of trailers, prior FEMA 
guidance also did not communicate clearly to states and others on the 
use of trailers in future disasters. Since Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, 
FEMA's policies have been inconsistent regarding the use of travel 
trailers. For example, FEMA issued interim guidance in July 2007 that 
temporarily suspended the use of travel trailers while the agency 
worked with health and environmental experts to assess air quality and 
health-related concerns. On the basis of the preliminary results of 
this assessment, FEMA's revised guidance in March 2008 stated "it will 
not deploy travel trailers" as a temporary housing option. A month 
later, FEMA's Administrator told Congress that the agency was never 
going to use travel trailers again, yet 2 months later FEMA changed its 
policy to allow limited use of travel trailers. According to that 
guidance issued in June 2008, trailers would remain an option upon a 
state's request in extraordinary disaster conditions when no other form 
of temporary housing is available. The guidance also indicated that 
FEMA would no longer enter into contracts for the manufacture of travel 
trailers. However, FEMA awarded four contracts in April 2009 for the 
manufacture of low-emission travel trailers. 

Given all of the changes in guidance on the use of trailers since the 
Gulf Coast hurricanes, FEMA did not ensure the strategy clarified its 
policies and provided sufficient details so that states understand the 
extent to which trailers (as well as other options) are available and 
practicable for future disasters. Officials from Texas and Louisiana 
with whom we spoke also agreed that the strategy did not clearly 
describe the circumstances under which temporary housing options could 
be used in responding to the needs of disaster victims and did not 
identify alternatives for options that could not be used. Louisiana 
officials, for example, told us that the strategy provided a good 
overview on the categories of assistance available to states following 
a major disaster. However, these descriptions lacked information on the 
specific situation or circumstance that would "trigger" when a 
particular option could be used, according to the officials. 
Furthermore, the officials noted that reference in the strategy 
regarding the options being currently available to meet the needs of 
disaster victims was misleading for some of the options described. In 
particular, the officials did not believe that the use of innovative 
forms of temporary housing should have been included as a current 
practice for housing disaster victims following major disasters because 
new options, including alternatives to travel trailers, were not yet 
available to the states for future disasters. 

Without more specific information on interim alternatives to travel 
trailers while FEMA continues to conduct its assessments, state 
officials will not have the information needed to choose those that 
would be most effective and expedite decision making. As a result, FEMA 
and the states may not be fully prepared to respond to the temporary 
housing needs of those displaced by major or even catastrophic events. 
The absence of clear guidance for state officials on the most 
appropriate housing options and the lack of specific options to replace 
travel trailers can lead to delays in deciding on what forms of 
temporary housing assistance to deploy. 

Conclusions: 

FEMA began reporting basic performance measures about closing group 
sites in the Gulf Coast region after the 2005 hurricanes, but these 
measures did not provide information on the effectiveness of the 
program in meeting its goals. As we have previously reported, it is 
important for federal agencies to identify performance measures that go 
beyond summarizing program activities. We have found that performance 
measures focused on results are most effective in assessing the 
achievement of policy objectives. FEMA officials agree that developing 
measures that focus on results is critical, and, with the establishment 
of the National Disaster Housing Strategy, FEMA will have an 
opportunity to develop such measures consistent with the strategy in 
future disasters. We recognize that each disaster presents its own 
unique set of challenges, but FEMA can leverage its experiences and 
lessons learned from its responses to past major disasters to identify 
a range of potential measures of the agency's performance in closing 
group sites and assisting households with transitioning to permanent 
housing. Furthermore, the agency can modify such measures as needed to 
reflect the realities of future disasters. Having results-oriented 
measures, such as the amount of time that households live in group 
sites before returning to permanent housing, and developing numerical 
targets can help identify potential problems in meeting program goals 
and could be used to make decisions about resources needed and actions 
to be taken. Without measures that reflect program results and clearly 
link to the agency's goals, FEMA will not be able to demonstrate 
program results and progress in achieving its intended objectives. 

The completion of the National Disaster Housing Strategy and the 
Disaster Housing Community Site Operations Annex is an important step 
in the agency's efforts to more clearly describe its roles and 
responsibilities for closing group sites and assisting households with 
the transition into permanent housing. However, these documents lack 
several key characteristics for an effective strategy and plan. As a 
result, their usefulness as a management tool for ensuring that FEMA 
meets its goal of helping households find safe and suitable permanent 
housing after a disaster is limited. For example, because the strategy 
and the annex do not address the roles and responsibilities of other 
federal and state agencies in closing group sites and transitioning 
households into permanent housing, stakeholders and the public may not 
have a full understanding of their role and responsibilities. 
Furthermore, because these documents did not address the resources to 
assist households living in group sites transition into permanent 
housing, it is unclear what resources are needed to build capacity and 
whether they would be available. Finally, because these documents did 
not describe or anticipate challenges associated with helping people 
find permanent housing after a catastrophic event, delays could occur 
in helping disaster victims return to more stable and conventional 
living arrangements. Opportunities exist to improve the usefulness of 
these documents, especially the annex, because FEMA views them as 
evolving documents that are to be updated on a regular basis to reflect 
ongoing policy decisions. 

