For 11th Straight Time, Congress Punts On Reform Of Foundering Federal Flood Insurance Program
Its been the wettest 12 months on record in the continental United States. Parts of the High Plains and Midwest are still reeling from deadly, destructive and expensive spring floods some of which have lasted for three months. Mounting bills from natural disasters like these have prompted renewed calls to reform the National Flood Insurance Program, which is managed by Federal Emergency Management Agency and is now $20 billion in debt.
The program was established in 1968 as a way to provide flood insurance to properties with high flood risk some of which is subsidized by taxpayers and to use management programs to help reduce risk. But Jessie Ritter, director of water resources and coastal policy at the National Wildlife Federation, says the program has unintentionally done the opposite over the years. By offering government-funded insurance where private companies wouldnt, its made it easier to build in flood-prone areas. Local land-use decisions in some places havent helped, either.
Most people agree that some reform of the National Flood Insurance Program is needed. Four former FEMA administrators recently sent a letter to Congress asking for just that. But legislators who disagree how to accomplish that goal have been kicking the can down the road by issuing short-term extensions since the programs last five-year authorization lapsed in September 2017. Most recently the House of Representatives voted May 14 to approve the 11th short-term extension. If the Senate agrees, the program would then carry on as-is until September 30. Meanwhile homes and communities continue to flood and the insurance programs losses keep stacking up. In the absence of reforms, costs in taxpayer dollars and lives lost will only get worse, the former FEMA administrators wrote in their letter urging action.
Its past time to make the necessary changes, Ritter says. Congress has been unable politically to get to a place where we can meaningfully reform this program and address some of the underlying symptoms that are making disasters so costly in our country, she says. A perpetuation of the status quo makes no sense at a time when we are spending billions annually on relief in response to a continual string of disasters. This spring the most destructive Mississippi River floods in 25 years resulted in thousands of lost homes, damaged businesses and flooded farms.
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https://therevelator.org/flood-insurance/