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Before Congress passed the National Flood Insurance Act in 1968
after frequent widespread flooding along the Mississippi River, the
national response to flood disasters had been to build dams, levees and
other structures to hold back flood waters, a policy that may have
encouraged building in flood zones.
The National Flood Insurance Act created the National Flood
Insurance Program (NFIP), which was designed to stem the rising cost of
tax-payer funded relief for flood victims and the increasing amount of
damage caused by floods. The NFIP has three components: to provide
flood insurance, floodplain management and flood hazard mapping.
Federal flood insurance is only available where local governments have
adopted adequate flood plain management regulations for their
floodplain areas as set out by NFIP. About 20,400 communities across
the country participate in the program. NFIP coverage is also available
outside of the high-hazard areas.
The law was amended in 1969 to provide coverage for mudslides and
again in 1973. Until then, the purchase of flood insurance had been
voluntary, with only about one million policies in force. The 1973
amendment put constraints on the use of federal funds in high-risk
floodplains, a measure that was expected to lead to almost universal
flood coverage in these zones. The law prohibits lenders that are
federally regulated, supervised or insured by federal agencies from
lending money on a property in a floodplain zone when a community is
participating in the NFIP, unless the property is covered by flood
insurance. The requirement for flood insurance also applies to
buildings that receive financial assistance from federal agencies such
as the Veterans Administration. However, because the initial mortgage
on the property is frequently sold by the originating bank to another
entity, enforcement of this law has been poor.
Legislation was enacted in 1994 to tighten enforcement of flood
insurance requirements. Regulators can now fine banks with a pattern of
failure to enforce the law and lenders can purchase flood insurance on
behalf of homeowners who fail to buy it themselves, then bill them for
coverage. The law includes a provision that denies federal disaster aid
to people who have been flooded twice and have failed to purchase
insurance after the first flood.
Buildings constructed in a floodplain after a community has met
regulations must conform to elevation requirements. When repair,
reconstruction or improvement to an older building equals or exceeds 50
percent of its market value, the structure must be updated to conform
to current building codes. A 2007 NFIP study on the benefits of
elevating buildings showed that due to significantly lower premiums
homeowners can usually recover the higher construction costs in less
than five years for homes built in a “velocity” zone, where the
structure is likely to be subject to wave damage, and in five to 15
years in a standard flood zone. The Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) estimates that buildings constructed to NFIP standards suffer
about 80 percent less damage annually that those not built in
compliance.
Contact your Cravnes Warren commercial flood insurance specialist to see how this change may affect you.
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