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White House set to ask Congress for added $60 billion in Sandy relief for New Jersey

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Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., said it made no sense to expect New York’s subway system to replace 70-year-old switches with similar equipment.

Fugate, the FEMA director, said he is prepared to work with Congress to put new rules in place to get money flowing more quickly. But he said lawmakers need to remember the red tape is there because Congress wanted to make sure federal dollars were well-spent, and key issues need to be decided.

Among them is what to do when a local entity wants more than FEMA estimates a project will cost. Likewise, if projects cost less than estimated, can the recipient use the money for something else?

Fugate said the federal disaster relief fund has about $4.9 billion left, enough to keep paying claims from Sandy and past disasters until the spring, but that more will be needed to get through the rest of the fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30.

Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., said the Republican-dominated House has already passed a bill calling for a pilot project on delivering aid based on estimates.

“Ten years from now, we don’t want to be having hearings asking FEMA why it’s taking so long to rebuild from Hurricane Sandy,” Mica said.

The Democratic chairwoman of a Senate appropriations subcommittee that will hold its own hearing on Sandy relief today has also urged Obama to include funding based on estimates in the budget request he sends to Congress.

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