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ALERT: FLASH FLOOD WARNING: Oahu in Honolulu, HI — Warning issued April 10 at 4:46PM HST until April 10 at 7:45PM HST by NWS Honolulu HIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Emmet — Watch issued April 10 at 10:31PM EDT until April 15 at 8:00AM EDT by NWS Gaylord MIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Western Chippewa — Watch issued April 10 at 10:31PM EDT until April 15 at 8:00AM EDT by NWS Gaylord MIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Clay, MN — Watch issued April 10 at 9:29PM CDT by NWS Grand Forks NDALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Guam — Watch issued April 11 at 8:05AM ChST until April 15 at 10:00AM ChST by NWS Tiyan GUALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Bayfield — Watch issued April 10 at 1:04PM CDT until April 15 at 7:00AM CDT by NWS Duluth MNFEMA approves major disaster declaration for Tennessee following severe winter storm — Feb. 7, 2026IICRC S520 mold remediation standard cited in 2026 National Defense Authorization Act — Jan. 5, 2026Hawaii receives presidential disaster declaration for flooding — Apr. 8, 2026IICRC S500 consensus body issues position statement on weather-related water damage — Mar. 16, 2026LA wildfire rebuilding: California Insurance Commissioner study shows fire-safe construction cuts losses — Mar. 27, 2026FEMA designates 15 Tennessee counties as natural disaster areas after winter storm — Apr. 6, 2026IICRC S220 standard open for second round of public input — Mar. 27, 2026R&R Magazine: AI adoption reaches 88% of restoration businesses in 2026 — Feb. 18, 2026Commerce Dept. invests $4.9M in disaster supplemental funding for storm-impacted states — Apr. 9, 2026Florida Helene and Milton recovery: FEMA provides ongoing support as long-term recovery continues — Feb. 10, 2026ALERT: FLASH FLOOD WARNING: Oahu in Honolulu, HI — Warning issued April 10 at 4:46PM HST until April 10 at 7:45PM HST by NWS Honolulu HIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Emmet — Watch issued April 10 at 10:31PM EDT until April 15 at 8:00AM EDT by NWS Gaylord MIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Western Chippewa — Watch issued April 10 at 10:31PM EDT until April 15 at 8:00AM EDT by NWS Gaylord MIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Clay, MN — Watch issued April 10 at 9:29PM CDT by NWS Grand Forks NDALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Guam — Watch issued April 11 at 8:05AM ChST until April 15 at 10:00AM ChST by NWS Tiyan GUALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Bayfield — Watch issued April 10 at 1:04PM CDT until April 15 at 7:00AM CDT by NWS Duluth MNFEMA approves major disaster declaration for Tennessee following severe winter storm — Feb. 7, 2026IICRC S520 mold remediation standard cited in 2026 National Defense Authorization Act — Jan. 5, 2026Hawaii receives presidential disaster declaration for flooding — Apr. 8, 2026IICRC S500 consensus body issues position statement on weather-related water damage — Mar. 16, 2026LA wildfire rebuilding: California Insurance Commissioner study shows fire-safe construction cuts losses — Mar. 27, 2026FEMA designates 15 Tennessee counties as natural disaster areas after winter storm — Apr. 6, 2026IICRC S220 standard open for second round of public input — Mar. 27, 2026R&R Magazine: AI adoption reaches 88% of restoration businesses in 2026 — Feb. 18, 2026Commerce Dept. invests $4.9M in disaster supplemental funding for storm-impacted states — Apr. 9, 2026Florida Helene and Milton recovery: FEMA provides ongoing support as long-term recovery continues — Feb. 10, 2026
LIVE|Saturday, April 11, 2026
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Bipartisan Bill Would Create Interstate Contractor Licensing Reciprocity for Disaster Response

Legislation introduced in March 2026 would allow licensed contractors from any state to work in federally declared disaster areas without obtaining a separate license in the affected state, removing a major barrier to rapid disaster response.

WASHINGTON — Bipartisan legislation introduced in the House and Senate in March 2026 would create a federal framework for interstate contractor licensing reciprocity during federally declared disasters, addressing a longstanding barrier that prevents out-of-state contractors from quickly deploying to disaster-affected areas.

Under current law, contractors who travel from their home state to work in a disaster-affected state must comply with the licensing requirements of the destination state, which may require obtaining a separate license, passing additional examinations, or waiting for reciprocity agreements to be processed. In the immediate aftermath of a major disaster, these requirements can delay the deployment of needed restoration capacity by days or weeks.

The Disaster Contractor Reciprocity Act of 2026 would create a temporary federal license that allows any contractor holding a valid license in their home state to work in a federally declared disaster area for up to 180 days without obtaining a separate state license. The temporary license would be subject to the same insurance and bonding requirements as the home state license.

The legislation has been endorsed by the Restoration Industry Association, the Associated General Contractors of America, and the National Association of Home Builders, as well as several state emergency management agencies.

Opposition has come primarily from state licensing boards, which have expressed concern that the legislation would undermine state consumer protection standards and create enforcement challenges.

The bill has been referred to the House Energy and Commerce Committee and the Senate Commerce Committee. Industry advocates are cautiously optimistic about its prospects, noting that the bipartisan support and broad industry endorsement give it a better chance than previous similar proposals.

Topics:contractor licensingreciprocitydisaster responselegislationinterstateRIA
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