Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Federal flood insurance program on the edge

Congress faces tough questions about another financial rescue and how to make it self-supporting.

- By Lauren Rosenblatt lauren.rosenblatt@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — An unpreceden­ted wave of destructiv­e hurricanes has brought the long-struggling federal flood insurance program to the brink.

Now Congress faces tough questions about whether to again bail out the nearly 50-year-old program and how to implement reforms to make it more sustainabl­e, secure and cost-effective.

With five major hurricanes in recent weeks, insured damage has racked up estimated costs of $16 billion, adding to the $23 billion the National Flood Insurance Program already owed to the Treasury Department for exceeding its borrowing limit.

The House authorized $16 billion in debt forgivenes­s last week as part of a disaster relief package, and the Senate is expected to follow suit. But the program will reach the end of its financial resources by the end of the month.

Even with debt relief and a short-term extension of the program, many say the flood program will not be self-sustainabl­e without major reforms.

“It needs to be reformed in a way that not only helps people recover from (a) flood but helps them get out of harm’s way,” said Joel Scata, an attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council.

In 1968, Congress developed the NFIP to help homeowners in floodprone areas largely abandoned by the insurance industry due to the high risk.

Bob Hunter, who ran the flood program for much of the 1970s, said it was designed to protect existing structures that were left without coverage. The goal was to educate communitie­s about safe building practices by identifyin­g areas prone to flooding, he said.

“The stick was that communitie­s would have to enact tough land-use and control housing,” said Hunter, now the director of insurance at the Consumer Federation of America.

Since then, the program has fallen off course, according to flood experts, insurance commission­ers and lawmakers. The program fails to adequately update maps, making it harder to accurately determine flood risk in an area, and allows people to maintain artificial­ly low premiums based on out-of-date risk prediction­s. The low premiums, experts suggest, could be encouragin­g people to rebuild in unsafe areas.

At the same time, lawmakers are struggling over how to keep premiums low enough to be affordable and maintain participat­ion in the program while not putting too much of the cost on taxpayers.

When Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans in 2005, the program was not equipped to handle the quantity of claims and it was plunged into debt. In 2006 the Government Accountabi­lity Office put the NFIP on its “high-risk list,” meaning it predicted the program would not be able to repay the Treasury for money borrowed.

In 2012, Congress attempted to make the program more fiscally sustainabl­e. The Biggert-Waters act would have raised premiums to more accurately reflect flood risk and stop the “grandfathe­ring” of subsidies, which allowed residents to keep policies with low premiums based on older risk estimates for their property.

Superstorm Sandy hit New Jersey a few months later and lawmakers abandoned those reforms as people complained of not being able to afford the new rates.

People “stormed Capitol Hill and said, ‘You can’t do that, I can’t afford that,’ ” said Burl Daniel, an insurance expert witness. If the program tried to remap areas and increase rates again, Daniel predicted, “you’re going to have another march on Capitol Hill.”

Congress is now working on new reforms before the program is up for re-authorizat­ion in December.

A rise in premiums could take the pressure off the federal government and taxpayers, advocates say, but opponents worry it will push people away from the program, leaving residents even more vulnerable to flood damage.

In a separate plea, some lawmakers are hoping to reduce the area that the flood program will insure to prevent the rebuilding of properties on unsafe, highrisk lands. The Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmen­tal advocacy organizati­on, found nearly 10 percent of damage from flooding comes from properties that have been damaged more than once, amounting to about $5.5 billion to repair socalled repetitive loss properties.

Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney suggested in an Oct. 4 letter the flood program should not be able to sell insurance for properties on areas labeled as severe flood risk that are built after 2021.

Still others say the best solution is for the federal government to partner with the private insurance market to spread the risk between both parties. If private insurers have a stake in the losses, advocates say, they will want to raise premiums and thus encourage communitie­s to stop building on — and homeowners to stop buying — properties on high-risk land.

Critics worry that private insurers will cherry-pick the least at-risk properties to protect themselves, leaving the government to foot the bill for the most expensive risks.

But without a private market, taxpayers “take the brunt of the hit,” said North Dakota Commission­er of Insurance Jon Godfread. “These (hurricanes) are massive hits going to” the flood program, he said. “I don’t think they can do it on their own at this point.”

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP/AP ?? Residentia­l streets east of downtown Houston are filled with muddy water following Tropical Storm Harvey in August.
DAVID J. PHILLIP/AP Residentia­l streets east of downtown Houston are filled with muddy water following Tropical Storm Harvey in August.

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