The Legislative Yuan yesterday approved an aid and recovery package authorizing the government to allocate up to NT$60 billion (US$1.99 billion) for regions hit by Typhoon Danas and subsequent torrential rains last month.
Proposed by the Executive Yuan on Aug. 7, the bill was passed swiftly after ruling and opposition lawmakers reached a consensus in inter-party talks on relief funding and assistance for disaster-stricken areas.
The package increases the government’s spending cap from the originally proposed NT$56 billion to NT$60 billion, earmarked for repairing and rebuilding infrastructure, electricity systems, telecommunications and cable TV networks, cultural heritage sites and other public facilities.
Photo: Chen Yi-kuan, Taipei Times
Areas covered include Miaoli County and regions south of Miaoli in western Taiwan and Hualien and Taitung counties in eastern Taiwan.
The legislation also provides support for private-sector recovery — including the agriculture, fishery, tourism and cultural industries — and for affected households through subsidies, compensation and other relief measures.
Lawmakers also approved a resolution granting NT$20,000 in cash to households that were inundated by floodwaters exceeding 50cm, on top of existing relief payouts, and NT$30,000 to low-income and lower-middle-income households in the same circumstances.
The act would remain in effect until Dec. 31 next year, with certain infrastructure projects permitted to continue until the end of 2027.
The Cabinet would need to submit a separate appropriation bill before accessing the funds.
President William Lai (賴清德) on social media yesterday thanked lawmakers for setting aside partisan differences and approving the aid package.
The recent severe weather killed two people, injured more than 700 and forced thousands to evacuate. More than 1 million households experienced power outages, while 70,000 lost access to water, according to government data.
In southern Taiwan, where agriculture and aquaculture are major economic activities, the two sectors sustained an estimated NT$3.28 billion in losses.
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