The U.S. Department of Agriculture has designated 45 counties in Michigan as natural disaster areas for three separate sets of disaster conditions last year.
Gov. Rick Snyder on Tuesday announced the designation after periods of weather that occurred starting in February 2011 and May 2011. The designation made earlier this year means qualified farm operators are eligible for low-interest emergency loans.
Twenty-nine counties were designated primary natural disaster areas for weather including rain, wind, snow, flooding and tornadoes that started in February 2011. Ten got the designation for similar weather, drought and excessive heat starting at that point.
Six counties were designated primary natural disaster for drought and excessive heat starting in May 2011.
Lists of the counties are on the USDA’s website.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Atmospheric River to Flood Pacific Northwest Through Week
Zillow Deleting Climate Risk Scores Reveals Limits of Flood, Fire Data
LA Fires Push Insurers’ 2025 Disaster Losses to $107 Billion
Poorer Americans Dropped Federal Flood Insurance When Rates Rose