Historically, FEMA has relied on travel trailers to provide temporary 
housing to displaced households, especially after a major disaster when 
other temporary housing options (such as existing rental housing) are 
not sufficient. The use of these trailers has received significant 
criticism after the 2005 hurricanes due to safety and health issues as 
well as suitability for long-term use. While FEMA has changed its 
policy, it has made little progress in issuing or providing clear and 
consistent guidance on when travel trailers should be deployed 
following major disasters. Furthermore, while FEMA has initiated 
various assessments to identify potential temporary housing options 
that retain many of the conveniences of trailers but are safer and more 
suitable to the occupants, the lack of specific information on the 
interim alternatives to travel trailers will impede decision making by 
the states and places disaster victims at risk of not receiving 
temporary housing assistance as quickly as possible following a major 
disaster. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To ensure that Congress and others have accurate information about the 
performance of Federal Emergency Management Agency's direct housing 
assistance in group sites, we are making three recommendations to the 
Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security to direct FEMA to 
develop performance measures and targets that the agency will use for 
reporting on the results of closing group sites and assisting 
households with transitioning to permanent housing, and ensure that 
these measures are clearly linked with FEMA's goals for disaster 
assistance. 

In addition, because of the multiple agencies with which FEMA must 
coordinate in delivering temporary housing assistance, we recommend 
that the Secretary of Homeland Security direct FEMA to take the 
following actions: 

* Update its planning documents (e.g., the Disaster Housing Community 
Site Operations Annex of the National Disaster Housing Strategy) to 
describe how it will work with other agencies in closing group sites 
and transitioning households into permanent housing, what resources it 
needs to perform these activities, and how it will deal with specific 
challenges of a major disaster, such as potential shortages in 
available permanent housing. 

* Describe clearly in its guidance to states how trailers or other 
options identified by the states can be deployed when other preferred 
housing options, such as existing rental housing, are not sufficient 
after a major disaster. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided a draft of this report to the Department of Homeland 
Security's Federal Emergency Management Agency for its review and 
comment. We received written comments from the Secretary of the 
Department of Homeland Security, which are reprinted in appendix II. 
The agency also provided a technical comment, which we incorporated 
into the report. 

FEMA generally agreed with our recommendations and is planning to take 
steps to address them. Specifically, FEMA intends to work through the 
National Disaster Housing Task Force to establish standard performance 
measures and reporting methods for all aspects of its direct assistance 
program, including group sites. FEMA also intends to work through the 
task force to address interagency operational issues. Although FEMA 
indicated that the strategy, including its annexes, will be updated as 
needed, it did not specifically discuss (1) whether these particular or 
other planning documents will describe how FEMA will work with other 
agencies in closing group sites and transitioning households into 
permanent housing; (2) what resources it needs to perform these 
activities; and (3) how it will deal with specific challenges of a 
major disaster, such as potential shortages in available permanent 
housing. We continue to believe that FEMA should update its planning 
documents to include these key characteristics of effective strategies 
and plans. Finally, FEMA said that the agency has been working to 
develop guidance for Joint Field Offices and the states on formally 
requesting and approving the use of temporary housing assistance 
programs following a disaster, including direct assistance. According 
to FEMA, the agency intends to clearly describe this process in the 
National Disaster Housing Concept of Operations. 

As agreed with your offices, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days 
from the report date. At that time, we will send copies of this report 
to the appropriate congressional committees, the Secretary of the 
Department of Homeland Security, and other interested parties. The 
report will also be available at no charge on the GAO Web site at 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staffs have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-8678 or sciremj@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. Key contributors to this report are 
listed in appendix III. 

Signed by: 

Mathew J. Scirè: 
Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

The objectives of this report were to examine (1) challenges that 
households living in group sites faced in transitioning to permanent 
housing; (2) the extent to which the Federal Emergency Management 
Agency (FEMA) effectively measured its performance in closing group 
sites and assisting households with transitioning into permanent 
housing; (3) the National Disaster Housing Strategy's effectiveness in 
defining FEMA's roles and responsibilities for closing group sites and 
assisting households with transitioning to permanent housing; and (4) 
the alternatives to travel trailers in group sites when providing 
temporary housing after major disasters, how they compare with respect 
to identified policy factors, and how well FEMA's National Disaster 
Housing Strategy assessed these alternatives. Our review focused on 
FEMA's programs for temporary housing in Alabama, Louisiana, 
Mississippi, and Texas, including the use of group sites in the 
aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. For the purposes of this 
report, the term "group sites" refers to both sites established by FEMA 
and commercial sites that already existed and were used to house 
hurricane victims. 

