HF4581
Hazard mitigation grant program established to support mitigation planning and mitigation projects that diminish potential effects of emergencies, report required, and money appropriated.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
Related bill: SF5002
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
- Establish a state program to reduce risks from emergencies by funding hazard mitigation planning and mitigation projects.
- Create a Hazard Mitigation Fund (account) to provide grants and technical help to eligible local governments and related entities, aiming for long-term risk reduction and protection of people and property.
Key Provisions
- Creates a Hazard Mitigation Fund Grants program in Minnesota statute, administered by the state commissioner.
- Allows use of funds for both planning and practical mitigation projects, and to support activities that reduce future emergency costs.
Eligible Applicants
- Local governments and political subdivisions: counties, cities (including home rule and statutory), towns, school districts, special districts, joint powers authorities, and other local government units.
- Any department, board, commission, or authority acting on behalf of an eligible applicant may submit applications.
Funding Mechanism
- Establishes the hazard mitigation account in the state’s special revenue fund.
- Money in the account can be used for:
- Grants and technical assistance for planning and mitigation projects.
- The nonfederal share for federal hazard mitigation programs (like BRIC and HMGP) to the extent allowed by federal law.
- Money from appropriations, gifts, federal funds, donations, and interest earnings.
- Eligible costs and matching: the applicant’s share of project costs must be at least 25%, with in-kind contributions allowed to count toward that share under detailed rules.
Eligible Activities
- Mitigation planning activities: developing, updating, or implementing local hazard mitigation plans; risk assessments; public engagement; plan adoption.
- Mitigation projects: design, engineering, environmental and historic preservation reviews, permits, construction, acquisition, and other activities needed to complete projects; also includes pre-award costs to apply for federal assistance.
- Planning activities are eligible for funding, and projects must tie to an approved local hazard mitigation plan or FEMA-approved process.
Application Process and Timing
- The commissioner must run an annual grant application cycle and may add cycles in response to disasters or new federal funding opportunities.
- Applications must be filed on behalf of the eligible applicant and cite an official action authorizing the submission and grant agreements.
- If an applicant lacks a current FEMA-approved hazard mitigation plan, they may apply for a planning grant to develop or update one.
Matching Contributions
- An eligible applicant’s share of project costs must be at least 25%.
- Donated materials, equipment, services, and labor can count toward the applicant’s share, subject to rules:
- Donated nonprofessional labor valued at prevailing federal minimum wage.
- Donated equipment valued according to highway equipment rates used by the state Department of Transportation.
- Donated materials and professional services valued at prevailing rates and documented by invoices.
- In-kind matching hours valued at the prevailing volunteer rate.
- All donated items must be clearly documented in the application.
Priorities and Evaluation
- Applications are evaluated for:
- Cost-effectiveness and long-term risk reduction.
- Flood-related needs tied to local watershed planning and capital improvement programs.
- Reduction of risk to safety-critical facilities, lifelines, and essential services.
- Addressing repetitive losses and recurring impacts.
- Feasibility, readiness, and the applicant’s ability to complete the activity within the grant period.
- Use of resilience measures, nature-based solutions, or other multi-benefit approaches.
- Benefits to historically underserved or higher-vulnerability communities.
- Leveraging federal or other nonstate funding (including BRIC and HMGP) and ensuring long-term operation and maintenance.
Technical Assistance and Coordination
- The program must provide technical help to build local capacity to identify hazards, develop projects, and apply for federal aid.
- The program should coordinate with Minnesota’s hazard mitigation plan and may adopt BRIC/HMGP evaluation methods.
- Flood-related projects should align with local watershed management plans and Chapter 103B and 103D requirements.
- After a state or federal disaster declaration, the program may add supplemental cycles or adjust priorities to support opportunities related to the disaster.
Oversight, Reporting, and Compliance
- Each grant must be governed by a formal grant agreement outlining scope, performance period, reporting, and remedies for nonperformance.
- Grantees must meet applicable state and federal procurement, auditing, and record-retention requirements; misused funds may require repayment.
- By January 15 each year, the commissioner must report to specified legislative chairs summarizing awards and outcomes.
Significant Changes to Existing Law
- Creates a new Hazard Mitigation Grant Program within Minnesota statute and a Hazard Mitigation Fund in the special revenue fund.
- Establishes formal definitions (e.g., eligible applicant, mitigation planning, mitigation project) and a structured grant process with annual cycles.
- Institutes minimum cost-sharing and in-kind contribution rules and a detailed set of selection criteria and reporting requirements.
- Provides for federal coordination (BRIC, HMGP) and alignment with federal hazard mitigation standards.
Relevant Terms - hazard mitigation account - hazard mitigation fund grants - eligible applicant - mitigation planning - mitigation project - nonfederal share - in-kind matching - donated materials - donated equipment - donated services - volunteer rate - cost-effectiveness - long-term risk reduction - flood-related applications - local watershed management plans - BRIC (Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities) - HMGP (Hazard Mitigation Grant Program) - FEMA - Code of Federal Regulations title 44 part 201 - hazard mitigation plan (FEMA-approved) - 103B and 103D (Minnesota chapters) - technical assistance - grant agreement - reporting and oversight - procurement, auditing, record retention - post-disaster supplemental application cycles
Bill text versions
- Introduction PDF PDF file
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 23, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Public Safety Finance and Policy |
Citations
[
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Cross-reference to Minnesota Statutes chapter 12B as the codification target for the hazard mitigation grant program proposed in the bill.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "12B",
"subdivision": ""
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "References federal hazard mitigation requirements under 44 C.F.R. Part 201 (and successor provisions) to guide planning, evaluation, and approval of mitigation projects.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "44 C.F.R. Part 201",
"subdivision": ""
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Flood-related applications are evaluated on local watershed management plans under Minn. Stat. § 103B.221 and identified capital improvement program and standards schedules.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "103B.221",
"subdivision": ""
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "The bill refers to compliance with Minnesota Statutes chapter 103B for related flood-related planning and watershed management requirements.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "103B",
"subdivision": ""
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "The bill refers to compliance with Minnesota Statutes chapter 103D regarding watershed management planning and related requirements.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "103D",
"subdivision": ""
}
]