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Victims of Calif. fires begin to rebuild
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Pastor Dale Morgan  
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 More options Oct 30 2007, 10:11 pm
From: Pastor Dale Morgan <dgrmor...@telus.net>
Date: Tue, 30 Oct 2007 19:11:29 -0700
Local: Tues, Oct 30 2007 10:11 pm
Subject: Victims of Calif. fires begin to rebuild
*Perilous Times

Victims of Calif. fires begin to rebuild*

Residents who had homes damaged, destroyed have few places to turn
The Associated Press
Updated: 5:10 p.m. PT Oct 30, 2007

RAMONA, Calif. - Nicole Booth’s hands were stained with ash from picking
through the blackened and twisted pieces left of her life after an
inferno engulfed everything she owned.

She tried not to cry in front of her four children. But in the few
moments she can steal away, the tears spill down her cheeks.

Like so many others, Booth took the first steps toward rebuilding her
life Monday, a week after a firestorm destroyed her San Diego County
home and business. She applied for aid.

“I feel ashamed. I’ve never had to ask for help. I don’t know what to
say to people,” Booth says, her voice dropping to a whisper.

The wildfires, which destroyed more than 2,000 homes, continued to burn
Monday. With more than a dozen blazes fully surrounded, firefighters
were trying to gain control of six others that were at least half
contained. The flames have killed 14 people and blackened 809 square
miles from the Mexican border to Los Angeles.

In the weeks ahead, the Booths and hundreds of other families who lost
their homes will be at the mercy of the federal government for grants,
loans and other assistance.

Some help can be offered quickly, but larger decisions about the future
will take weeks, and be decided by federal workers shuffling mountains
of loan applications in Ft. Worth, Texas, and suburban Maryland.

Fire engulfed house before their eyes

A week ago, the Booths ran for their lives — carrying only the
essentials: a change of clothes for the children, and oxygen tanks, a
wheelchair and medication for a daughter paralyzed by brain tumors who
survives on life support. The fire swallowed their house before their
eyes as they pulled out of the driveway.

The family lived in a modest home that was passed down to her husband,
Robert Booth, from his father, and they never put their names on the
deed, which could delay tens of thousands of dollars in aid.

In the meantime, the Booths will have to depend on charity. The Red
Cross is the only agency still providing hotel assistance for fire victims.

“For them, I think the wrinkles can be worked out, but it’s going to
take many agencies, and probably going to take volunteer agencies to
step in, too,” said FEMA spokesman Michael Raphael.

Typically, only homeowners are eligible for FEMA’s maximum $28,200
payout for lost property. But Raphael said the agency may be able to
bend the rules if they were paying the mortgage.

FEMA has already received nearly 8,300 applications for aid and visited
641 homes to assess damage in the seven counties declared a major
federal disaster area. As of Monday, the agency had paid out $600,000,
and was on pace to settle about 75 claims a day.

Lessons learned from Katrina

Fire victims have said FEMA apparently learned lessons from the
confusion that arose after Hurricane Katrina about where to turn for
federal assistance.

The agency has sent scores of neatly dressed agency representatives to
the San Diego area. Large signs and tents bearing the agency’s name
direct victims to one-stop centers where victims can redirect their
mail, apply for building permits and register for FEMA disaster assistance.

But the scale of the disaster here is much smaller than in New Orleans,
where hundreds of thousands of people were left homeless.

Hector Valazquez, 52, who lost his home in Delzura last Sunday said he’s
felt reassured by his first interactions with friendly FEMA workers, but
the proof of how well the agency deals with the disaster has yet to be seen.

“They are going to show us that what happened in Katrina can be done
better here,” Valazquez said. “Until we have a home, there’s no proof.”

Families have big challenges

If FEMA denies their request, the Booths could apply for up to $40,000
in loans from the Small Business Administration to replace the contents
of their home.

For the Southern California fires, the federal government has already
offered a 2.937 percent interest rate, and homeowners can have up to 30
years to repay the loan.

It isn’t just the Booths’ house and all their belongings that were
destroyed. Their business, Booth’s Pump and Crane Service, also burned
and so did all of the equipment.

To restart their business, the Booths will have to apply for hefty loans
to purchase new equipment and cover their lost income.

One of the biggest challenges is showing proof when important paperwork
went up in flames.

Robert Sanders, 56, a commercial photographer who lost his Rancho
Bernardo house, complained Monday about a pile of documents he needed to
fill out for assistance when the information requested went up in smoke.

“Under normal circumstances, I can understand it, but in this kind of
situation where everything you have has been ripped from your soul,
filling out these forms is the last thing you want to do,” he said.
“What you want to do is just climb on the back of a Harley and go ride
and live out of pup tent for the rest of your life. It’s a real sense of
futility.”

Sanders did get food stamps and $1,000 from the American Red Cross, but
he got nothing from FEMA.

Insurance pays some, for a few

Business owners can apply for up to $1.5 million in loans from the Small
Business Administration, which come with a 4 percent interest rate. The
agency aims to approve loans within two weeks of receiving applications,
said spokesman Phil Duncan.

For victims who had fire insurance, insurance agents can provide initial
money for hotels and apartment rentals. Homeowner’s insurance will
usually cover a year — or even two — of expenses for temporary living
quarters while customers rebuild.

But that’s not a solution for the Booth family, who like so many others
in the area, had their fire insurance canceled after devastating blazes
in 2003. Their house wasn’t damaged then, but they were unable to meet
requirements issued by insurance companies to clear away brush and
vegetation in mountain communities.

The Booths have filled out their FEMA paperwork. They’ve talked to the
SBA. They have an appointment with the Red Cross.

And still, Booth says days later, she doesn’t know what to do.

“They told me this was just the beginning process. What does that mean?
What do we do in the meantime?” asked, her cheeks smudged from wiping
tears with ash-stained hands. “I just wish somebody would tell me it’s
going to be all right.”


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