Flood pressure: Climate disasters drown FEMA’s insurance plans
http://grist.org/cities/flood-pressure-how-climate-disasters-put-femas-flood-insurance-program-underwater/
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Heres the other thing: While Biggert-Waters contained only passing mention of climate change, it was the first real wake-up call for many coastal residents who had been living with the illusion that, if disaster struck, the federal government would always be there to pick up the pieces. As comforting as that might seem, it is becoming less and less realistic as the mercury, and the waters, rise.
Heres the story of how we got here and a few thoughts on how we might get out.
The Federal Flood Insurance Program was created back in 1968, a time when many private insurance companies found flood insurance too risky. To cover the escalating costs of cleaning up after floods, the feds created their own insurance program, offering discount rates to convince people to buy in. It may have seemed like a good idea at the time, but over the years, the situation became pretty preposterous, as the governments cut-rate insurance encouraged building, and rebuilding, in vulnerable coastal areas and floodplains.
If youre an 18-year-old and you buy a Ferrari, youre probably not going to be able to get insurance, says Stephen Ellis with the budget watchdog group Taxpayers for Common Sense. Even if youre a 30-year-old driving a Chevy Cavalier, if you get in an accident, your premiums are going to go up. That doesnt happen with flood insurance. We had properties that flooded 17 or 18 times that were still covered under the federal insurance program.