Vermont Business Magazine The October 31 deadline to apply for FEMA Individual Assistance has passed, but that does not mean FEMA is leaving. FEMA will continue working with Vermont Emergency Management to help survivors and communities recover.
If you applied for FEMA assistance due to damage from the July 7-21 storms, FEMA encourages you to keep in touch.
By staying in touch, you can track the progress of your case, notify the agency of changes to your mailing or email addresses or phone numbers, and report insurance settlements or additional damage you may have discovered since your home inspection.
To reach FEMA:
- Call the toll-free Helpline at 800-621-3362. Specialists are available 24/7 to answer your questions and provide referrals to resources. Language translation is available; if you use a relay service such as video relay service (VRS), captioned telephone service or others, give FEMA your number for that service when you call.
- Download the FEMA App.
- Visit DisasterAssistance.gov.
- To create an account:
- Select “Check Status” on the home page or from the “Get Assistance” menu.
- Click “Continue” to go to login.gov.
- Click “Create Account.”
- Enter your email address, select your language, check the box to indicate you’ve read the Rules of Use, then click “Submit.”
- You will receive a confirmation email from [email protected]. When you receive it, click the link, and follow the instructions.
- To create an account:
The deadline to apply for a long-term, low-interest disaster loan from the U.S. Small Business Administration has also passed. However, you may still apply online at DisasterLoanAssistance.sba.gov. To request a paper application, call the SBA Customer Service Center at 800-659-2955. To access telecommunications relay services, dial 7-1-1 or send an email to [email protected].
As of November 9, 2023, FEMA and our partners have approved more than $84.2 million in assistance for Vermont storm survivors:
- FEMA has approved more than $23.2 million for households and individuals.
- SBA has approved more than $26.7million in low-interest disaster loans for homeowners, renters and businesses.
- FEMA’s National Flood Insurance Program has paid $34.3 million in claims for policyholders.
- More than 3,958 people have visited Disaster Recovery Centers throughout the nine designated counties to receive information and advice for their recovery.
- Disaster Survivor Assistance teams visited more than 19,465 homes and talked to more than 12,587 residents about how FEMA can help them recover, answered questions, and helped them apply.
FEMA is committed to ensuring disaster assistance is accomplished equitably, without discrimination on the grounds of race, color, religion, nationality, sex, age, disability, English proficiency or economic status. Any disaster survivor or member of the public may contact the FEMA Civil Rights Office if they feel that they are the victim of discrimination. FEMA’s Civil Rights Office can be contacted at 833-285-7448. Multilingual operators are available.
For the latest information on Vermont’s recovery, visit fema.gov/disaster/4720. Follow the FEMA Region 1 account on Twitter at twitter.com/FEMARegion1, the FEMA Facebook page at facebook.com/FEMA, or Vermont Emergency Management on Twitter at twitter.com/vemvt and on Facebook at facebook.com/VermontEmergencyManagement.
Source: 11.9.2023. WILLISTON, Vt. – FEMA

