INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Department of Homeland Security has announced a plan to reimburse homeowners for building FEMA-approved tornado safe rooms or shelters on their property.
The reimbursements cover up to 75% of the expenses in building the shelter and max out at $5,000.
The Residential Safe Room Program was developed in 2015 to provide a rebate for the installation of safe rooms for Indiana residences.
Indiana is providing this rebate program through the FEMA Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) Grant Program. Therefore, IDHS must comply with all federal grant regulations for each rebate recipient.
To put in an application, which is open through April 15, visit the IDHS site here.
IDHS asks all interested applicants to read all safe room program rules and regulations carefully to ensure eligibility for a safe room rebate and to ensure applications meet all federal grant guidelines associated with this program.
IDHS and FEMA will review each application and associated documentation submitted to ensure guidelines are met for each application entered in the lottery.
-
Deal to turn abandoned high school into community center falls through
John Marshall High School will remain vacant after the city of Indianapolis decided not to buy the building.HVAF veterans thank community for support after massive fire
HVAF veterans are thanking the community for an outpouring of support after a massive fire left over four dozen veterans displaced.SWIFT CITY: The Eras Tour takes over Indianapolis
Indianapolis has officially turned into Swift City as The Eras Tour kicks off its three-days at Lucas Oil Stadium. The megastar Taylor Swift and Swifties have left a mark on the city — It's like something out of your Wildest Dream.Why some Swifties are flocking to Indy — even without tickets
WRTV talked with one woman who still doesn't have tickets but plans on traveling to Indy to explore everything it has to offer.