WHAT TO DO ABOUT RISING FLOOD INSURANCE RATES?
September 7th, 2017
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
WHAT TO DO ABOUT RISING
FLOOD INSURANCE RATES?
Hurricane Harvey
has caused property owners along the Gulf and East Coasts to panic over
projections of outrageous property flood insurance rates that, in some cases,
could lead to increases of greater than 1000 per cent. Is there really a
problem finding affordable flood insurance along America’s coasts? Yes, and a
growing one.
The current
national flood insurance program has been around since 1968. Actually, it
was created not so much because of hurricane damage, but due to widespread
flooding along the Mississippi River in the early 1960s. More and more
levees were built up and down the river, which created major flooding in
unprotected areas. Private insurance companies could not handle the
damage claims so the federal government stepped in. The program was
extended to cover hurricane damage along the Gulf Coast, and if a homeowner
didn’t get flood insurance, they were unable to get their home financed.
A year ago,
Congress reauthorized the national flood insurance program through 2017.
But in the process, a number of changes were made to make the program
more financially sound. The new program caused rates to skyrocket along
the Gulf Coast.
How do we begin to
solve the affordability problem? First of all, we need to recognize how
vast this exposure for national disasters has become. I live in hurricane
alley, and we all understand that hurricanes are a major part of the puzzle to
be solved. Hurricane Sandy, which devastated coastlines of New York and
New Jersey, show that this is not just a regional problem. All coastlines are
at risk. Over half of all Americans live within 100 miles of the coast.
But hurricane
protection is just one part of the problem. Torrential rains in the
Midwest have unleashed a wave of damage that is wiping out thousands of
homes. Without flood insurance, they are out of luck. And what
about wildfires out west? Wildfires are a
rampant and growing problem that needs a national insurance response. Then
there’s the massive destruction caused by tornados in Oklahoma, Alabama,
Georgia, Kansas, and a host of other states.
Get my
point? Natural disasters happen all over America, and have increased way
beyond the ability for state programs to be effective and affordable. So has
any plan been proposed which is encompassing, and yet affordable for homeowners
that doesn’t use taxpayer dollars? Yes. Louisiana’s Insurance
Department, during the time I served as Commissioner, took the lead back in 1995
by proposing a comprehensive plan that could assist property owners following
disasters all across the country. The proposal called for a Natural
Disaster Insurance Corporation (NDIC) that would sell disaster reinsurance for
residential and commercial properties while also providing primary coverage for
residential properties.
In making this
proposal, I commented at the time that “if a major hurricane strikes New
Orleans, it could put 26 feet of water in the downtown area and cause insurance
losses greater than $26 billion.” That’s right on the money as to what
happened during Hurricane Katrina ten years later. I concluded by saying:
“We are going to have a huge problem with catastrophic insurance losses all
over America if we don’t get a national disaster program in place.”
I testified a few
months later before a Senate panel in Washington on Senate Bill 1350.
Private insurance would take a small portion of its premiums and contribute to
a state fund. The state fund would then be backed up by a national
fund. The national fund could borrow to pay for any shortfall, but no
federal tax dollars would be involved. Each state could buy in and have a
rate set according to the risk. Hurricane prone states like Louisiana
would pay more than a state like North Dakota that experiences much less in
natural disaster damage.
The U.S. Senate adopted my proposal, but the
legislation became hung up and died in the U.S. House of Representatives. That
was the plan then. And the good news is that a number of states are coalescing
around this same plan now following the devastation of Hurricane Sandy, and now
Harvey.
It’s taken almost
20 years, but it looks like it could be the right time for problem solving.
It’s just not a handout for the coastal states. The whole country
will benefit. And at a price that’s affordable. We certainly cannot
be any worse off than we are now.
*******
“Do you
know what happens when you give a procrastinator a good idea? Nothing!”
Donald Gardner
Peace
and JusticeJim Brown
Jim
Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout
the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns
and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
You can also hear Jim’s nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning
from 9 am till 11:00 am, central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a
live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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