For all four objectives, we interviewed officials from FEMA's Disaster 
Assistance Directorate, Individual Assistance Branch, Office of Policy 
and Program Analysis, Office of the Federal Coordinator for Gulf Coast 
Rebuilding, Gulf Coast Recovery Office (GCRO), and Recovery Division. 
We also interviewed state officials from the Louisiana Recovery 
Authority, the Mississippi Governor's Office of Recovery and Renewal, 
and the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs. 

To identify challenges that households living in group sites faced 
transitioning to permanent housing, we examined reports related to the 
federal government's response to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and its 
efforts to provide housing assistance in group sites. Specifically, we 
reviewed relevant reports, including reports from the Department of 
Homeland Security's (DHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG), Louisiana 
Family Recovery Corps, The Brookings Institution, RAND Gulf States 
Policy Institution, PolicyLink, Congressional Research Service, and 
GAO. In addition to interviewing FEMA officials and officials from the 
state agencies that we have previously mentioned, we conducted site 
visits to Baton Rouge and New Orleans, Louisiana, where we met with 
officials from the following selected local housing agencies and not- 
for-profit organizations to obtain their perspectives on the challenges 
that households living in group sites faced: 

* Local agencies: 
Jefferson Parish Housing Authority; 
Housing Authority of East Baton Rouge; 
Housing Authority of New Orleans; 
Louisiana Housing Finance Agency; 
New Orleans Office of Recovery and Development Administration. 

* Not-for-profit organizations:
Louisiana Family Recovery Corp. 
Catholic Charities; 
Greater New Orleans Fair Housing Action Center; 
Louisiana Justice Institute. 

We also visited three group sites, including Renaissance Village--the 
largest group site established. To corroborate some of the challenges 
mentioned during our interviews, we analyzed several data sources. 
Specifically, to determine the extent to which Hurricanes Katrina and 
Rita had an impact on rents in these areas, we analyzed data from the 
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) on the fair market 
rents for two-bedroom units in the Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas, 
metropolitan statistical area (MSA); Gulfport-Biloxi, Mississippi, MSA; 
Mobile, Alabama, MSA, and New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, Louisiana, MSA, 
from fiscal years 2005 to 2009. Furthermore, to determine the change in 
unemployment rates in the selected MSAs following Hurricanes Katrina 
and Rita, we analyzed annual unemployment rates data from the 
Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics from fiscal years 2004 
to 2007. In addition, we collected and analyzed data from FEMA to 
determine the average reported income for households living in group 
sites in Louisiana and Mississippi. We focused on group sites in 
Louisiana and Mississippi for this analysis because FEMA established 
most sites in these states. Specifically, we obtained information from 
two of FEMA's databases--the FEMA Response and Recovery Applicant 
Tracking System (FRRATS) and the National Emergency Management 
Information System (NEMIS). 

* FRRATS data are collected through FEMA field offices. Information 
obtained from FRRATS included receipts for the purchase of travel 
trailers and data on the type of site and the state where the trailer 
or mobile home was located. 

* NEMIS data are collected through the national FEMA office. 
Information obtained from NEMIS included date of birth, age, income of 
those receiving housing assistance, owner or renter status, and former 
and current addresses. 

* Both FRRATS and NEMIS contain a unique registration ID that we used 
to match the data we collected from these databases. 

We have tested the reliability of these data as part of a previous 
study and found the data to be reliable.[Footnote 63] We determined 
that the data provided were sufficiently reliable for the purposes of 
this report. However, it is important to note that the demographic data 
in NEMIS are largely self-reported by applicants, and FEMA does not 
independently verify all of the data it collects. As an example, while 
some of FEMA's assistance programs are based on income, the incomes 
reported in NEMIS are not verified. Our analysis was based on the 
highest income reported by an individual. Also, our analysis was 
limited to individuals who provided the information, and we did not 
determine whether nonrespondents were likely to differ from those who 
responded. 

