USA TODAY International Edition

Flood insurance: Big rate hikes ahead

High- risk areas may be hit hardest by overhaul

- Kyle Bagenstose, Dinah Voyles Pulver and Kevin Crowe

With a major overhaul of the nation’s flood insurance program just months away, new data released Monday by the First Street Foundation suggests hundreds of thousands of homeowners in the riskiest locations across America could face massive rate hikes starting in October.

The Brooklyn, New York- based research group estimates the average rate needs to more than quadruple on the nation’s most flood- prone homes under the ongoing effort to make the federal flood insurance program solvent and ensure homeowners most at risk are paying their fair share.

First Street data projects that the majority of homeowners won’t see big rate changes, and others could see premiums decrease. But for some 265,000 properties, annual premiums would need to climb $ 10,000 or more to match the actual risk. Those with more expensive properties are estimated to see the biggest premium increases.

Any actual rate hikes adopted by the federal government would be slowly phased in for existing policyhold­ers.

First Street’s calculatio­ns, which the group says are based on similar methodolog­y to what the National Flood Insurance Program will use when it rolls out its new rating system on Oct. 1, reveal a major shift is needed in pricing policies. Such changes could level the playing field overall but depress home values in some areas.

Some of the biggest gaps in current premiums versus actual risk appear in the Southeast and Mid- Atlantic regions in places such as Florida, South Carolina and New Jersey. Chasms also exist in pockets of California, Texas and Washington.

In the historic waterfront city of Charleston, South Carolina, for example, nearly four in 10 flood- prone homes would need to pay an average premium of $ 18,211 to cover the anticipate­d costs of flooding compared to the current average NFIP rate of $ 2,264, First Street data shows.

And almost every homeowner on the barrier island city of South Patrick Shores, Florida, would need to pay an average of $ 24,724 a year to adequately cover their risk. The average rate there now is $ 491, First Street data shows.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency, which operates the National Flood Insurance Program, has not publicly shared how its new “Risk Rating 2.0” overhaul will impact individual premiums. So it’s unknown how close First Street’s calculatio­ns will come to the real thing.

But FEMA said First Street’s estimates are just that – estimates.

“Any entity claiming that they can provide insight or comparison to the Risk Rating 2.0 initiative, including premium amounts, is misinforme­d and setting public expectatio­ns that are not based in fact,” said David Maurstad, senior executive for the National Flood Insurance Program. “While entities are free to suggest or estimate their opinion of what flood insurance premiums should be, they are offering exactly that – an opinion – and they do not have insight into the Risk Rating 2.0 initiative.”

First Street agreed its numbers are estimates but said its modeling is comparable to any of the risk- based approaches that FEMA would use.

“Our data supports the idea that if insurance pricing is adjusted to match the risk from today’s current and future climates, there will need to be significant adjustment­s,” the group said in a statement.

How financial toll of flood damage is calculated

First Street calculated the propertyle­vel financial toll of flood damage by collecting home values and structural informatio­n for every single- family and small multi- unit dwelling in the nation and applying it to its previously published flood model with damage formulas.

With that informatio­n, the foundation compared current flood insurance premiums to what it says the federal government would have to charge to cover the expected damages each home could incur because of flooding.

Its data release marks the first time individual homeowners across the country will be able to see the estimated risk they face from flooding and what that risk translates to in terms of average annual financial loss – which will dictate potential insurance costs. The group allows property owners to look up that informatio­n on its website.

Increased NFIP premiums are a reckoning long overdue, said Carolyn Kousky, executive director of the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Wharton Risk Center and a First Street advisory board member.

Kousky said inaccurate pricing has left the NFIP in the red. Its coffers were wiped out by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The program suffered additional hits from hurricanes Sandy, Harvey and Irma. Congress bailed out the program in 2017 with $ 16 billion in debt relief, leaving the ultimate cost of those storms on the backs of the American taxpayer.

Flood insurance premiums also will need to keep climbing over the next few decades, First Street said, as rising sea levels, climate change and rapid developmen­t in coastal regions exacerbate flood risks.

“Environmen­tal change has already been happening for 50 years, and the policy structure hasn’t kept up with it,” said Matthew Eby, First Street’s founder and executive director. “FEMA is trying to compensate for five decades of mispriced insurance.”

FEMA has for years been working on a new risk assessment and rating structure. When it’s implemente­d in October, Risk Rating 2.0 will be the biggest change to the NFIP since its inception more than 50 years ago.

For the first time, it will tie individual premiums to each property’s actual flood risk. It also will level the playing field so that properties with the highest risks and the biggest associated damages pay the most.

Currently, the program bases rates on the amount of insurance purchased for a home rather than its replacemen­t cost. So the owner of a $ 2.5 million house with the same flood risks as the owner of a $ 250,000 house might pay the same rate even though repairs to the mansion would cost more.

“Over time, this has inadverten­tly caused a disparity – policyhold­ers with lower- valued homes are paying more for their insurance coverage than they should while policyhold­ers with highervalu­ed homes are paying less,” Maurstad said. “There is also a disparity at the edge of flood map zones where neighborin­g property owners often have vastly different flood insurance costs for the relatively same level of risk.”

FEMA said rate reductions would take effect immediatel­y upon Risk Rating 2.0’ s implementa­tion. Rate hikes would be phased in slowly – a maximum 18% increase per year – for existing policyhold­ers. Those buying insurance after Oct. 1 would pay the full amount.

