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Black Collegian News & Views
Hundreds of Dillard Students Told to Give Back FEMA Money
Agency says school-owned dorms don't qualify for aid
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Modular Building Institute
"I stayed in Module A in the Nelson Modular Complex and lost
everything" during Hurricane Katrina, one Dillard student said.
"I have no intention of paying" FEMA. |
By Wesley Hollis and Ashley R. Harris
Black College Wire
Hundreds of Dillard University dormitory residents who received
assistance payments from the federal government after Hurricane Katrina
are being asked to repay the money because according to federal
officials, they were ineligible for the aid.
The students, said Rachel Rodi, a spokeswoman for the Federal
Emergency Management Agency, incorrectly received assistance payments
because they claimed that the college dorms that were damaged by the
storm were their primary residence.
"Students who lived in a dormitory owned or managed by the school
will not qualify for housing assistance because dormitories are not
considered a primary residence," Rodi said. Instead of applying to FEMA,
she added, the students should have first tried to receive compensation
for their losses through the school's insurance company, which was
National Student Services, Inc. at the time of the hurricane.
Brandon Carter, a sophomore chemistry pre-engineering major, was one
of the students who was confused when he received a letter from FEMA.
"When I did my application, I was honest about my losses. I was
shocked when I received the letter and showed it to my mother. My
initial reaction was to brush it off, yet after speaking with my mom, I
realized that actions needed to be taken. Regardless of what FEMA's
decision is after my appeal, I have no intention of paying them. I
stayed in Module A in the Nelson Modular Complex and lost everything.
The money was much in need; I had nothing," Carter said.
"I never received any type of insurance," said Channel Prothro, a
former Dillard student. "FEMA was the only assistance I received for
losing everything, yet I'm being treated as if I cheated them.
"I am still struggling due to the hurricane and this FEMA situation
is making it worse. It took them two months after the hurricane to give
me anything and now they are asking for their money back? That is just
ridiculous for them to be so idiotic."
Rodi, the FEMA spokeswoman, said that the precise number of students
involved and the total they would have to repay was not available.
In late July, FEMA began sending letters demanding repayment because
of an investigation in early May of fraudulent claims, said Freddye
Hill, Dillard's vice president of campus life. FEMA then began an
investigation.
"I received a call from one of the investigators. He told me that
FEMA had received more than 3,000 applications for assistance from 2601
Gentilly Blvd.," the address of a Dilliard dormintory. "The large number
of applications from 2601 prompted an investigation," Hill said.
FEMA has been asking for money back from disaster victims for a
number of reasons, even if the agency had already determined an
individual eligible for assistance.
According to a statement from FEMA, some of the wrongful payments
were the result of the need to provide quick assistance to victims while
chaos reigned in the immediate aftermath of the hurricane.
In the disaster setting, individuals might not have completed
paperwork at the time of registration or might not have realized that
another family member had already registered, according to FEMA's
official Web site.
"During an evacuation, people may find themselves as they did in
Katrina with very little but the clothes on their backs for many weeks.
Assistance from FEMA can make all the difference in those early days
when they could not get help yet from private insurance for example,"
according to the FEMA statement. Now that the situation has calmed and
victims have had time to receive compensation from their private
insurance companies, FEMA expects to be repaid."
Hill explained that some students made unnecessary claims on items
that were actually Dillard property.
"The investigator asked questions about what furniture and appliances
the University provided in each residential unit because some applicants
requested assistance to replace large appliances such as refrigerators
and stoves," said Hill. "He said that these claims necessitated
information about what furniture and appliances Dillard provided in each
room and apartment."
Samantha Knox, a junior elementary education major, said FEMA did not
make it sufficiently clear that students who received aid might have to
repay it. If FEMA "is now trying to make the money we received . . .
some type of loan, they should have told us from the start. It's wrong
for them to have told us a year after we used the money to replace our
lost items," said Knox.
"This is a major concern of the students. SGA, Dr. Hill and Edgar
Chase have been working together with FEMA in order to rectify this
situation," said the Student Government Association president, Dominique
Hayes. Chase is the Dillard vice president in charge of the campus
reconstruction.
According to Rodi, students have 30 days to pay the money back in
full or agree to an installment plan. But they can appeal the demand for
repayment by explaining in writing why they feel FEMA's decision was
incorrect. They can, for example, supply additional information, such as
a utility bill or any other kind of bill with an address to prove that
it was their primary residence.
Hill said Dillard was willing to help the students during their
misfortune. "Since October, I have sent FEMA letters on behalf of
residential students who resided in University housing in August 2005.
If a student needs a letter verifying that he or she resided in
University housing in August 2005, I will provide a letter verifying
residency," said Hill.
Wesley Hollis, a student at Dillard University,
writes for the Courtbouillon. Ashley R. Harris is a student at the
University of Houston.
Posted Jan. 15, 2007 |