To assess the extent to which FEMA effectively measured its performance 
in providing housing assistance in group sites, we reviewed FEMA's 
strategic plan and DHS's annual performance report and other documents 
related to the measures that FEMA developed to assess its performance. 
To identify the measures that FEMA developed to track the number of 
group sites it used after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and the number of 
households that lived in those sites, we examined FEMA's GCRO 
Individual Assistance Global Report Executive Summary weekly reports. 
We determined that these reports were sufficiently reliable for the 
purposes of our report. Finally, we assessed FEMA's measures against 
criteria for effective performance measures described in our prior 
work.[Footnote 64] 

To determine the National Disaster Housing Strategy's effectiveness in 
defining FEMA's roles and responsibilities for closing group sites and 
assisting households with transitioning to permanent housing, we 
reviewed the strategy and supporting annexes as well as federal 
emergency plans, including the National Response Framework and 
supporting annexes and the 2008 Disaster Housing Plan. Furthermore, we 
reviewed relevant sections of major statutes, regulations, and plans to 
better understand FEMA's roles and responsibilities for closing group 
sites and assisting households with transitioning into permanent 
housing. Specifically, our review included the Robert T. Stafford 
Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act of 1974 (Stafford Act)--as 
amended--and the Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act (Post- 
Katrina Act). Additionally, we drew upon our extensive body of work on 
the federal government's response to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, as 
well as our prior work on pandemic influenza, to compare the relevant 
sections of the National Disaster Housing Strategy with the 
characteristics of an effective national strategy.[Footnote 65] 
Specifically, we assessed the extent to which the strategy and the 
Disaster Housing Community Site Operations Annex addressed certain 
desirable characteristics and the related elements of these 
characteristics developed in previous GAO work.[Footnote 66] Because we 
were not assessing the effectiveness of the entire National Disaster 
Housing Strategy and supporting annexes, we focused on three 
characteristics identified in previous work: organizational roles, 
responsibilities, and coordination; problem definition and risk 
assessment (i.e., challenges and constraints); and resources, 
investments, and risk management. Finally, we reviewed reports issued 
by Congress, DHS's OIG, and the Congressional Research Service. 

To determine the alternatives to travel trailers in group sites and 
examine how they aligned with identified policy factors, we reviewed 
the Stafford Act, the Post-Katrina Act, and other related legislation. 
We also reviewed our previous reports and relevant literature, 
including reports from Congress, DHS's OIG, and the Congressional 
Research Service and academic reports. In addition, we interviewed 
officials from FEMA, state housing agencies in the Gulf Coast region, 
and selected nonprofit and housing research groups. We reviewed the 
National Disaster Housing Strategy to determine how well it assessed 
the capacity of available temporary housing options to respond to the 
housing needs of individuals displaced by a major disaster on the basis 
of certain factors, such as cost-effectiveness and efficiency. We also 
interviewed officials from the previously mentioned state agencies to 
obtain their perspective on the extent to which FEMA provided 
sufficient information on the factors that should be considered when 
selecting an interim housing approach in response to a disaster. 

We conducted this performance audit from January 2008 through August 
2009 in Atlanta, Chicago, Louisiana, and Washington, D.C., in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. Those 
standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that 
the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security: 

U.S. Department of Homeland Security: 
Washington, DC 20528: 

August 14, 2009: 

Mr. Matthew J. Scire: 
Director: 
Financial Markets and Community Investment: 
Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, D.C. 20548: 

Dear Mr. Scire: 

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the draft report GAO-09-
796, "FEMA Needs More Detailed Guidance and Performance Measures to 
Help Ensure Effective Assistance after Major Disasters." The Department 
of Homeland Security (DHS) appreciates GAO's in planning and conducting 
and issuing this report. 

The following is our response to the recommendations. 

Recommendation #1: 

To ensure that Congress and others have accurate information about the 
performance of FEMA's direct housing assistance in group sites we 
recommend that the Secretary of DHS direct FEMA to develop performance 
measures and targets that the agency will use for reporting on the 
results of closing group sites and assisting households with 
transitioning to permanent housing and ensure that these measures are 
clearly linked with FEMA's goals for disaster assistance. 

Response: FEMA generally concurs with this recommendation. FEMA intends 
to work through the National Disaster Housing Task Force to establish 
standard performance measures and reporting methods for all aspects of 
its direct assistance program, including group sites. 

In addition, FEMA is returning to the fundamentals of housing 
assistance; that is, applicants receiving direct temporary housing 
assistance are temporarily housed until rental resources become 
available in a community or until habitable repairs have been made to 
their pre-disaster dwellings. FEMA is currently working on improving 
the methods and strategies that it will use to document FEMA's support 
of the applicant's efforts to locate and secure permanent or alternate 
housing. FEMA is finalizing the documentation process that will be used 
to measure whether the applicant is making progress in repairing their 
dwelling. This process will allow FEMA to assess and monitor any 
systematic or individual impediments to recovery. During the recovery 
period, FEMA will also continue to monitor the availability of rental 
resources. The various actions mentioned above will be solidified in a 
new policy for continued direct assistance. As is the goal of disaster 
recovery, once the applicant returns to permanent housing and moves 
towards self-sufficiency, FEMA will disengage from the process. 

