More Georgia counties are approved for federal disaster relief

Gov. Brian Kemp asked FEMA administrators and the White House for more help after Hurricane Helene battered the state
Austin Fosdick (left) and Nealy Hiers, both students at Valdosta State University, check out damages caused by Hurricane Helene near Valdosta State University, Saturday, September 28, 2024, in Valdosta. The devastation in Valdosta was extensive after the South Georgia city was battered with hurricane-force winds on Helene’s path across the state. Damaging Helene has swept through Georgia, leading to at least 15 deaths. All 159 counties are now assessing the devastation and working to rebuild, even as serious flooding risks linger. (Hyosub Shin / AJC)

Credit: HYOSUB SHIN / AJC

Credit: HYOSUB SHIN / AJC

Austin Fosdick (left) and Nealy Hiers, both students at Valdosta State University, check out damages caused by Hurricane Helene near Valdosta State University, Saturday, September 28, 2024, in Valdosta. The devastation in Valdosta was extensive after the South Georgia city was battered with hurricane-force winds on Helene’s path across the state. Damaging Helene has swept through Georgia, leading to at least 15 deaths. All 159 counties are now assessing the devastation and working to rebuild, even as serious flooding risks linger. (Hyosub Shin / AJC)

Editor’s note: This story has been updated to reflect the addition Tuesday afternoon of 30 more Georgia counties to the federal disaster declarations list.

AMERICUS, Ga. — President Joe Biden’s administration has approved additional emergency disaster declarations in Georgia in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, increasing the number of counties eligible for expanded federal assistance to 41.

On Tuesday afternoon, the White House announced 30 more counties had been added to the list, up from an original announcement of 11. More counties could join the list as more evaluations are made. The White House also announced Tuesday that Vice President Kamala Harris will travel to Georgia on Wednesday to survey damage and receive briefings.

The original disaster declaration announcement Tuesday morning frustrated some Republicans who joined Gov. Brian Kemp earlier in the week to urge the Federal Emergency Management Agency to swiftly declare roughly 90 counties a disaster to immediately free up funds.

“Does FEMA not understand that this hurricane cut a 150-mile wide path of destruction from Valdosta to Augusta?” said U.S. Rep. Mike Collins, a Republican who represents a swath of northeast Georgia that was pummeled by the storm.

Kemp spoke to FEMA administrators and the White House early Tuesday urging officials to declare more counties a federal disaster after Helene, the deadliest hurricane to hit Georgia in three decades. Senior Democrats also privately lobbied FEMA to expand the list.

Earlier this week, Biden aide Tom Perez told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the White House would move urgently to respond to Kemp’s request for emergency relief, which was seconded by Georgia’s entire delegation.

“I’m confident that it will be processed very, very quickly,” Perez said. “We’re talking hours, not days.”

Cook County Probate Judge Chase Daughtrey was aghast that his rural South Georgia county was left off the initial list for the emergency declaration, which immediately opens federal spigots for aid.

“This is unacceptable,” he said. “I’ve got a line as far as the eye can see here in Adel of people trying to get food for their children. They are hungry and have nothing.”

Cook County was added Tuesday afternoon as part of the expanded declaration.

“I know there was a lot of frustration down here,” Kemp told first responders Tuesday during a stop in the city of Douglas. “… I explained it was going to create a political firestorm and was sending the wrong signal. They listened to us.”

FEMA sometimes issues the disaster declarations on a rolling basis to free up funds for storm-ravaged counties sooner as it works to complete evaluations on others. That’s what happened after Hurricane Idalia bombarded the Southeast in August 2023.

But the delay comes at a delicate time for Biden’s administration. Georgia is one of a handful of politically competitive states in the November race, and former President Donald Trump has accused the White House of a lethargic response to the storms. He also took shots at Harris, the Democratic nominee.

During a visit to Valdosta on Monday, Trump falsely accused Biden of being “very nonresponsive” to Kemp’s calls. The governor said at a separate stop in Augusta that he spoke with Biden on Sunday evening and that he appreciated the “bipartisan way” local, state and federal leaders worked together to respond to the crisis.