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Sen. Martha McSally (R-Arizona)

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

July 1, 2020

McSally Pushes FEMA to Reduce COVID-19 Cost-Sharing Burden on Tribes

U.S. SENATE – U.S. Senator Martha McSally (R-AZ) today advocated for a reduced cost-sharing burden for Arizona’s tribes hard hit by the coronavirus pandemic.

During a U.S. Senate Indian Affairs Committee hearing, McSally asked Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) Region 9 Administrator why Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez had not received a response to his letter requesting a waiver of the 25 percent cost-share burden.

“This pandemic has devastated Native American communities and economies,” McSally said. “While FEMA aid has been flowing to the Navajo Nation since the early days of the pandemic, the 25 percent cost-share requirement has proven to be burdensome and seems to unwisely divert funds away from where they are needed most locally. On April 2, the Navajo Nation formally requested a waiver for the 25 percent tribal cost-share requirement. FEMA acknowledged receipt of the letter and reported that the request was under review at FEMA Region 9 Headquarters.”

“Mr. Fenton, since nearly three months have passed since the Nation submitted their request, when can President Nez expect a response?”

Mr. Robert J. Fenton, Jr., FEMA’s Region 9 Administrator said: “So there’s a couple different ways the cost-share can be changed … In the interim, the Administration has made CARES Act funding available to be used as a cost-share match so that could be used that 25 percent along with our 75 percent to cover the whole 100 percent … So no state, tribal nation, or territory has received a cost-share change primarily because of all the funding that’s out there now and trying to leverage that together to provide the need. I talked to President Nez yesterday and he understands that there hasn’t been a response yet, that doesn’t mean that there won’t be one.”

Senator McSally pressed Mr. Fenton further to secure a commitment that FEMA will provide a formal response to the Navajo Nation’s request promptly.

McSally also asked Administrator Fenton to focus on improving FEMA’s working relationship with tribes in a way that respects tribal sovereignty and also improves efficiency, and asked the Indian Health Services director to increase mobile COVID-19 testing for rural tribes such as the White Mountain Apache Tribe.

“I’m concerned the White Mountain Apache Tribe now has the highest infection rate per capita in Arizona and are in need of mobile testing sites,” McSally told Rear Admiral Michael Weahkee, the director of Indian Health Services.

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