Recommendation #2: 

In addition, because of the multiple agencies with which FEMA must 
coordinate in delivering temporary housing assistance, FEMA should 
update its planning documents (e.g., the Disaster Housing Community 
Site Operations Annex of the disaster housing strategy) to describe how 
it will work with other agencies in closing group sites and 
transitioning households into permanent housing, what resources it 
needs to perform these activities, and how it will deal with specific 
challenges of a major disaster, such as potential shortages in 
available permanent housing. 

Response: FEMA generally concurs with this recommendation. FEMA intends 
to work through the National Disaster Housing Task Force (NDHTF) to 
address inter-agency operational issues. The NDHTF will continually 
focus on improving the delivery of the assistance for the entire 
continuum of disaster housing, from sheltering to transitioning 
disaster survivors into permanent housing. 

Through the development of a Concept of Operations, the NDHTF will 
revisit lessons learned and the Strategy, including its Annexes, to 
improve the process of identifying housing needs following a disaster 
and the sequence of delivery for delivering assistance. The Strategy 
and its Annexes are living documents, and will be updated, as needed, 
to eliminate identified shortfalls and incorporate best practices. 

Recommendation #3: 

Describe clearly in its guidance to states how trailers or other 
options identified by the states can be deployed when other preferred 
housing options such as existing rental housing, are not sufficient 
after a major disaster. 

Response: FEMA generally concurs with this recommendation. FEMA has 
been working to develop guidance for Joint Field Offices and States to 
formally request and approve the use of temporary housing assistance 
programs following a disaster, including direct assistance. FEMA 
intends to clearly describe this process in the National Disaster 
Housing Concept of Operations. FEMA is working on policy and guidance 
to develop standard and criteria to determine the need for a temporary 
housing unit mission. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Jerald E. Levine: 
Director: 
Departmental GAO/OIG Liaison Office: 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Mathew J. Scirè, (202) 512-8678 or sciremj@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contact named above, Daniel Garcia-Diaz, Assistant 
Director; Emily Chalmers; Marshall Hamlett; John McGrail; Marc Molino; 
Josephine Perez; and Rose Schuville made key contributions to this 
report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] FEMA refers to preexisting trailer parks used to house disaster 
victims as "commercial sites." For the purposes of this report, our use 
of the term "group sites" includes both FEMA-constructed and 
preexisting commercial sites, unless otherwise indicated. 

[2] The Post-Katrina Act was enacted as title VI of the Department of 
Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2007, Pub. L. No. 109-295, 120 
Stat. 1355 (2006). 

[3] GAO has also conducted related work on the federal government's 
efforts to assist households living in group sites with employment, 
services for families with children, and transportation. See GAO, 
Disaster Assistance: Federal Efforts to Assist Group Site Residents 
with Employment, Services for Families with Children, and 
Transportation, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-81] 
(Washington, D.C.: Dec. 11, 2008). 

[4] FEMA defines "permanent housing" as safe, sanitary, and secure 
housing that can be sustained without continued disaster-related 
assistance. 

[5] The Stafford Act is codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 5121 et seq. 

[6] HUD annually estimates the fair market rents for all metropolitan 
and nonmetropolitan areas nationwide for the Housing Choice Voucher 
program. Fair market rents represent the cost of modest housing (equal 
to the 40th percentile in the distribution of rents) in specific 
markets. 

[7] See appendix I of this report for a list of all the entities we 
interviewed to identify challenges that households living in group 
sites faced in transitioning to permanent housing. 

[8] 44 C.F.R. § 206.114(b)(1). 

[9] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-81]. The 
demographic data represent information that individuals self-reported 
as part of their application for FEMA assistance. 

[10] U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Comprehensive 
Market Analysis: Beaumont-Port Arthur, TX (Washington, D.C.: June 1, 
2008). 

[11] The Urban Institute, Affordable Rental Housing in Healthy 
Communities: Rebuilding After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita (May 2007). 

[12] In general, investors can claim credits on the qualified basis of 
the property--that is, total development cost (excluding land and other 
certain costs) of the low-income units. The investors receive 
approximately 9 percent of the qualified basis in tax credits annually 
for 10 years. 

[13] GO Zone LIHTCs were provided to the five eligible states in 
addition to their regular annual allocations. The 2006 through 2008 GO 
Zone LIHTC authority was about 75 percent, 567 percent, and 523 percent 
greater than the regular LIHTC authority that Alabama, Louisiana, and 
Mississippi received in the same period, respectively. Also, Florida 
and Texas each received $3.5 million in GO Zone tax credit authority. 

[14] GAO, Gulf Opportunity Zone: States Are Allocating Federal Tax 
Incentives to Finance Low-Income Housing and a Wide Range of Private 
Facilities, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-913] 
(Washington, D.C.: July 16, 2008). 

[15] Alex Frangos, "Credit Losses Stall Affordable-Housing Projects," 
The Wall Street Journal (Mar. 12, 2008) Eastern edition, B.1; and 
Rebecca Mowbray, "Market Crunch Hinders New Housing," The Times 
Picayune (Mar. 28, 2008). 

