MIL-OSI USA: FEMA Home Inspections Underway for Oklahoma Wildfire Survivors

Source: US Federal Emergency Management Agency

Headline: FEMA Home Inspections Underway for Oklahoma Wildfire Survivors

FEMA Home Inspections Underway for Oklahoma Wildfire Survivors

OKLAHOMA CITY – After Oklahoma residents apply for FEMA assistance for the March wildfires, a home inspection may be necessary to help determine whether the home is safe, sanitary and livable, or to confirm its present condition

FEMA recognizes that many survivors of the March wildfires suffered significant or total loss of property

The FEMA inspection process requires in-person verification of the applicant, co-applicant or someone authorized to speak on their behalf, as well as the address of the damaged dwelling

Providing photographs or video of the damaged property before and after the disaster can help the inspector to accurately assess the extent of the damage

FEMA inspectors do not make any decisions about eligibility for assistance

Information gathered during the inspection is only one of several criteria FEMA uses to determine if applicants are eligible for federal assistance

 If the home is standing, the housing inspector will consider:The structural soundness of the home, both inside and outside

Whether the electrical, gas, heat, plumbing and sewer/septic systems are in working order

Whether the home is safe to access and can be entered and exited safely

If the home is not standing, the housing inspector will:Verify the current state of the property to accurately assess the extent of the damage

All FEMA representatives have official identification

Housing inspectors will make an appointment with the applicant before the visit

They will already have the applicant’s FEMA application number

 They carry photo identification and will show it to the applicant

For security reasons, federal identification may not be photographed

Inspectors will never ask for, or accept, money

Their service is free

 FEMA inspectors will call or text applicants to arrange to meet at the home

They will leave messages and/or texts at the phone number listed on the FEMA application

These communications may come from unfamiliar phone numbers so it is important that applicants respond to ensure their applications continue to move forward

A typical home inspection takes about 45 minutes to complete

After the inspection, applicants should allow seven to 10 days for processing

If they have questions about the status of their application, they can call the FEMA Helpline at 800-621-3362

To learn more about FEMA home inspections and how to identify an inspector, visit FEMA Home Inspections

For the latest information about Oklahoma’s recovery, visit  fema

gov/disaster/4866

 Follow FEMA Region 6 on social media at x

com/FEMARegion6 and at facebook

com/FEMARegion6/

thomas

wise
Mon, 06/09/2025 – 14:00

MIL OSI USA News