Florida’s Republican senators have requested for federal funding to assist with reduction after Hurricane Ian ripped via the state ― regardless of neither lawmaker voting on Thursday for billions in catastrophe reduction, a few of which might go towards hurricane restoration efforts.
On Friday, Sens. Marco Rubio and Rick Scott despatched a joint letter to the Senate Appropriations Committee chairs asking for funding to “present a lot wanted help to Florida.” The letter was first reported by the Tallahassee Democrat.
“Hurricane Ian shall be remembered and studied as one of the devastating hurricanes to hit america. Communities throughout Florida have been utterly destroyed, and lives have been perpetually modified,” the senators wrote.
“A sturdy and well timed federal response, together with via supplemental packages and funding, shall be required to make sure that adequate sources are supplied to rebuild vital infrastructure and public providers capability, and to help our fellow Floridians in rebuilding their lives.”
However simply someday earlier, Scott and Rubio refused to vote for such further funding. The stopgap spending invoice that the Senate handed on Thursday contains about $18.8 billion in further funding for the Federal Emergency Administration Company to answer Hurricane Ian and future disasters.
All 25 senators who refused to vote for the invoice had been Republicans. Scott voted towards it, and Rubio didn’t vote in any respect. The Home additionally handed the invoice, with Republicans overwhelmingly voting towards it.
“The identical week that #HurricaneIan introduced a lot chaos and destruction to Florida, not a single Florida Republican cared sufficient to vote in favor of Hurricane reduction for the folks in their very own state hit hardest by the storm,” Florida Democratic Celebration Chairman Manny Diaz tweeted on Saturday.
“That could be a degree of callous indifference and political opportunism that boggles the thoughts. Fortunately, [President Joe Biden] and Florida Democrats are doing the precise factor when it counts, and we admire their efforts to assist Florida rebuild as soon as once more.”
In 2013, Rubio voted towards the $50 billion reduction invoice meant to assist states impacted by Hurricane Sandy, which left a path of injury on the East Coast and a whole lot useless. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), who was a congressman on the time, additionally voted towards a number of payments that may have supplied assist to victims of Sandy.
When asked by CNN’s Dana Bash on Sunday why different senators ought to assist catastrophe reduction for his state when he voted towards Sandy reduction, Rubio justified his choice by saying the invoice “had been loaded up with a bunch of issues that had nothing to do with catastrophe reduction.”
“What I didn’t vote for in Sandy is as a result of that they had included issues like a roof for a museum in Washington, D.C., for fisheries in Alaska,” the senator stated. Bash reminded Rubio that based mostly on the congressional analysis report for the invoice, the roof requested for the museum was broken by the hurricane, and the Alaskan fisheries had been impacted by a separate catastrophe.
Rubio added that he wouldn’t assist an emergency reduction invoice for Hurricane Ian if it contained one thing not in regards to the straight impacted areas.
Ian was one of many strongest hurricanes to make landfall within the U.S., hitting Florida the toughest final week earlier than climbing as much as the Carolinas. The Class 4 hurricane has resulted in a rising loss of life toll ― escalating to at the very least 47 as of Sunday morning. Tons of of 1000’s are with out houses and energy, and the destroyed infrastructure has left many individuals remoted.