[16] The CDBG program, administered by HUD, is the federal government's 
largest and most widely available source of financial assistance to 
support state and local government-directed neighborhood 
revitalization, housing rehabilitation, and economic development 
activities. The CDBG program has been used frequently by the federal 
government to respond to natural and man-made catastrophes. 

[17] Congress appropriated $11.5 billion in CDBG assistance in the 
Defense Appropriations Act for fiscal year 2006, Pub. L. No. 109-148, 
and $5.2 billion in the Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act of 
Defense, the Global War on Terror, and the Hurricane Recovery Act of 
2006, Pub. L. No. 109-234. In addition, Congress provided $3 billion in 
CDBG funding for the Louisiana homeowner assistance grant program, 
through the Department of Defense Appropriations Act for fiscal year 
2008, Pub. L. No. 110-116. 

[18] A 2003 FEMA policy states that it cannot fund the repair and 
rebuilding of public housing units through its Stafford Act authorities 
(see FEMA Policy 9523.7 and FEMA/HUD memorandum of understanding 
entitled Coordination of HUD and FEMA Disaster Assistance to Public 
Housing Authorities (PHAs) at [hyperlink, 
http://www.fema.gov/government/grant/pa/9523_7b.shtm]). Although recent 
changes in law now appear to allow FEMA funding of public housing units 
after a presidentially declared disaster, these changes do not apply 
retroactively to units affected by the 2005 hurricanes. 

[19] Mississippi Center for Justice, prepared for the Steps Coalition, 
Is Mississippi Building Back Better Than Before: Problems and Solutions 
Regarding Mississippi's Use of CDBG Disaster Recovery Fund (Biloxi, 
Miss.: Aug. 29, 2008). 

[20] See Department of Homeland Security, Office of Inspector General, 
Federal Emergency Management Agency's Exit Strategy for Temporary 
Housing in the Gulf Coast Region, OIG-09-02 (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 2, 
2008). The Louisiana Road Home Program, which is mainly funded with 
CDBG funds, provided eligible homeowners affected by Hurricanes Katrina 
or Rita with compensation grants up to $150,000 for their losses and to 
help them get back into their homes. Similarly, Mississippi's 
Homeowner's Grant Program provided eligible homeowners with 
compensation grants of up to $150,000 for losses not covered by their 
homeowners insurance or FEMA assistance. 

[21] PolicyLink, A Long Way Home: The State of Housing Recovery in 
Louisiana 2008 (online publication). 

[22] OIG-09-02. 

[23] GCR & Associates, Inc., Louisiana and New Orleans Metro Housing 
Needs Assessment--Louisiana Housing Finance Agency (New Orleans, La.: 
Feb. 15, 2008). 

[24] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-81]. These data 
represent information that individuals self-reported as part of their 
application for FEMA assistance. 

[25] Louisiana State University Agricultural Center, Louisiana FEMA 
Park Survey, Interim Report (April 2007). 

[26] Pub. L. No. 103-62, 31 U.S.C. 1115 et seq. and 5 U.S.C. 306. 

[27] GAO, HUD and Treasury Programs: More Information on Leverage 
Measures' Accuracy and Linkage to Program Goals Is Needed to Assessing 
Performance, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-136] 
(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 18, 2008); Tax Administration: IRS Needs to 
Further Refine Its Tax Filing Season Performance Measures, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-143] (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 22, 
2002); and Executive Guide: Effectively Implementing the Government 
Performance and Results Act, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-96-118] (Washington, D.C.: June 
1996). 

[28] GAO, Managing for Results: Analytic Challenges in Measuring 
Performance, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/HEHS/GGD-97-
138] (Washington, D.C.: May 30, 1997). 

[29] GAO, Military Operations: Actions Needed to Improve DOD's 
Stability Operations Approach and Enhance Interagency Planning, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-549] (Washington, D.C.: 
May 31, 2007). 

[30] According to the Office of Management and Budget, output measures 
describe the level of a program's activity, whereas outcome measures 
describe the intended result from carrying out a program or activity. 

[31] Pub. L. No. 109-295, section 638(e), 120 Stat. 1422 (2006). 

[32] On February 28, 2009, FEMA changed the format of its individual 
assistance weekly reports, which no longer include the total number of 
group sites established following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and the 
current number of group sites still open. Prior to this date, FEMA also 
included data on industrial sites, private sites, and rental 
assistance. The last publicly available report on FEMA's Web site was 
published on April 9, 2009. According to FEMA, 348 households continued 
to live in 101 group sites located in Louisiana and Mississippi, as of 
June 18, 2009. 

