Friday, March 13, 2020

Elizabethtown Approved for More Than $5.2 Million to Repair Cemetery

<p><span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="line-height:14.0pt"><span style="font-family:&quot;Calibri&quot;,sans-serif"><span style="font-size:12.0pt">The State of North Carolina and FEMA have approved more than $5.2 million to reimburse an Elizabethtown cemetery following Hurricane Florence-related damage.</span></span></span></span></p>
Elizabethtown
Mar 13, 2020

The State of North Carolina and FEMA have approved more than $5.2 million to reimburse an Elizabethtown cemetery following Hurricane Florence-related damage.

 

Hurricane Florence’s heavy rainfall saturated the cemetery adjacent to the Cape Fear River to cause about half of its grounds to sink. Ground saturation also shifted many of the more than 2,800 burial sites.

 

The grant reimburses the city for its work to reduce flood damage at the cemetery by installing drains to divert floodwater and a retaining wall to prevent river overflow. It also covers realigning the shifted burial sites to their original final resting places.

 

FEMA’s Public Assistance program provides grants for state and local governments and certain private nonprofit organizations to reimburse the cost of debris removal, emergency protective measures and permanent repair work.

 

Public Assistance is a cost-sharing program. FEMA reimburses applicants at least 75 percent of eligible costs and the remaining 25 percent is covered by the state. The federal share is paid directly to the state to disburse to agencies, local governments and certain private nonprofit organizations that incurred costs.

 

FEMA’s total share for the Elizabethtown Cemetery project is more than $3.9 million and the state’s share is more than $1.3 million.

 

For more information on North Carolina’s recovery from Hurricane Florence, visit ncdps.gov/Florence and FEMA.gov/Disaster/4393. Follow us on Twitter: @NCEmergency and @FEMARegion4.

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