Wildfires disproportionately affect the poor: University of Georgia
2022 AUG 12 (NewsRx) -- By a
Roughly 2 million acres burned last month. And major fires are currently scorching
Many of those at risk are lower-income Americans who face canceled homeowners insurance policies and rising premiums, according to new research from the
Published in Forests, the study found that counties with moderate-to-high wildfire risk are more likely to have higher poverty rates. Many of these counties reside in states that are dominated by a handful of insurance companies. Homeowners’ options in these areas may be limited if they need to replace a policy that has been terminated.
“The overlap of wildfire risk, poverty and concentrated insurance markets should get people thinking about policies and interventions to help the most vulnerable homeowners,” said
More counties, states likely at risk of fires than previously thought
Auer and graduate student
Among those states, 98 counties had high wildfire hazard potential, the study found. The only states without a high-risk county were
The researchers also found discrepancies between the
“The First Street Foundation data should give everybody pause because in it there are entire states that have comparatively high wildfire risk,” Auer said. “States we tend not to think about as majorly susceptible to destructive wildfire are in harm’s way, including, for example,
“None of us, really, in this day and age can be blase about wildfire risk.”
Protecting against wildfires may require government intervention in insurance industry
Many commercial insurers are fleeing wildfire-prone areas, significantly lessening the competition that historically kept premiums reasonable.
The ones that are staying in the market are not only upping their prices and frequently reducing what their policies cover. They’re also requiring homeowners to adopt fire safety measures, such as clearing landscaping and brush away from their homes to stall a potential fire’s spread.
That’s doable in wealthier counties, where incomes are high and homeowners can cope with higher premiums or even entirely rebuild their homes, if necessary. But for others, those changes add up.
“For folks who are in poorer counties, homeowners don’t have as much flexibility, and they don’t have the ability to afford all of the wildfire prevention strategies that may be required by the few companies willing to insure homes in wildfire-prone areas,” Auer said. “This issue hasn’t been addressed in some states, and it needs to be because the situation we see today is just going to get worse.”
In
But it’s better than nothing.
Other states at high risk are likely to follow California’s lead, Auer said, calling wildfire risk a bipartisan issue.
“Wildfire doesn’t care about party affiliation,” he said. “Our homes aren’t Republican or Democrat homes. They’re just homes in the way of wildfire.”
(Our reports deliver fact-based news of research and discoveries from around the world.)
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