Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.

Flood insurance rebuilds homes with public money repeatedly

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

\WASHINGTON, N.C. (AP) — Floodwaters rose about 15 inches (40 centimeters) into Danielle Rees’ home in September when Hurricane Florence drenched this tidewater city on the Pamlico River and overwhelmed a local creek and marshland. The first floor was a sopping mess of gritty, swampy water in three bedrooms, a bathroom and a laundry.

“It’s part of living close to the river, and Washington is really low land,” said Rees, a graphic designer who grew up in the city.

But she anticipates her $2,000-a-year policy through the taxpayer-subsidized National Flood Insurance Program will help her rebuild the home about a quarter-mile from the river, just as it did in 2011 after Hurricane Irene — and as it did, under previous ownership, after floods in 1996, 1998 and 1999, according to her property history provided by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The program has done something similar, over and over, for others.

Records at FEMA, which operates the program, show that nearly 37,000 properties from the Carolinas to California have repeatedly flooded and been rebuilt — some dozens of times — with help from a federal insurance program that is, itself, financially underwater. About 18,000 of those are currently covered by policies, and 15,000 of those haven’t taken voluntary steps to reduce the risk of future damage to their property, FEMA said this week.

The National Flood Insurance Program was $20 billion in the red before the start of the current hurricane season, even after Congress last year wrote off an additional $16 billion. The program must be reauthorized by Congress this month.

The repeatedly flooded properties cost nearly $7.4 billion in claims before the start of the current hurricane season.

Rees’ home isn’t included on the official “severe repetitive loss” list because the 1996 and 1998 hurricanes didn’t cause damage exceeding $5,000. It takes at least four of those $5,000-plus occurrences to put properties on the list.

Last year was the 40-year-old flood program’s second-worst, with more than $10 billion in claims, following hits from Hurricanes Harvey in Texas and Maria in Puerto Rico. Annual losses have risen and fallen with the weather since a record in 2005, when Hurricane Katrina swamped the Gulf Coast and triggered more than $16 billion in payouts.

Some critics say the situation will only worsen as global climate change generates more extreme weather and raises ocean levels.

The properties that have suffered severe and repetitive losses “are the canary in the coal mine for the millions of properties in the U.S. that are going to be in the exact same situation in future decades,” said Rob Moore, water and climate director at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

The environmental group favors FEMA giving homeowners more financial help to move to higher ground.

San Marcos Record

(512) 392-2458
P.O. Box 1109, San Marcos, TX 78666