Houston recovery czar looking for largest-ever volunteer program after Harvey

Thursday, November 2, 2017
HOUSTON (KTRK) -- The city's newly-appointed flood recovery czar appeared Tuesday in front of city council members in a formal setting for the first time, outlying his plan to "build a stronger Houston."

Former Shell Oil president Marvin Odum now has that tall task in his job description as the person in charge of Houston's recovery.
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Odum, a native Houstonian, says the job now is to focus on four major areas: housing, city infrastructure, flood mitigation and revitalizing small businesses. And doing it all as fast as possible.

"We are looking for ways to be faster, and fully compliant with all local, federal guidelines," Odum said.

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On a day that brought rain to parts of Houston, Odum outlined how to get billions of dollars in federal funding, rebuild major portions of the city and keep areas from being susceptible to that rain.
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How do you accomplish that?



Create the "largest-ever volunteer program" with millions of volunteer hours.

Odum's pitch, a goal of more than 10 million volunteer hours, organized neighborhood-by-neighborhood. Those hours can then be used to seek FEMA reimbursement dollars.

Those volunteers can help with home repair and other clean-up efforts in very localized areas across the city, Odum said.

For larger projects, like bayou repair or expansion, it will take billions in federal funds to accomplish: at least $6 billion for bayou projects, $500 million for reservoirs, $500 million for lake rehabilitation, $500 million for regional water detention and another $5 billion for unscheduled, unplanned and unfunded city of Houston projects. That list alone is more than $12 billion and doesn't include major projects like the proposed "coastal spine" to protect against storm surge. That's expected to cost at least $12 billion on its own.

Hundreds of millions worth of projects have already launched or are planned in the near future to asses the city's needs, Odum said. Most of those costs should be covered by FEMA, he said.

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