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Applying for the Shelter at Home program as easy as a click of a button

Jo Thompson said she didn’t waste any time signing up for the shelter at home program when registration started Monday.
 
Thompson said that first responders rescued her and her kids from her home that flooded, and was then taken to a shelter.
 
Governor John Bel Edwards announced the shelter at home disaster recovery program to help those affected by flooding to have the opportunity to live at home while repairs are being made and released registration information for the program that will allow Louisiana residents whose homes flooded to shelter at their own home while they continue to rebuild, rather than relocating to a shelter, hotel or rental property.
 
Residents who are eligible for the program should register using one of the following methods:
The Shelter at Home Program evaluates each applicant’s home and, if up to $15,000 of work in that home can create a safe, secure, habitable place for the family to live while they continue their permanent home rebuilding, then that applicant may be eligible for this program.  This program is not designed to fully repair the applicant’s home.
 
To be eligible, the property must be single-family and owner-occupied and have up to $15,000 in repairs that will allow residents to quickly and safely shelter in their own home. Only properties that meet these criteria are eligible to participate in the program.
 
Anyone in this program must apply individually (separately from registering with FEMA or SBA or filing a flood insurance claim with NFIP). Applications should be made to the website or phone number listed above.
 
Shelter at Home teams will complete tasks such as:
Shauna Sanford, press secretary for the Office of the Governor, said more than 7,000 people have signed up.
 
“You don’t have to go and pay for an apartment, you don’t have to move in with family or friends although they would gladly welcome you, you don’t have to go to a hotel or motel you don’t have to go to a shelter, this allows you to stay in your home while you work on your home, and to be very clear, it’s not to completely repair your home, it’s to create a space that you can live in for the time being while you work on getting things back in order,” Sanford said.
 
A click of the mouse is all it takes, Thompson said, to get her back to normalcy, be able to oversee repairs, her son back in a neighborhood school, and bring the community back where it needs to be.