FLOOD INSURANCE COSTS RISE
"Once it starts getting over
Under a revamped federal flood insurance program rolled out this fall, millions of homeowners are set for rate hikes that officials say more accurately reflect a property's risk. That includes the vast majority of the 1.7 million homeowners with relatively cheap policies in areas federal officials previously deemed low or moderate risk - and where coverage is voluntary.
The overhaul is intended in part to make it more expensive to develop in risky areas. But some worry the price hikes will only make it harder to convince homeowners to voluntarily buy or keep flood coverage, particularly in middle- and working-class areas.
"We have no high-rise condominiums, we have no sandy white beaches. It is a working coast in our state," said
The
In many parts of the country, such risks are growing as climate change increases the strength of hurricanes and the intensity of rainstorms.
The program - Risk Rating 2.0 - will mean higher prices for about three-quarters of the 4.9 million federal flood insurance policies, and decreases for the rest. Voluntary policyholders in single-family homes will be hit particularly hard, with an estimated 90% set for increases, according to
"We've learned that the old way of looking at risk had lots of gaps, which understated a property's flood risk and communicated a false sense of security," said
In spite of identifying more flood risk across the country, the new system doesn't change who is required to buy coverage. In areas
In recent years, homeowners living in places where coverage isn't required have faced losses in the billions of dollars. Between 2017 and 2019, nearly 40% of the flood claims
Many properties outside the flood zones face risk "that has always been there but has never been identified," said
First Street estimates that 14.6 million properties across the
Raising rates and having more people opt for coverage also matters for the financial health of
For new policy holders,
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