Pat McElraft

Former State Representative, North Carolina-13th District

Pat McElraft was a Republican member of the North Carolina House of Representatives, serving District 13, Carteret and Jones Counties. In her seventh term, she is the Deputy Majority Whip for the House Republican Caucus. After graduating from C. E. Donart High School in Stillwater Oklahoma, she attended the University of Oklahoma and Oklahoma State University. Following her studies, Pat began a 30-year career in technical sales with a national microbiology products company.

Pat served as a Carteret County Commissioner and Town of Emerald Isle Commissioner prior to her election to the North Carolina House of Representatives in 2006. Throughout her tenure in the General Assembly, she has prioritized issues concerning economic development, coastal management, natural resources, public educational resources and disaster recovery.

Rep. McElraft served on the House Standing Committees on Appropriations, Appropriations- Agricultural and Natural and Economic Resources (Co-Chair), Environment, Ethics, Health Care Reform, Insurance, Regulatory Reform and State Personnel. Additionally, she is a member of the House Select Committees on Disaster Relief and North Carolina River Quality.

Pat has lived in Emerald Isle for over 30 years, where she now practices as a part-time real estate broker. She remains an active supporter of various civic organizations and recently served on the North Carolina Travel and Tourism Board. Rep. McElraft and her husband of 54 years, Marine Colonel Roger McElraft, are the proud parents of two grown children and two grandchildren.

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Help Me Choose

Which characteristics is your community looking for in funding opportunities?

Disaster declaration
A Presidential Disaster Declaration unlocks a suite of federal programs that assist local governments with disaster recovery. This is a good filter for communities included in recent Disaster Declarations related to flooding.
Nature-based solutions
The program has a strong focus on providing assistance to promote a healthy ecosystem as a critical defense against flooding impacts. Eligible activities may include floodplain restoration, environmental stewardship, projects that use natural features to mitigate erosion, and living shorelines.
Encourages public-private partnerships
The program encourages or requires collaboration between government entities and stakeholders, including the private sector, to fund, develop, or implement projects.
Offers rolling deadlines
The program accepts applications on an ongoing basis with no fixed deadline.

Is your project in the planning, design, or construction phase?

Planning
The gathering of data and information regarding the extent and impacts of flooding. Eligible activities may include data acquisition, risk assessment, and environmental analysis.
Design & scoping
Covers pre-construction activities, such as defining project scope, developing technical designs, and securing funding to prepare for implementation.
Construction & implementation
Involves carrying out flood resilience projects, including building infrastructure and deploying solutions to reduce flood risks.

Are you looking for grants, loans, or technical assistance for your project?

Funding (grants)
A monetary award that does not need to be repaid. Many federal grants are reimbursable, meaning recipients must cover project costs upfront and then request reimbursement from the government.
Financing (loans)
A government-issued loan that must be repaid. These loans typically provide funding upfront, helping communities cover project costs before repayment begins.
Technical assistance
Assistance from the government in the form of services — such as project planning, engineering and design support, data analysis, training, capacity building, or collaboration through a cooperative agreement — instead of direct funding.

Some programs provide extra support for specific project types or communities. Do any of these apply to your project?

Small or rural communities
Programs that set aside funding, offer loan forgiveness, or adjust cost share requirements for communities with smaller populations.
Small or low-cost projects
Programs that offer reduced requirements for smaller projects, such as waived cost-sharing or exemptions from benefit-cost analysis.
Regional or watershed focus
Programs that support projects that take a watershed management approach or address flooding at a regional scale, requiring coordination beyond a single town or community.
Tribal communities
Programs that dedicate resources or adjust cost share requirements specifically for tribal governments or organizations.