On some St. Louis streets, 70% of tornado victims are uninsured. Can recovery happen?
Not all city streets have such high rates, with the figures varying among blocks where the tornado carved a path of damage. But the sheer number of uninsured properties will complicate recovery in neighborhoods that were already among the poorest in the region, struggling with decades of disinvestment and pocked with thousands of vacant properties.
Lenders require homeowners with mortgages to carry insurance. But many north
City leaders also have floated the idea of using Rams settlement money and American Rescue Plan Act funds to help with recovery — though they acknowledge that no amount of government assistance can fully address the needs.
“We know we are simultaneously doing a herculean effort and not doing nearly enough,” Mayor
The
City officials estimated that hundreds of structures were damaged.
They say it’s unclear what recovery will look like. Residents say they don't have much, if any, time to wait for financial help, as they scramble to find shelter and assess what their futures look like.
“Residents are going through something that none of us have ever experienced before,” said Alderwoman
Map: Many near tornado's track lack insurance
Around 28% of the 8,000 tornado-impacted homeowners north of
If there's a comparison for recovery, it might be the
A few days after the tornado that hit
The couple and their six children moved into the house, in the Greater Ville neighborhood, about two months ago. Her father, a longtime carpenter, bought the building after it was vacant and fixed it up to hand down to his children so they could raise families of their own.
Her youngest kids have asked whether they can put the house back together. But the house wasn't insured.
“I tell them we’ll try,” said Myles, 32. “We’ll try.”
Homeowners without insurance face uncertain future
"We are just still processing everything. I inherited this house three months ago from my dad and I don't have insurance yet," said
'A vicious cycle'
The Post-Dispatch analyzed census data on insurance coverage within geographic areas called "block groups," which cover 600 to 3,000 people each.
According to
Zooming in to the north
Part of the issue is that insurance has gotten more expensive in recent years.
From 2021 to 2024, insurance companies increased annual premiums an average of 24% across the country, according to research from the
Nationally, the gulf was particularly pronounced for homes worth less than
“It’s a vicious cycle because the people who would benefit the most from homeowners insurance tend to be people who don’t have it and don’t have the resources to help them recover after a disaster,” said
Homeowners without insurance face uncertain future
"Somehow, I will re-build my family home right back here," said homeowner
Homeowners without insurance face uncertain future
"I don't want to be a burden to anyone," said
On
He bought the one-story, two-bedroom house from the city's land bank in 2014 for
"To have something of your own like that, that's being blessed," he said.
A father of 10, his kids and grandkids gathered in the home every Sunday.
"I put most of my money into this house," said Thornton, 60, a maintenance worker for the
Now, after the tornado, the attic window sits on top of a pile of wood and brick in the front lawn. The remains of his kitchen and bedroom are out in the open air, the walls in pieces in the backyard.
He has been sleeping in his damaged pickup truck to ward away people who might try to loot his home.
Thornton a few months ago was laid off from a second job he held, doing maintenance at a private apartment complex. He was helping some of his family members financially, he said. He struggled to pay his own bills. He stopped paying for insurance.
He still wants to rebuild. But he's left hoping volunteers or charities can help.
"I worked three jobs to get it to the point where it was," he said. "I have to hope on a prayer."
Homeowners without insurance face uncertain future
"I did everything right. I never missed a payment. It was always on time," said homeowner
'I would have been in trouble'
The
She recalls a relatively quick turnaround from
“I would have been in trouble,” she said.
Bowen carries homeowners insurance now.
"I'll never do that again," she said.
It took nearly a decade before developers bought some of the vacant lots left behind by the
After the storm, Berkeley’s then-building commissioner,
Berkeley’s population, about 9,500 in 2011, stands at roughly 8,100 today.
In
“A third of the city is in ruins. You can’t have a city that exists that way. It wasn’t OK before and it’s worse now,” said
Homeowners without insurance face uncertain future
'I put it in God's hands'
Federal officials last week began touring the damage in
Homeowners without insurance face uncertain future
Siblings Aaliyah, 22, Ethan, 11, and
Spencer has raised the possibility of using unspent COVID recovery money from the federal government to help, though the legality of such a plan would have to reviewed. Other aldermen have suggested using money from the Rams lawsuit settlement.
“Communities in north
"They've been holding on to that money for so long, and all they're concentrating on is, 'Downtown, downtown,'" he said. "People near downtown are hardly making it."
At Thompson's home on
Thompson's house — a brick, two-story structure — was passed down from his grandfather to his mother and then, in 1995, to Thompson. He and his wife raised their five sons there. As their family grew and added grandchildren, they gathered to celebrate Christmas each year.
Thompson mortgaged the home in 2007 to pay for renovations, and his lender required him to have insurance. But he hasn't been able to afford insurance in more recent years.
He's been on a limited income since 2020, when he suffered a stroke, lost vision in his right eye and had to leave his longtime job as a driver for a dry cleaning service. He's one of several senior residents on the block living in homes they inherited from older generations. Half the block was already vacant before the tornado.
Homeowners without insurance face uncertain future
"This is a poor community," he said. "You have a lot of elders on a fixed income, and they're not getting much."
He has started a
"I put it in God's hands," he said.
In the Greater Ville,
Her father bought the house in 2018 from the city's land bank for
“He wanted all of us to have a house to come back to,” Myles said.
Homeowners without insurance face uncertain future
Outreach workers with Leonard Baptist Church Keith Phillips, far right, and
Myles and her family — her fiance and their six kids, ages 2 to 13 — moved into the home in March from the
“I would never have thought a tornado would come,” she said.
Now she's worried she'll also lose the land if she can't rebuild. A certified nursing assistant, Myles says she's determined to rebuild, even if she has to save money for years.
“We, as a Black community, a lot of us don’t have this," she said about her property. "If you have a house, you try to hold on to it and pass it down as best you can."
'The need is absolutely astronomical,' says
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