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Harris County officials will ask Commissioners Court this week to consider a new funding strategy designed to preserve hundreds of millions of dollars in federal flood mitigation funding while keeping major flood risk reduction projects on track.
The proposal, developed by the Harris County Flood Control District (HCFCD), the Harris County Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD), and the Texas General Land Office (GLO), reflects months of coordination among local, county, state, and federal partners as agencies work to navigate strict federal funding deadlines and complex project delivery requirements.
At issue is approximately $322 million in Community Development Block Grant–Disaster Recovery (CDBG-DR) funding awarded to Harris County for Hurricane Harvey recovery projects. Those funds carry a February 2027 expenditure deadline. At the same time, a separate pool of Community Development Block Grant–Mitigation (CDBG-MIT) funding is available through a program with a later deadline.
According to county officials, the proposed strategy would better align project schedules with available funding timelines.
A Different Approach to Meeting Federal Deadlines
Rather than reducing project scopes or abandoning projects, county officials are proposing a phased approach that shifts eligible work between federal funding programs based on when projects are expected to spend funds.
Under the proposal, portions of slower-moving flood mitigation projects currently funded through the disaster recovery program could be completed using mitigation funding, which has a later deadline. At the same time, several faster-moving projects that are expected to spend funds before February 2027 could be moved into the disaster recovery program.
The goal is straightforward: ensure federal dollars are spent within required deadlines while preserving the flood risk reduction benefits originally promised to communities.
County officials have stated that the proposal would maintain the full scope of planned projects while creating an opportunity for additional mitigation investments in the future.
Why It Matters
Federal flood mitigation projects are often funded through multiple programs, each with its own eligibility requirements, reporting standards, environmental reviews, and spending deadlines.
While much of the public conversation has focused on project deadlines, the reality is that major flood mitigation projects often take years to move from design and environmental review through property acquisition, bidding, construction, and closeout.
As construction schedules have become clearer, county officials say they now have a better understanding of which projects can realistically meet the February 2027 deadline and which would benefit from being funded through programs with longer implementation periods.
The proposed strategy is intended to ensure Harris County can continue advancing projects while minimizing the risk that federal funds could go unused.
An Example of Intergovernmental Coordination
The proposal also highlights the complexity of delivering large-scale infrastructure projects through multiple levels of government.
The funding originates with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, is administered in Texas by the General Land Office, and is implemented locally through Harris County agencies.
Officials from both Harris County and the GLO have publicly described the proposal as the result of ongoing collaboration between agencies working to find practical solutions within existing federal requirements.
The approach demonstrates how local and state agencies can adapt funding structures and project sequencing to address implementation challenges while keeping projects moving forward.
What Happens Next
The proposed funding strategy is expected to be discussed during the June 11 meeting of Harris County Commissioners Court.
Commissioners are expected to receive updates on project status, federal funding timelines, and the proposed path forward. Any actions related to the strategy would remain subject to applicable federal and state requirements, including approvals from HUD and the GLO.
The discussion comes at a time of heightened public attention on Harris County’s flood mitigation program and broader questions about project delivery, federal deadlines, and long-term flood resilience investments.
Regardless of the outcome of Thursday’s discussion, the proposal represents a significant development in Harris County’s effort to preserve federal funding and continue delivering flood risk reduction projects across the region.
