BAXTER SPRINGS, Kan. (AP) - Officials say the Baxter Springs and its residents affected by a recent tornado won’t get financial assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Jonathan York, response and recovery branch director for the Kansas Division of Emergency Management, said during a town hall meeting Saturday that preliminary reports show the April 27 that hit Baxter Springs didn’t have a magnitude to meet public assistance or individual assistance from FEMA. About 100 of the city’s 2,000 homes and 12 businesses were damaged by the EF-2 tornado.
FEMA looks at the concentration and extent of damage in a community when making a disaster declaration.
The Joplin Globe reports (https://bit.ly/1lPlQkT ) Gov. Sam Brownback has requested a Small Business Administration disaster declaration for Cherokee County and adjacent counties, which would make low-interest, long-term loans available.
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Information from: The Joplin (Mo.) Globe, https://www.joplinglobe.com
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