Lack of funding stymies Iowa city's flood recovery
By Ryan Schlader
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa, June 13 (Reuters) - Amanda Brandt is frustrated at what she sees as unmet promises to help her and her Iowa neighbors rebuild homes ruined by rain-swollen rivers that spilled over their banks one year ago.
"The city is lacking some leadership and direction," Brandt said. "It seems every time we are told an important date is coming up, it gets pushed back."
Thousands of flood-damaged homes lie vacant in the core of Cedar Rapids, a city of 120,000 hard hit by June 2008 flooding that inundated towns and farms across the Midwestern United States.
"Are we satisfied with that progress? No, clearly not," Cedar Rapids City Manager Jim Prosser said. "A lot of people whose lives aren't even close to being whole yet have a lot of unanswered questions, bills to pay, and don't have the resources to recover."
Cedar Rapids' struggles echo recovery efforts in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, flooded after Hurricane Katrina nearly four years ago, and in Galveston, Texas, following Hurricane Ike in September.
Brandt, who has moved into a different home but bears the costs of her ruined old one, said officials make promises but no one takes responsibility when funding only trickles in.
More than 10 square miles (26 sq km) containing 5,400 homes and 700 businesses were flooded by the Cedar River, which winds through the city. The muddy waters inundated the headquarters of the fire and police departments, city hall, the courthouse and the main library.
City officials said they have received a small fraction of the estimated $5.7 billion needed to rebuild. Continued...
One Year Later
A look back at the events of 26/11 ahead of the first anniversary of the militant attacks in Mumbai that killed 166 people. Slideshow | Full Coverage
India Investment Summit 2009
Top executives and bankers discuss their own plans and the broader opportunities and challenges for India. Full Coverage