[33] Department of Homeland Security, Annual Performance Report for 
Fiscal Years 2008-2010 (Washington, D.C.: May 7, 2009). 

[34] Federal Emergency Management Agency, National Disaster Housing 
Strategy (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 16, 2009). 

[35] The provisions of the Post-Katrina Act became effective upon 
enactment, October 4, 2006, with the exception of certain 
organizational changes related to FEMA, most of which took effect on 
March 31, 2007. 

[36] According to a 2008 report by the Senate Subcommittee on Disaster 
Recovery, the draft strategy violated two-thirds of its legal 
requirements and in doing so failed in the planning needed to protect 
the nation. For example, the draft strategy did not describe the 
disaster housing group site operations. See Senate Committee on 
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, Subcommittee on Disaster 
Recovery, FEMA's Disaster Housing "Strategy:" Still Passing the Buck, 
Nearly Three Years After Katrina & Rita (Washington, D.C.: July 21, 
2008). 

[37] The disaster housing strategy defines "sheltering" as housing that 
provides short-term refuge and life-sustaining services for disaster 
victims who have been displaced from their homes and are unable to meet 
their own immediate postdisaster housing needs; "interim housing" as 
the intermediate period of housing assistance that covers the gap 
between sheltering and the return of disaster victims to permanent 
housing; and "permanent housing" as safe, sanitary, and secure housing 
that can be sustained without continued disaster-related assistance. 

[38] GAO, Influenza Pandemic: Further Efforts Are Needed to Ensure 
Clearer Federal Leadership Roles and an Effective National Strategy, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-781] (Washington, D.C.: 
Aug. 14, 2007). 

[39] A community site is a site provided by the federal, state, or 
local government that accommodates two or more units and is connected 
to utilities. Before developing the current strategy, FEMA referred to 
these sites as group sites. In addition, the Disaster Housing Community 
Site Operations Annex of the National Disaster Housing Strategy 
includes information about all of the phases of establishing group 
sites, including (1) assessment of needs; (2) site selection; (3) site 
development; (4) placement of individuals and households; (5) site 
management; and (6) depopulation, conversion, and deactivation. We 
focused on the last phase of the process because our scope was on the 
closing of group sites and assisting households with transitioning to 
permanent housing. Furthermore, according to FEMA officials, the 
process of closing group sites and transitioning households into 
permanent housing that is described in the Disaster Housing Community 
Site Operations Annex is the same for commercial sites. 

[40] In July 2007, FEMA and HUD entered into an interagency agreement 
to pilot DHAP, to temporarily extend rental assistance and case 
management services for victims displaced by Hurricanes Katrina and 
Rita. The program is funded by FEMA from the Disaster Relief Fund, 
which is the major source of federal disaster recovery assistance. 

[41] FEMA, Louisiana Transitional Recovery Office, Louisiana 
Depopulation Implementation Plan (Nov. 6, 2007), and Mississippi 
Transitional Recovery Office, Mississippi Transitional Recovery Office 
Housing Action Plan (Nov. 28, 2007). 

[42] GAO, Statement by Comptroller General David M. Walker on GAO's 
Preliminary Observations Regarding Preparedness and Response to 
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-365R] (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 1, 
2006). 

[43] GAO, Disaster Assistance: Better Planning Needed for Housing 
Victims of Catastrophic Disasters, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-88] (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 28, 
2007). 

[44] As we have previously discussed, for the purposes of this report, 
our use of the term "group sites" includes both FEMA-constructed and 
preexisting commercial sites. 

[45] Emergency sheltering provides immediate, short-term housing 
assistance for disaster victims who have been displaced from their 
homes, while temporary housing provides intermediate, longer-term 
housing assistance to cover the gap between emergency sheltering and 
the return to permanent housing. 

[46] A February 2009 report on deficiencies in federal disaster housing 
assistance after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, recommended amending 
section 403 of the Stafford Act to permit extending the duration of 
section 403 emergency assistance in the event of a catastrophic 
disaster if FEMA determines that transition into section 408 assistance 
is not practicable or that such an extension is necessary to meet 
postcatastrophic housing needs. See Senate Committee on Homeland 
Security and Governmental Affairs, Ad Hoc Subcommittee on Disaster 
Recovery, Far From Home: Deficiencies in Federal Disaster Housing 
Assistance After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and Recommendations for 
Improvement, S. Prt. No. 111-7, at 279 (2009). 

[47] The Brookings Institution, Housing Families Displaced by Katrina: 
A Review of the Federal Response to Date (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 11, 
2005). 

[48] The Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act of 1994 was signed 
into law on February 12, 1994 (Pub. L. No. 103-211), and provided 
nearly $900 million in appropriations to HUD programs for communities 
impacted by disasters. Of this, $200 million was directed to provide 
Section 8 rental assistance to households displaced by the Northridge 
earthquake. 

