Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumThousands of U.S. homes have flooded over and over again. Here's where.
What we are seeing is flooding is increasing faster than we are mitigating our risk, one analyst says of data from the National Flood Insurance Program
By Brady Dennis and Harry Stevens
January 9, 2024 at 9:00 a.m. EST
Source: Federal Emergency Management Agency, Natural Resources Defense Council
The number of U.S. properties that have flooded numerous times continues to rise, according to newly released federal data, in the latest sign of the nations mounting flood risk.
Figures show that the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP), which covers millions of homeowners across the nation, now has on its books at least 44,000 structures where damage has been covered again and again by taxpayers, in some cases with cumulative payouts that exceed a propertys worth.
One property in Virginia Beach has flooded 52 times including four floods in 2020 and another two in 2021 with total payments amounting to $784,967. Another property on the Outer Banks of North Carolina has flooded 44 times, with payments totaling more than $2.2 million. There are 30 properties that have flooded at least 30 times, the data shows.
Properties that have repeatedly flooded account for only a small fraction about 1 percent of the flood insurance programs nearly 5 million active policies across more than 22,000 communities. But they are responsible for more than 10 percent of the agencys claims, according to the Natural Resources Defense Council, an advocacy group that sought the updated records from the federal government and maintains an online dashboard that tracks the issue. ... Essentially, what we are seeing is flooding is increasing faster than we are mitigating our risk, said Anna Weber, an NRDC senior policy analyst.
Signs warn potential home buyers about flooding issues in the Starcreek Circle neighborhood of Myrtle Beach, S.C., in 2022. (Madeline Gray for The Washington Post)
{snip}
Atlantic Ocean waves wash past Seagull Streets beachfront houses in Rodanthe, N.C., in 2022. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post)
{snip}
By Brady Dennis
Brady Dennis is a Pulitzer Prize-winning national reporter for The Washington Post, focusing on the environment and public health. He previously spent years covering the nations economy. Twitter https://twitter.com/brady_dennis
By Harry Stevens
Harry Stevens is the Climate Lab columnist at The Washington Post. He was part of a team at The Post that won the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting for the series 2C: Beyond the Limit. Twitter https://twitter.com/Harry_Stevens
NJCher
(38,218 posts)and hover your mouse over your county and it will tell you which areas have repeated flooding problems. This is at the online dashboard link featured in the story.
I did it for my county and sure enough--all the towns in the northern part of my county that popped up are the ones that I keep seeing in the news. What this map told me that I didn't know before is how much reimbursement took place--in one town almost $40 million. It will tell you for each town. You do have to know some initialisms, such as SRLP and NFIP, for example.
Incredibly interesting data map! Anyone interested in infographics will have an interesting time here.
Now, back to my flooded basement. And I am on high ground, up on a mountain. We even had our basement waterproofed and I still have this issue--that's how bad it was here in this latest storm. I have spent half an hour mopping up water and much more to go.
hunter
(39,056 posts)We need to figure out how to relocate entire communities.
So far as insurance goes, there probably needs to be some sort of three strikes law.
On the third strike everything on your property is removed and the land returned to something resembling a natural state.