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Judge orders Trump administration to reinstate disaster preparedness grants. That includes projects in Washington, Oregon

The front of a red brick building with Klickitat Valley Health signs. The building has two awnings with white tops. The sky is a purple, blue and pink sunset hue.
Courtesy: Jonathan Lewis
Klickitat Valley Health has plans for a new microgrid project to keep its aging facilities going during long-term power outages. A judge recently ordered the federal government to give back federal funding to disaster preparedness projects, like this one, across the country.

A federal judge has ordered the Trump administration to give back grants to hundreds of disaster-prevention projects across the country, including dozens in the Northwest.

One such project is a planned microgrid in south-central Washington. The goal for the Goldendale microgrid is to build solar and battery storage that would connect the local hospital and school district. Community leaders said that could help rural residents during long-term power outages caused by weather or wildfires.

“ We looked at some of the potential risks to our community and the power grid, especially around wildfire. As we dug into it more, there were a lot of reasons why our little valley could lose power,” said Jonathan Lewis in an earlier interview with NWPB. Lewis is the director of support services for Klickitat Valley Health, or KVH.

In April, with projects underway, the administration abruptly stopped funding for Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities grants, more commonly known as BRIC grants. The grants are part of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA.

“It really (felt) like a betrayal,” Lewis said at the time. “ If we thought that the federal government would pull out of all these (projects), we wouldn't have spent all this time doing all this.”

The bipartisan BRIC grants are aimed at helping communities and tribes plan for future disasters. BRIC grants are FEMA’s largest pre-disaster grants, according to court documents, and are funded through direct Congressional appropriations.

“ By investing ahead of time, we can save lives, reduce injuries, protect property, and also save on post-disaster costs,” said Tyler Roberts, an assistant attorney general with the state of Washington.

Every dollar spent on mitigation saves $6 in post-disaster costs, according to the Washington Attorney General’s Office.

Washington and Oregon were among 20 other states and the District of Columbia that sued the administration, asking to reinstate the grants.The judge ruled the executive branch couldn’t terminate funding doled out by Congress.

Some project leaders said they still feel a little trepidatious because the administration could appeal the decision.

The Goldendale microgrid project was originally awarded a $9.8 million BRIC grant.

“That pot of money was set aside, approved by the last Trump administration, for this,” Lewis said.

Before the funding rollercoaster, FEMA had already paid $1 million to design Goldendale’s microgrid project. Once the funding was pulled, Lewis said community leaders were eager to keep the project moving.

They scraped together funds from the Washington State Department of Commerce and reconfigured the microgrid plans. That included scaling back the school district portion of the project, even though the aging school buildings are about two blocks from the hospital.

At a ground breaking in November, Lewis announced plans for solar carports and a ground-source heat pump at the hospital. Construction is expected to be completed in 2026.

Now, the addition of the BRIC grant could complicate things, Lewis said. That’s because they’ve redesigned plans, intending to piecemeal the project together.

However, he said he’s excited and hopeful the BRIC funding could help complete the microgrid sooner.

The decision also comes at a time when many rural hospitals are stretched thin and concerned about closing, Lewis said.

In Oregon, Astoria’s Columbia Memorial Hospital had plans to expand its footprint and prepare for tsunamis or a significant Cascadia earthquake. The hospital was supposed to receive $20 million in BRIC grant funding.

“ We would be the first hospital in the nation that has embedded a vertical tsunami evacuation staircase and a tsunami safe refuge area into a hospital design or into a hospital structure,” Erik Thorsen, the hospital’s CEO, told OPB’s Think Out Loud.

These grants shouldn’t be a political decision, he said.

“This is about saving and protecting lives, which I think is at the core of the BRIC grant program,” Thorsen said.

Courtney Flatt has worked as an environmental reporter at NWPB since 2011. She has covered everything from environmental justice to climate change.