S 1617 · 117th Congress · Commerce

Disaster Assistance for Rural Communities Act

Introduced 2021-05-13· Sponsored by Sen. Risch, James E. [R-ID]· Senate

Bill Progress

1
Introduced
2
Committee
Senate Vote
House
Enacted
Latest: Became Public Law No: 117-249.(2022-12-20)

Recorded Votes

PassedHouse · 2022-12-08
Roll #517
Yea 406Nay 8
Democrats
209 Yea·0 Nay
Republicans
197 Yea·8 Nay
PassedHouse · 2022-12-08
Roll #517
Yea 406Nay 8
Democrats
209 Yea·0 Nay
Republicans
197 Yea·8 Nay

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Plain Language Summary

[AI summary unavailable — showing source text] Disaster Assistance for Rural Communities Act This bill authorizes the Small Business Administration (SBA) to declare a disaster in rural areas where significant damage has been incurred for the purpose of providing certain assistance. A rural area is a geographic area with a population of less than 200,000 outside an urbanized area. Significant damage means uninsured losses of not less than 40% of the fair replacement value or pre-disaster fair market value of the damaged property (whichever is less). For a rural area where the President has declared a major disaster, the SBA may declare a disaster for the purpose of providing economic injury disaster loans if (1) the state wherein the rural area is located requests the declaration; and (2) any home, small business, private nonprofit organization, or small agricultural cooperative has incurred significant damage. The Government Accountability Office must report on (1) any unique challenges to communities in rural areas compared to communities in urbanized areas when seeking economic injury disaster assistance, and (2) any legislative recommendations for improving access to disaster assistance for communities in rural areas.…

Summarized by Claude AI · Non-partisan · For informational purposes only

CBO Cost Estimate

Congressional Budget Office

S. 1617, Disaster Assistance for Rural Communities Act

Oct 27, 2022

As passed by the Senate on September 28, 2022

Full CBO report ↗

Official non-partisan budget analysis by the Congressional Budget Office

Cosponsors (4)

2 Democrats2 Republicans