The Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity is sending $62 million to 55 communities around the state for use on disaster plans.
The department announced Thursday the money is part of the IKE Disaster Recovery Planning Program. The program was set up after remnants of Hurricane Ike caused destruction in towns around the state in 2008.
Communities have to apply for the grants with plans that will help prevent damage from future disasters and help with recovery from damage that could come.
The grants went to communities across the state. They ranged from the town of Arcola just south of Champaign to Ottawa and Streator in central Illinois and Rock Island in the northwest. Most grants were between $75,000 and $125,000.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
NYC Travel Snarled by Snow as Central Park Gets 15 Inches
Claims Handling Breakdowns From LA Wildfires One Year on
Besieged Berkshire Utility Tries to Rewrite Who Pays for Wildfires
Gas-Guzzler Revival Risks Dead-End Future for US Automakers