Few in Calif. have flood insurance Do you have flood insurance? Most in soaked California don't
Beyond the physical destruction, the storm could pack a financial hit: Starks does not have flood insurance.
"I didn't think it would flood this bad," he explained from an evacuation center, worried that water damaged wiring and air conditioning equipment.
In
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It takes targeted study to know the role of climate change in specific weather, but warmer air means storms like the ones that deluged
Yet
"People think the only people that need flood insurance are people who live right on the beach or on the banks of a river that has a history of flooding," Bach said. In reality, far more people are threatened by rushing or rising water.
When you buy a home, a key document will be official
Yet
The maps particularly lowball the chance of disaster in
The
Reyes knew this, but he still did not buy flood insurance. It was too expensive, he said, and wasn't required. Plus, he thought local officials had improved the storm drainage system so a similar flood wouldn't happen again. But it did and Reyes also had to be rescued by boat. He's staying at the same evacuation center as Starks, hoping his home isn't too badly damaged.
The storms damaged several thousand homes so badly, they'll need to be repaired before people can live in them again. But
"It is worrisome that there was as much damage as there was for what was extreme but not catastrophic flooding," he said.
State officials said even without flood coverage, they try to help people pursue claims - flooded cars, for example, are sometimes covered under auto insurance policies.
Also trying to figure out how to recover is
"It was kind of like you were walking on a wave or a trampoline," he said. The house smells like a mix of mildew, rotted hay and septic system overflow.
Enero lives in an area that is designated high risk where people have to buy flood insurance. He says paying for the damage on his own would be unimaginable. In retrospect, he wishes he had insured his belongings, as well.
Though the maps force people in certain areas to buy coverage,
The agency updated its pricing in 2021 to more accurately reflect risk and dubbed it Risk Rating 2.0.
Yet since the new ratings went into effect in
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