Facing the biggest average rate hike are an estimated 4.26 million homes with a substantia­l risk of flooding that could cause structural damage. Substantia­l risk is defined as having a 1% annual chance of flood, otherwise known as a 100- year flood risk.

A third of those properties are in flood zones and required to buy flood insurance if they have a federally backed mortgage. If all of them got a policy, the average premium would need to rise from the current $ 1,884 a year to nearly $ 7,895 to cover the risk, First Street Foundation data shows.

The other two- thirds of those properties are outside the flood zone but still face a substantia­l risk of flooding resulting in structural damage. If all of those homeowners got a policy, the average rate would need to rise from $ 478 a year to roughly $ 2,484 to cover their risk.

No one ever wants to pay more for insurance, said Dawn Maletzke, who lives in South Patrick Shores. “I wouldn’t be happy about it, but if we don’t have a choice, we’ll pay it.”

Maletzke and her husband started buying flood insurance after several hurricanes swept through the area and forced evacuation­s, but she feels like at less than $ 400 a year, “it isn’t super expensive.” Even if their insurance doubled or tripled, she said, “it wouldn’t be a huge hardship.”

She doubts it would be an issue for anyone who buys a home in her neighborho­od either, because there’s such a demand for homes on the barrier islands along Florida’s east coast.

“People want to live here, and people who do aren’t worried about those things,” she said. “They’ll pay the cost to live here. It’s a lifestyle.”

Conversely, more than 1 in 4 counties across the U. S. would see lower rates, according to First Street’s model. They include dozens of counties in central South Carolina, the inland portions of southeast Georgia and the Florida panhandle.

Many of the mostly rural counties along the Mississipp­i River from Missouri’s boot heel south to the Delta could also see lower premium prices.

For example, owners of some of the most at- risk residentia­l properties in East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana, could see rates more in line with the $ 326 average annual loss First Street calculated for their homes. That’s compared to the current average NFIP premium of $ 814 per year.

Caveats and Congress

In preparatio­n for its expected rollout, FEMA is sharing details of the program with the insurance industry to get feedback, said Joe Rossi, a flood specialist for Rogers Gray Insurance, executive director of the Massachuse­tts Coastal Coalition and chairman of the National Flood Associatio­n’s flood committee.

Rossi has seen the program and the rate structure, but like others in the industry, he is under a nondisclos­ure agreement regarding the details and rates.

“I personally think Risk Rating 2.0 is a real positive change,” Rossi said. “I say we’re in uncharted territory because this is the first time in 52 years that the NFIP has made this big of a change.”

First Street and independen­t experts interviewe­d by USA TODAY say there are caveats to the group’s study. All modeling is subject to error, and First Street doesn’t directly predict premium increases. It instead assesses how much money is needed annually to pay for estimated damages over the course of a 30- year mortgage. This is consistent with how FEMA says it will calculate its new rates.

Those watching FEMA also say a lot can change between now and October.

Rossi said he has heard the rollout could be delayed, or that some of the parameters might be adjusted “so the industry can kind of grapple a little bit more with the change.”

Congress could still take action that affects the rollout.

“FEMA said it’s a programmat­ic change and they’re allowed to do it, but if we get a reform bill passed in June and that dictates something different, then there could be a delay,” he said. “Con

gress may come out and say the maximum amount of increase in a year, which right now is 18%, is 10%, so that changes the dynamic as well.”

The National Flood Insurance Program, implemente­d in 1968, provides about 95% of the nation’s flood insurance policies – some 5.1 million.

The rating structure hasn’t changed since the 1970s. It assesses premiums based on whether properties are in a flood zone, the occupancy type and the structure’s elevation. It also takes into account just two types of flood risks: those from rising rivers or coastal storm surge.

The 2.0 model aims to bring the program more in line with actual risks by calculatin­g premiums based on each home’s specific structural features and its replacemen­t value. It also will include a broader range of flooding events, such as heavy rainfall, tsunamis and coastal erosion.

FEMA’s existing flood zones will not factor into rate calculatio­ns, so properties outside the zones won’t automatica­lly pay lower premiums. Homeowners inside those zones will still be required to buy flood insurance if they have federally backed mortgages.

First Street estimates the flood zones include about 3.8 million single- family and two- to four- unit residentia­l structures. The majority face no significant flood risk and should see flat or even declining premiums.

About 1.5 million of those homes, however, carry substantia­l flood risk that could cause structural damage. First Street data shows their premiums should rise an average of 4.2 times to cover current risk.

An additional 2.7 million residentia­l properties outside the flood zones are at risk of flood- induced structural damage. Their rates should climb 5.2 times, First Street estimates.

“There’s a focus on premiums, as if they’re somehow divorced from the underlying risk,” Kousky said. “The question should be, how do we reduce this risk? Are these areas where we should have developmen­t?”

 ?? FRED SQUILLANTE/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Firefighters in Columbus, Ohio, help evacuate people during a May 19 flood. In higher- risk places across the U. S., policyhold­ers could see big rate hikes.
FRED SQUILLANTE/ USA TODAY NETWORK Firefighters in Columbus, Ohio, help evacuate people during a May 19 flood. In higher- risk places across the U. S., policyhold­ers could see big rate hikes.
 ?? COAST GUARD VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? In Charleston, S. C., some homes would need to pay average premiums of $ 18,211 to cover anticipate­d costs of flooding, data shows.
COAST GUARD VIA GETTY IMAGES In Charleston, S. C., some homes would need to pay average premiums of $ 18,211 to cover anticipate­d costs of flooding, data shows.

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