Jamaica Gleaner

MPs decry lack of insurance payout for f lood damage

- Jovan Johnson Staff Reporter

SOME LEGISLATOR­S were left outraged yesterday on hearing news suggesting that Jamaica would need at least twice the damage from mid-May rains that have left, preliminar­ily, $5 billion in rebuilding costs, to get a payout from a regional catastroph­e insurance scheme. Taxpayers pay J$780 million (US$6 million) in yearly premiums.

The lawmakers are using the developmen­t to bolster their call for a review of arrangemen­ts with the Caribbean Catastroph­e Risk Insurance Facility (CCRIF), which Jamaica joined in 2007 when it was establishe­d. Jamaica has never benefited from it.

Chairman of Parliament’s Public Administra­tion and Appropriat­ions Committee (PAAC) Dr Wykeham McNeill told members yesterday morning that based on informatio­n submitted by the Finance Ministry, Jamaica did not meet the CCRIF’s threshold to get a payout even though the facility confirmed that an “excess rainfall event” occurred over the period May 15-19, 2017.

“They further advised,” McNeill read from the ministry’s document, “that the model loss based upon satellite data amounted to US$100 million (J$1.3 billion), which fell short of the attachment point of US$200 million. This, therefore, meant that Jamaica would not qualify for any payout.

“It should be noted that the CCRIF policy only covers built-up areas, including infrastruc­ture, but does not include losses associated with the agricultur­al sector, for example.”

‘DISTURBING’ DISCLOSURE

McNeill said that the disclosure was “disturbing”, especially given the extent of the flood rains that affected at least 10 parishes, damaged hundreds of roads, washed away bridges, and left some communitie­s submerged and marooned for days.

“They only estimate US$100 million worth of damage. It indicates to me that if you follow that model, the rains would have had to be twice as bad for us to collect the first dollar. It disturbs me because that threshold is so high, and I suspect we will be paying our US$6 million of premium every year and getting very little in return at any point in time unless we sort of sink into the sea.”

 ??  ?? Residents of Sunnyside and Redwood in St Catherine look at a section of the roadway that was washed away during the recent flood rains.
Residents of Sunnyside and Redwood in St Catherine look at a section of the roadway that was washed away during the recent flood rains.

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