(Bloomberg) — A once in 200-years storm dumped 11 inches of rain over four hours on the central Massachusetts town of Leominster in September, washing away culverts, creating a sinkhole that swallowed cars at a dealership, and flooding the city council chambers with sewage.
Damages to public infrastructure in Leominster exceeded $24 million, but the federal government denied a request for reimbursement to fix everything from dams to sanitation mains, and rejected Governor Maura Healey's bid for a major disaster declaration for impacted counties in the center of her state. Then, in June, the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency turned down her appeal, Healey said.
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