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Conservatives in US House open to additional disaster relief for Northeast

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“And so just throwing the money as some people have been calling for into FEMA is inappropriate. You should be looking to see is there enough money in ‘X’ and do you need to up that,” Garrett said.

Garrett was the only member of the House delegation from New Jersey to decline to sign a letter Nov. 5 to House Speaker John Boehner and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi calling for swift and bipartisan action if additional funding for recovery is needed. He said he would wait to see what the administration proposed before deciding whether to support additional spending.

Rep. Frank LoBiondo, R-Ventnor, N.J., circulated that Nov. 5 letter among Republicans. Since then, the need for additional funding has become clearer because of the scope of Sandy’s damage, spokesman Jason Galanes said.

“Exact final numbers are not known at this point, but . . . we envision a need for additional federal support from Congress,” he said. “Congress has worked together in a bipartisan manner to respond to earthquakes in California, tornadoes in the Midwest. New Jersey should not be treated any differently.”

Menendez, who was also at the FEMA briefing, said it was important to make clear from the start what Washington would be willing to fund or rebuild, even if projects may take years to complete. That’s because businesses and residents need to know as they make their own decisions about rebuilding.

“There will clearly not be enough money for recovery,” he said. “And the suggestion that we should wait to exhaust all the response money until you start to talk about recovery is really not acceptable, because if you’re trying to reconstruct your life and business, you can’t wait to understand what the federal government’s role is going to be.”

He said questions that still need to be answered are how much local governments or residents will have to contribute toward rebuilding, and whether other types of grants such as Community Development Block Grants, will be made flexible enough to meet local needs.

Like his colleagues, Menendez said he pressed the issue on the Senate floor during votes Tuesday night when other senators, including Republicans, came up to congratulate him on his re-election.

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