Posted on 02/20/2014 2:03:42 AM PST by Libloather
Husseincare grows?
Sell flood insurance to people who build in areas that routinely flood and
an inevitable outcome will be costs from floods will exceed premium revenues. The socialist solution is to find a way to FORCE AT GUNPOINT smart people who DON’T live in areas that flood to subsidize the others.
Redraw the maps to and voila....instantly you have tapped into a HUGE
slush fund. The problem is peop!e who insist on building and living i
areas that flood, coasts that see hurricanes and putting up matchstick
homes in tornado alley.
Building codes that were realistically designed for these risks would solve most of the problems. The initial cost to build might be very high but it would be much cheaper than constantly replacing homes.
Elevate houses in flat areas that flood. DON’T allow building in canyons where flash flooding happens. Dome homes of concrete resist tornados and hurricanes. And along coasts that see storm surge......NO HOUSES. Building there is just stupid.
“The problem is peop!e who insist on building and living in areas that flood, coasts that see hurricanes...”
No, you are wrong! That is not the standard FEMA applied in their flood re-zoning. FEMA applied the ‘take as much land and assess as much liability as possible’ standard.
I am in FL, 16 miles from the ocean at 42’ elevation. My slab is 3’ above grade yet due to a swamp at the back of the property it is considered to be in a flood zone. When FEMA re-zoned they pushed the flood plane 30’ onto my property and declared it a special flood zone due to the swam which drains into a small lake nearby. We had an excessively wet summer and while the water got to within a foot of road level it was 4’ below my slab. There will be standing water 16 miles to the ocean before my property will flood. Since all of FL is an aquafer that will just never happen.
So the problem isn’t with the people it’s with over-bearing and over-reaching bureaucrats making their living at the expense of the people -as usual.
No, let the private sector price and sell all flood insurance on their own—and it will be fairly and accurately priced.
How about letting people build as they like and insure as they like? Mortgage requirements would be a reasonable constraint for most homeowners—if the U.S. wouldn’t sweep in and bail everyone out.
And dome homes across the Midwest? How about the house that a viewer sent in here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/21/tornado-proof-homes-oklahoma_n_3313537.html
“let the private sector price and sell all flood insurance on their own.”
Correct. Need the added constraint that folks don’t get “bailed out” by the government if they buy in an area that insurance companies don’t insure.
You can be placed in or out of a flood zone depending on who your congressman is, and how much you pay him.
Aren’t FEMA flood maps supposed to cover 100-year floods? If you had water within four feet of your slab after a wet summer, it seems to me they’re probably correct to cast it in a 100-year flood plain.
Not everybody....
They updated the Floor maps around here in 2007. The flood zone expanded just a little bit in some areas.
That “little bit” raked in a bunch of lower income homes in some sections of the city into “Flood Zones”.
Now if they wish to refinance they have to maintain Flood Insurance.
I am contracted to buy a farm nearby and am going through this exact issue right now. The mortgage salesman sent me some paper to sign that was a notice that my property is in a flood zone... well the house and structures are not. I looked up the maps myself at the onset of all of this.
The flood boundaries shown on FIRMs (Flood Insurance Rate Maps) are NOT the same as the 100 year flood plain... The 100 year flood plain is what I need to offset my septic system from and covers more area... The FIRM, however, is what I am being lead to believe what flood insurance determinations are made by.
There are many exceptions but in general Democrats live substantially closer to sea level than most Republicans do. This is a stupid tax for being a Democrat.
So, no one lives on the coast. No one lives near rivers or flood plaines. or swamps. No one lives in smaller flood areas like creeks or lakes. Let’s not let people live where there are tornadoes, earthquakes, brush fires or landslides. /s
Bkmk- project???
This past summer WAS the 100 yr. flood. An elderly gentleman told me he’d never seen the water that high.
What part of ‘there will be standing water from my property 16 miles to the ocean and my slab will still be 3’ above it’ don’t you understand?
Do you think I am buying flood insurance to cover the back of my lawn? Will I be putting in a claim for soggy grass abutting the swamp? There will be water clear to the ocean and my house, driveway and front yard will be dry so why am I assessed as a ‘special flood’ zone? Because the the swamp is wet? Absurd!
So why buy flood insurance at all if there is no danger of a flood?
Mortgage requires flood insurance. One more reason to pay it off.
The 1% Flood is the same as the old term, 100 year flood. It means that in any given year there is a 1% chance of a flood of that magnitude. On average, such a flood will occur once in a hundred years. Like all averages, what actually happens is different. On area might have 3 1% floods in a row, while another area might go 300 years without one.
The flood that occurred in the Big Thompson Canyon in Colorado in the seventies was labeled a 500 year flood, a very rare event that killed over 100 people and caused by a flash flood from an intense thunderstorm that stalled over the drainage basin and quickly overwhelmed the drainage system.
These 1% floods are outside the span of people’s memories. A statement that “we haven’t flooded in the 50 years that I’ve lived here” can be completely true, but can also be followed by two floods in the next five years. Analysis of the drainage pattern and analysis of the historical rain record is what produces these maps. Improved and more accurate mapping techniques is why the lines differ from the old maps.
Since hurricanes and tropical storms can dump 20”-30” of rain when they come ashore, how about we just move everyone 100 miles from the coast?
Now that we got that problem solved, what do we do with all those people living where an earthquake might hit?
The folks that bought houses on the flood plain of Staten island were gullible fools. Those areas should be restricted for residential buildings.
The same is true for very large areas in Miami. When the hurricane strikes Miami, the cost is going to be stratospheric in value.
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