http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/texassouthwest/stories/091405dntexkattexascosts.124a6555.htmlThe bills are piling up: rent, police overtime, meals, transportation, hospital beds. Texas is already spending hundreds of millions of dollars caring for Katrina victims – but exactly how much may not be known for weeks.
And as they start tallying costs, state officials are becoming increasingly worried that despite a federal disaster declaration, Washington will leave Texas taxpayers stuck with huge bills.
Are we concerned? Yes," Gov. Rick Perry's spokesman, Robert Black, said Tuesday after the latest in a series of meetings between state and local leaders and federal emergency officials. "We are not completely comfortable with the federal response in terms of education and Medicaid."
House Majority Leader
Tom DeLay, R-Sugar Land, said that inevitably, some evacuees would end up as Texas residents, so the state will have to accept responsibility. "We will have to come up with some arbitrary timeframe," he said.