Data: Fewer CT property owners buying flood insurance despite the perils of record rainfall [The Hour, Norwalk, Conn.]
Jul. 29—With Gov.
Over the past year,
Nationwide, flood insurance policy coverage was down 1.7 percent as premiums rise for some under NFIP's new "Risk Rating 2.0" system intended to better reflect the financial risks facing any one property from flooding.
Homeowners across the Northeast got a fresh reminder of the peril in July after torrential rains flooded portions of towns, from
"It hit every piece of our state," Lamont said in mid-July, speaking in
Standard property and casualty insurance does not cover damage from floodwaters, leaving homeowners with the choice of taking the chance of having to pay for repairs or shelling out for coverage under the National Flood Insurance Program.
Factoring in both the value of properties and attendant risk of flood exposure,
Losses in
That number could go up for the current fiscal year after heavy rains triggered flooding along rivers and streams in July. On Thursday, officials with the
A decade after Sandy destroyed waterfront homes,
But as a percentage of the appraised value of all homes and commercial properties,
With a 23-mile-long coastline encompassing
Under pressure from
A bill is before
"New policyholders come into the program at full-risk rates — they no longer come into the program with a discount or a subsidy, and so the doubling of the insurance costs ... is not for a current policyholder," said
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