Æðµã´«Ã½

FEMA Developing New Grant Program

Disaster Response
Published

The Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA) recently began to roll out its new grant program, Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC). BRIC replaces the existing Pre-Disaster Mitigation program and is a result of amendments made to the Stafford Act by the Disaster Recovery Reform Act of 2018 (DRRA).

Through the BRIC program, FEMA hopes to promote a national culture of preparedness and public safety by encouraging investments to protect communities and infrastructure, and strengthening national mitigation capabilities to foster resilience.

To do so, the BRIC program will shift the focus for a significant amount of federal disaster spending from reactive (post-disaster) toward proactive investments in risk mitigation and community resilience that would occur before any disaster happens. BRIC is designed to support a range of hazard mitigation projects undertaken by states, local communities, tribes and territories.

Home builders, developers or remodelers may be impacted when those projects aim to elevate or otherwise mitigate the risk to individual residential structures or local infrastructure that serve their developments.

On March 27, FEMA launched a new webpage with background information on the program and a timeline for its implementation. The site also includes access to the document that reviews the comments FEMA received during its 2019 stakeholder engagement process.

On April 10, FEMA published the , which establishes the operational parameters for the program including eligibility criteria for applicants and projects. Public comments will be accepted on the policy through May 11, 2020.

Æðµã´«Ã½ staff is reviewing the draft policy. Because the draft focuses more on overall principles and additional details for how any funding may be used will be provided in the subsequent Notice Of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) announcements that will be released annually, it is not yet clear if or how it may be used by Æðµã´«Ã½ members. The draft policy does, however, provide some clarity on the minimum conditions that mitigation projects must meet to be eligible for funding.

FEMA anticipates finalizing the policy and releasing a NOFO by fall 2020. This timing is subject to change. To learn more, visit .

Subscribe to Æðµã´«Ã½Now

Log in or create account to subscribe to notifications of new posts.

Log in to subscribe

Latest from Æðµã´«Ã½Now

Sponsored Content

May 09, 2025

How CertainTeed One Precision Assemblies Accelerates Construction with Factory-Built Precision

With the demand for housing in today’s fast-paced construction environment, time is money — and quality is everything. That’s why more developers, general contractors, and home builders are turning to offsite construction solutions like CertainTeed One Precision Assemblies.

Workforce Development | Student Chapters

May 08, 2025

How an Æðµã´«Ã½ Student Chapter Alumnus Found His Residential Construction Passion

Lawrence Thompson III's eye for design and architecture led him to Æðµã´«Ã½'s Student Competition. Now the project manager is working a full-time job that fits his skills and passions.

View all

Latest Economic News

Economics

May 09, 2025

Consumer credit continued to rise in early 2025, but the pace of growth has slowed. Student loan balances rose year-over-year as borrowers resumed payments following the end of pandemic-era relief. However, growth remains modest.

Economics

May 08, 2025

Multifamily developers are starting the year in a cautious state, according to Q1 2025 results from the Multifamily Market Survey (MMS) released today by the Æðµã´«Ã½ (Æðµã´«Ã½). The MMS produces two separate indices.

Economics

May 07, 2025

The Federal Reserve remained on pause with respect to rate cuts at the conclusion of its May meeting, maintaining the federal funds rate in the 4.25% to 4.5% range. Characterizing current market conditions, the central bank noted that the “unemployment rate has stabilized at a low level in recent months, and labor market conditions remain solid.” However, the Fed noted that “inflation remains somewhat elevated.”