Feds take aim at flood insurance lawsuit
The motion to deny a preliminary injunction said the overhaul, known as Risk Rating 2.0, "updates the NFIP (National Flood Insurance Program) with up-to-date actuarial methods at a time when the program sorely needs reform. For the past several decades, the NFIP has been losing billions of dollars because premiums have not accurately reflected flood risk."
"These changes all reflect best practices in the insurance industry, which is precisely what
The flood-insurance program plays a major role for
Federal officials began phasing in the Risk Rating 2.0 changes in
"While the agency (FEMA) paints a picture of nuanced calculations using massive data repositories that reveal a property's individualized risks, the reality is much simpler: Flood insurance is going to be much more expensive for pretty much everybody," the lawsuit said.
A section of the lawsuit that focused on
But in Monday's motion to dismiss the case and Wednesday's motion to deny a preliminary injunction, the Biden administration disputed the allegations and argued the plaintiffs lack legal standing to challenge the overhaul.
"Plaintiffs wrongly ask the court to upend the status quo — which is that Risk Rating 2.0 has applied to NFIP policies for multiple years and has been fully implemented across the country — and do so simply because some policyholders in their states and communities are now paying higher premiums based on a more accurate, congressionally-mandated assessment of their flood risks, and are no longer being subsidized by policyholders in less flood-prone areas," Wednesday's motion said. "That some policyholders are now paying higher premiums does not entitle plaintiffs to relief."
Also, the
But in a news release after the lawsuit was filed in June,
The 146-page lawsuit makes a series of allegations, including that federal officials violated a law known as the Administrative Procedure Act by making changes that were "arbitrary and capricious."



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