Thousands in Louisiana drop flood insurance despite more frequent, damaging storms. Why?
Oct. 31—LAFAYETTE —
It happened in 2016. Then 2017. Then 2019.
After the last time, resigned to fate, he decided to leave a 6-inch space below his walls so he wouldn't have to keep replacing them.
"There's no use fixing it," he said.
The federal government, which manages the National Flood Insurance Program, joined
After years of waiting, work was set to begin on that project when things fell apart. Rabeaux, 49, was laid off from his job as an electronics technician at Halliburton. And a new federal plan for setting flood insurance rates had taken effect, raising his premium from a few hundred dollars a year to over
When a big insurance bill came due, he couldn't afford it — and dropped his coverage. That disqualified him from the grant.
The federal government for decades has provided a crucial assurance to most people in low-lying areas around the country: affordable flood insurance. For those most directly in harm's way, the feds spent billions of dollars to elevate or otherwise move their homes.
But now, for many in
Flood insurance costs are spiraling because of
Since 2022, 42,797 people in
Meanwhile, a decades-long effort to flood-proof the homes that are most at risk — and costliest to the flood insurance program — is failing to keep up with rising risk. Since Hurricane Katrina, an average of 1,400 properties per year have been added to a list of homes and businesses that flood repeatedly in
Over the same span, the state has only been able to reduce the flood risk at an average of 550 previously flooded properties per year, a Times-Picayune analysis of
That means that for every
"This is the hardest question for all of us in south
'That's not sustainable'
For the past few years,
"Sometimes, I go to people's homes and they have sofas and kitchen tables on blocks," Santos said. "They're on bricks or cinder blocks eight inches off the floor. Others have sandbags all around their houses."
The federal government, which pays out flood claims, has sought for decades to encourage local governments and builders to reduce flood risk. It has spent billions on elevating homes at greatest risk of flooding.
Nowhere is the problem more urgent than
The mitigation efforts come after many decades of risky development in floodplains in
The problem is not static.
Climate change is heightening flood risk in the state most threatened by it. Not only is
Elevating homes has long been the go-to solution. But homeowners are increasingly wary of the bargain they must agree to in order to get assistance to elevate: a promise that they maintain flood insurance in perpetuity. The promise is attached to the home even if they later sell it; future owners would be required to pay flood insurance as well.
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"You're just going to kill the program," he said. "That's not sustainable."
Not keeping up
When
"That's no longer the case," said Brinkman, a floodplain administrator in
Some who agreed to the deal years ago are now paying more for flood insurance than they did before their home was raised. The program is also beset by lengthy delays and a lack of money, despite a recent boost in funding from the bipartisan infrastructure law signed by President
"They are saving their biggest asset, their home, but can they even afford to live there if home and insurance rates and flood insurance rates aren't dropping?" Brinkman said. "They're going to lose the home regardless."
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Some solutions have proven to work. The
But the solutions aren't happening fast enough to stave off growing risk. And in the meantime, flood insurance increases are coinciding with spiraling home insurance costs, threatening home values, squeezing residents and pushing people out of the state.
"We are seeing an increase in the damages to properties. We're seeing more frequent, more damaging storms," said
"We continue to fight the good fight and do good mitigation. It doesn't seem to be keeping up with the flooding."
'We're stuck here'
Tens of thousands of people are dropping flood insurance, raising questions about whether communities across the state are equipped to recover from hurricanes and rainstorms.
The decreases are happening in nearly every parish, and are especially acute in some of the most flood-prone in the state. In the two years since the new rates went into effect, Jefferson's policies fell by 7,400,
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A casket, bottom, floated out of the ground during Hurricane Francine. Flood water still surrounds the cemetery in
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The flood insurance program is also paying the
"Status quo does not incentivize mitigation enough," he said.
The federal flood insurance program deemed Rabeaux's house in
Provided photo
Rabeaux had flood insurance for 22 years. But after his unaffordable bill came due, he became one of 3,341 people in
The official replied that the rules disqualify him, and suggested he try starting over.
"We're stuck here," Rabeaux said. "If we flood again we have absolutely no help."
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Two vehicle on Olive street are flooded during Hurricane Francine in
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All across
The house flooded a few years before she bought it, and again in Katrina. But flood insurance was affordable—a few hundred bucks a year—and for a long time, it stayed dry.
In recent years, things have changed. The house flooded twice in 2021, including during Hurricane Ida. And her flood premium is rising steadily: It's set to increase from
Neal is among the lucky few to get
"We flooded twice in two years," she said. "My house is unsellable. I can't do anything. I almost have to raise it because who would want to buy that?"
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