The Minnesota Legislature approved a $4.7 million disaster-relief measure on Monday, offering reimbursement checks to counties in central and southern Minnesota battered by windstorms, floods and ice storms over the spring and summer.
"Disaster relief is on its way," Gov. Mark Dayton said in the governor's reception room, where he signed the bill into law.
In a rare show of unanimity, the Senate quickly dispatched the disaster-relief package on a 59-0 vote, and the House followed suit, 123-1. Legislators briefly engaged over controversial new business taxes but saved that issue and their continuing political disputes for the regular legislative session next year.
"We will come together, Republicans and Democrats today, and do the right thing," said Rep. Greg Davids, a Republican from Preston whose southeastern district was one of the hardest-hit by the late-June storms.
The bulk of the money, $4.5 million, provides the state and local share required by the federal government for cleanup and repair costs related to severe storms, straight-line winds and floods that raged through central and southern Minnesota. Total disaster relief, including federal money, amounts to $18 million.
The summer storms hit the week of June 20-26 and included wind speeds of 85 miles an hour in Swift County, an 8.25-inch rainfall in Wilkin County and numerous flooded and damaged roads. The federal disaster declaration covers the 18 counties stretching from Wilkin County on the North Dakota border to Houston and Fillmore counties in the extreme southeastern section of the state. Others included Benton, Big Stone, Douglas, Faribault, Freeborn, Grant, Hennepin, McLeod, Morrison, Pope, Sibley, Stearns, Stevens, Swift and Traverse.
The exclusion of Ramsey County accounted for the sole dissenting vote, cast by St. Paul DFL Rep. Alice Hausman.
She said her densely populated county missed qualifying because its per capita disaster costs were slightly lower than the standard set by the federal government. "Because we measure on a county basis, we're sunk," Hausman said. Ramsey fell $280,000 short of the $1.7 million the county needed to qualify for federal relief.