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MANVILLE: County to provide matching funds for Manville flood buyout program 

The Somerset County Board of Chosen Freeholders has voted to provide the required local match for a program that will assist in buying out flood-prone properties in Manville.
“Major storms such as Hurricane Floyd and Hurricane Irene have continued to wreak havoc on residences in low-lying areas of Manville,” said Freeholder Mark Caliguire, county Open Space Advisory Committee liaison. “At the county level we feel it’s our responsibility to help in whatever way we can, so we’re pleased to be able to cover the cost of the 10-percent local match that’s required in order for Manville to receive FEMA funding.
“This current county program is especially important given the recent decision by the Army Corps of Engineers to snub Manville’s request for flood control projects,“ he added.
Manville will receive funding from the Federal Emergency Management Agency for the acquisition of flood-prone properties that have sustained damages in prior flooding events qualifying them as either repetitive or severe repetitive losses.
Borough officials requested its required FEMA 10-percent local match from Somerset County through the county’s Municipal Flood Mitigation Funding Program for the borough’s purchase of the properties, which will be owned and managed by the borough.
Freeholder Director Patricia Walsh said Manville has requested up to $300,000 from the county program to be used as matching funds
The goal of the Municipal Flood Mitigation Funding Program, established by the freeholders in 2012, is to assist municipalities in the acquisition of residences that have experienced severe, repetitive flooding, or homes that have sustained substantial damage of greater than 50 percent.
The program is designed to encourage the preservation of multiple parcels in a flood-prone area and to avoid the preservation of random, disconnected properties within neighborhoods.
The program is available to Somerset County municipalities only and not individual homeowners. Only privately owned, Somerset County residential properties will be considered. All land acquired through this program must be permanently preserved as open space and all structures on properties acquired through the program must be demolished. 

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