Chattanooga Times Free Press

Flood insurance: 6 questions and why the system is broken

- THE CONVERSATI­ON VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Homeowners generally rely on insurance provided by the federal government to cover the costs of rebuilding their lives after a flood. We asked an insurance expert, Dr. Robert W. Klein of Georgia State University in Atlanta, to explain the government program and its challenges. Klein is an associate professor of risk management and director of the university’s Center of Risk Management and 1 Insurance Research.

What is flood insurance?

Homeowners’ insurance does not cover damage to a home caused by flooding. A homeowner must have a separate policy to cover flood-related losses, defined as water traveling along or under the ground.

Most such policies are underwritt­en by the National Flood Insurance Program, which is part of the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The program was establishe­d in 1968 to address the lack of availabili­ty of flood insurance in the private market and reduce demand for federal disaster assistance. It also contains provisions intended to reduce flood risk.

The National Flood Insurance Program’s activities are funded largely by the premiums and fees paid by its policyhold­ers, supplement­ed by a little from the federal budget to help pay for flood risk mapping. Because the program serves the public interest, some believe that more of its funding for flood risk management should be borne by taxpayers.

Homeowners can purchase a federal flood policy directly from the program or through a private insurer. Separately, some private insurers sell their own flood policies on a limited basis for properties that are overcharge­d by the government’s program. 2

How many homeowners have flood insurance?

It is difficult to determine exactly how many homeowners have flood insurance.

The National Flood Insurance Program had just over 5 million policies in force as of May 31. Of these policies, approximat­ely 69 percent were on single-family homes and 21 percent on condo units. There is no source on how many private flood policies are in force, but my sense is that it is comparativ­ely small.

In recent years, the number of such policies has been dropping across the country over concerns about the cost and an underestim­ation of the risks. Some of the Texas counties hardest hit by Hurricane Harvey in 2017, for example, such as Harris (which includes Houston), have experience­d significan­t declines.

A more revealing — and more difficult to ascertain — stat is the share of homeowners in a disaster area who actually have flood insurance. In Harris County, for example, experts estimate that only about 15 percent of homeowners were insured for floods — though the percentage is likely higher in areas near coastlines.

Real-estate data company CoreLogic estimated that approximat­ely 75 percent of flood losses from Harvey were uninsured, a figure that rises to about 80 percent for 3 Hurricane Irma.

Why do people at great risk forgo insurance?

A number of factors affect a homeowner’s decision to buy flood insurance — or not.

People who perceive that their exposure to floods is high are more likely to buy it, all other things equal. While a mandatory purchase requiremen­t is intended to force owners of mortgaged homes in areas at high risk of flooding to buy insurance, it’s estimated that only about half of them do.

One reason might be that 43 percent of homeowners incorrectl­y believe that their homeowners’ insurance covers them for flood losses.

Other factors also come into play, such as a lack of informatio­n, the difficulty of calculatin­g flood risk and the expectatio­n that the government will provide disaster assistance that will fully cover a homeowner’s uninsured flood losses — which is in fact 4 rarely the case.

What does flood insurance cover?

With a National Flood Insurance Program policy, a homeowner can purchase coverage on a dwelling up to $250,000 and the contents of a home up to $100,000. It does not cover costs associated with “loss of use” of a home.

These limits have been in effect since 1994 and are no longer high enough to account for the increase in the replacemen­t cost of homes and the actual cash value of their contents. As a result, some homeowners buy additional flood protection from private insurers 5 to make up any shortfall. Why is the federal program underwater?

The National Flood Insurance Program has faced considerab­le criticism over its underwriti­ng and pricing of policies, which have resulted in a substantia­l debt. Essentiall­y, its premiums are not high enough to cover how much it pays out on claims and its other costs.

Part of the problem is that about 20 percent of the properties the program insures pay a subsidized rate. But many other National Flood Insurance Program policyhold­ers are also paying premiums substantia­lly less than what it costs to insure them because the rates do not adequately account for the catastroph­ic losses incurred during years when more major storms than normal strike, such as Katrina and Rita in 2005 and Sandy in 2012.

To show how much single storms can cost, the National Flood Insurance Program paid out $8.7 billion to cover Harvey-related flood losses, $16.3 billion for Katrina and $8.8 billion for Sandy.

These inadequate rates also exacerbate the moral hazard created by flood insurance. People are more likely to buy, build or rebuild homes in flood-prone areas and have diminished incentives to invest in flood risk mitigation, such as by elevating their home, if they can buy insurance at below-cost rates.

Although Congress forgave $16 billion in debt last year, the National Flood Insurance Program still owed $20.5 billion to the U.S. Treasury as of February.

Hurricane Florence and other storms that may follow will substantia­lly increase this debt — and may require more 6 forgivenes­s.

What can be done to fix the program?

Legislativ­e efforts to reform the National Flood Insurance Program to put it on firmer fiscal footing have produced mixed results.

The Biggert-Waters Act of 2012 made a number of changes to the program, such as increasing premiums, to make it “more financiall­y stable.” While that would have gone a long way to restore its fiscal solvency, an outcry from homeowners in high-risk areas led to the 2014 Homeowners Flood Insurance Affordabil­ity Act, which limited or rescinded many of the Biggert-Waters rate increases.

Currently, there is a bill in Congress that would fix some but not all of the problems with the program, such as by making it easier for private companies to sell their own policies and tightening the rules for properties that suffer repetitive losses.

But its prospects are dim due to opposition from legislator­s concerned about some of its changes, particular­ly its rate increases and the repetitive loss provision.

Fundamenta­lly, the program millions of Americans rely on to help them rebuild their lives after a devastatin­g flood needs to be fixed. Its dire financial straits could be resolved by either making taxpayers foot more of the bill or increasing premiums closer to fullcost rates for most homeowners, while also raising total coverage levels.

At the same time, the government could do more to convince or compel more at-risk homeowners to buy flood insurance — which would be harder to do if it were to raise rates. Increasing taxpayer support for the program will have to be part of the solution so that pricey premiums don’t become a deterrent to someone buying insurance.

This article is republishe­d under a Creative Commons license from The Conversati­on (http:// theconvers­ation.com), an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

While a mandatory purchase requiremen­t is intended to force owners of mortgaged homes in areas at high risk of flooding to buy insurance, it’s estimated that only about half of them do.

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