Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Floridians dunned for overpayments

Compiled from wire reports The Spokesman-Review

Fort Myers, Fla. The Federal Emergency Management Agency has asked thousands of Floridians whose homes were damaged by last summer’s four hurricanes to give back more than $27 million in aid overpayments.

FEMA this year began mailing letters to residents in efforts to recoup the overpayments from people who received federal aid after Hurricanes Charley, Frances, Ivan and Jeanne hit Florida last August and September.

According to data supplied to the News-Press of Fort Myers through a Freedom of Information Act request, the agency detailed 6,579 cases in which they say people owe a total of $27.2 million.

Many of the problems stem from FEMA providing money for items that were later covered by property insurance policies, more than one person from the same household applying for benefits or from processing errors.

Boy burned after fall into thermal pool

Yellowstone Park, Wyo. A 9-year-old Kentucky boy fell into a hot spring pool in Yellowstone National Park Sunday morning, suffering second-degree burns over 40 percent of his body.

Park officials said Matthew Luke Hoang of Lawrenceburg, Ky., was being treated at the burn center in Salt Lake City. He was stabilized at Lake Clinic in the park and then flown to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center in Idaho Falls, before being flown to Salt Lake.

Officials said the boy and his family had stopped at a small thermal area at about 9 a.m. The boy was playing with his dog and somehow fell into the pool, suffering second- and possibly some third-degree burns. His father immediately pulled him out of the hot water and called 911.

Several children hurt as school bus rolls

Topsham, Maine A school bus taking kids from a summer camp to an amusement park rolled over Sunday, injuring several children.

All 37 children aboard were taken to hospitals for treatment or as a precaution, said Maj. Randy Nichols of the Maine State Police. None of the injuries was considered life-threatening.

State Department of Public Safety spokesman Stephen McCausland said most of the injuries appeared to be bumps and bruises.

The bus, chartered from Poland’s Bus Service in Cornville, was part of a convoy of buses and vans carrying youngsters from Camp Modin to Funtown USA, a popular amusement area. Ten counselors and the driver were on board the bus.

The accident happened on Interstate 295 about 30 miles northeast of Portland. The bus veered onto the soft shoulder in the breakdown lane on a slight curve, Nichols said. The driver then overcorrected, causing the bus to skid sideways across both travel lanes and end up on its right side in the median.