[49] Under section 408 of the Stafford Act, FEMA also has the authority 
to provide financial assistance for the repair or replacement of owner 
occupied primary residences that sustained damage or were destroyed by 
a major disaster and FEMA can also provide assistance to construct 
permanent or semipermanent housing. We consider these forms of 
assistance as permanent housing options and do not include them in our 
discussion of available temporary housing options that can serve as 
alternatives to trailers in group sites. 

[50] Pub. L. No. 109-295, 689i, 120 Stat. 1454 (2006). 

[51] In 2008, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention identified 
the presence of significant levels of formaldehyde in the travel 
trailers in group sites that FEMA used following the 2005 hurricanes. 
Formaldehyde can pose serious health and safety concerns to those 
exposed to the chemical. 

[52] The strategy adopted an approach that was previously described in 
FEMA's June 2008 Disaster Housing Plan, which was in effect during the 
2008 hurricane season when Hurricanes Gustav and Ike hit the Gulf Coast 
in September 2008. 

[53] FEMA Notice HQ-08-056, April 11, 2008: New FEMA Procurement 
Specifications Require Significantly Reduced Formaldehyde Levels In 
Mobile Homes And Park Models. 

[54] Department of Homeland Security, Office of Inspector General, 
FEMA's Sheltering and Transitional Housing Activities After Hurricane 
Katrina, OIG-08-93 (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 12, 2008). 

[55] Federal Emergency Management Agency, Individuals and Households 
Pilot Program: Fiscal Year 2009 Report to Congress (Washington, D.C.: 
May 19, 2009). FEMA estimated that rapid repair was about 83 percent 
less expensive than manufactured units in the Iowa pilot program and 66 
percent less expensive than in the Texas pilot. 

[56] Far From Home: Deficiencies in Federal Disaster Housing 
Assistance. 

[57] The agency intends to order a minimum of 100 units from each 
contract award, with the ability to order 6,000 units each year for 5 
years. 

[58] In a related December 2008 GAO report on disaster assistance 
following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, we reported that FEMA officials 
stated that given the level of destruction caused by these hurricanes 
and, in some cases, opposition from communities, FEMA was not always 
able to locate temporary housing in places with easy access to existing 
infrastructure, even though in instances where FEMA creates group 
sites, its guidance suggests that such sites should be located near 
existing supermarkets, public transportation, schools, and health care 
facilities. See GAO-09-81. 

[59] FEMA designed the AHPP as a competitive grant to the Gulf Coast 
States and awarded projects to the following four states: Alabama, 
Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas. 

[60] In 2008, FEMA conducted a solicitation and awarded provisional 
contracts to seven alternative housing manufacturers. The JHSG has 
recently begun to assess and evaluate the viability of the units 
identified by these manufacturers on the basis of criteria such as 
cost, livability, and deployment time. According to FEMA, once the 
testing of pilot units is complete and the JHSG determines that the 
units meet safety, security, and affordability requirements, FEMA will 
begin purchasing units. 

[61] Department of Homeland Security, Office of Inspector General, 
FEMA's Preparedness for the Next Catastrophic Disaster, OIG-08-34 
(Washington, D.C.: March 2008). 

[62] See Far From Home: Deficiencies in Federal Disaster Housing 
Assistance. Furthermore, the report indicated that FEMA's assessment on 
the efficiency and effectiveness of the options was "general" in 
nature, and suggested that FEMA should build on the information 
presented in the strategy and provide more specific cost-effectiveness 
studies of the available housing options so that policymakers and state 
and local governments can make informed decisions about which programs 
to use. 

[63] GAO, Disaster Assistance: Federal Efforts to Assist Group Site 
Residents with Employment, Services for Families with Children, and 
Transportation, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-81] 
(Washington, D.C.: Dec. 11, 2008). 

[64] GAO, HUD and Treasury Programs: More Information on Leverage 
Measures' Accuracy and Linkage to Program Goals Is Needed to Assessing 
Performance, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-136] 
(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 18, 2008); Tax Administration: IRS Needs to 
Further Refine Its Tax Filing Season Performance Measures, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-143] (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 22, 
2002); and Executive Guide: Effectively Implementing the Government 
Performance and Results Act, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-96-118] (Washington, D.C.: June 
1996). 

[65] For examples, see GAO, Influenza Pandemic: Further Efforts Are 
Needed to Ensure Clearer Federal Leadership Roles and an Effective 
National Strategy, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-781] 
(Washington, D.C.: Aug. 14, 2007); and Catastrophic Disasters: Enhanced 
Leadership, Capabilities, and Accountability Controls Will Improve the 
Effectiveness of the National Preparedness, Response, and Recovery 
System, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-618] 
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 6, 2006). 

[66] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-781]. 

[End of section] 

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