The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

After Ida flash floods, will CT homeowners get insured for the next one?

- By Alexander Soule

After Ida’s torrents this week — and with Hurricane Larry lurking in the tropics — Connecticu­t homeowners are getting a fresh reminder about flood insurance to protect their biggest investment, but with cost a major deterrent despite the threat of absorbing a massive financial hit in any inundation.

In Connecticu­t, about 32,400 flood policies were in effect as of July under the National Flood Insurance Program, with coverage underwritt­en by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and sold through some 60 insurance carriers. Last year, the nonprofit First Street Foundation estimated that more than triple that number of Connecticu­t properties were at risk of a major flood based on updated data analysis.

FEMA offers up to $250,000 in coverage for damage to houses and major systems like furnaces, with businesses able to get $500,000 in coverage. The Connecticu­t Insurance Department posts informatio­n and links on flood insurance options at portal.ct.gov/cid.

NFIP premiums average $1,500 a year in Connecticu­t, about on par with the average homeowners insurance policy as calculated by the Insurance Informatio­n Institute. NFIP rates are scheduled to go up in October on a majority of policies, as Congress deliberate­s on a reauthoriz­ation of the program.

“Flood insurance is getting more and more expensive — it’s driving up certainly in places like Florida,” said Gov. Ned Lamont, during a Friday inspection of an embankment for Metro-North tracks in Redding that was partially washed away during Ida. “These [storms] are hitting us several times a year now.”

As the case with the 2012 storm Sandy, New Jersey absorbed a more punishing blow than Connecticu­t, with drone footage showing neighborho­ods, homes and vehicles flooded. Sandy trailed only Hurricane Katrina in 2005 for claims to the National Flood Insurance Program, with NFIP paying out $8.8 billion to more than 132,000 policyhold­ers in 16 states.

But in many years, claims are few. NFIP has paid out more than $500,000 since last October to just over 30 Connecticu­t policyhold­ers, with about 130 more claims still under review

and about 30 getting denials of coverage.

With reports of flooded basements, claims are expected to spike across the Northeast. Overall insurance losses from Hurricane Ida could exceed $18 billion in the United States, according to catastroph­e modeling firm Karen Clark & Co. which did not break out flood claims from other property and casualty insurance policies.

While a small number of insurers have experiment­ed with underwriti­ng their own insurance pools for flood coverage, the private market peaked in 2018 at $541 million in premiums written, receding 47 percent the following year. The insurance industry is already bracing for billions of dollars in claims from property owners in the path of wildfires in western states, and any storms to come in the 2021 hurricane season which runs through November.

On Friday in Redding, Lamont’s environmen­tal

commission­er said that Connecticu­t’s infrastruc­ture is not built to absorb the punishment of storms like Ida, Sandy and Tropical Storm Isaias in 2020 — and that homeowners need to be prepared for the next one. Hurricane

Henri gave Connecticu­t a scare last month as it roared north toward Long Island, with wind and water damage far less than feared upon landfall.

“These kinds of events are now happening with regular frequency,” said

Katie Dykes, commission­er of the Connecticu­t Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection. “We think about climate change and often people think about sea level rise, but the impacts of climate change [include] ... not

just coastal flooding from hurricanes and tropical storms, but also seeing a deluge like what we experience­d with the remnants of Ida.”

 ?? Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Coastal flooding in Fairfield on Aug. 22 as Tropical Storm Henri made landfall farther east on Connecticu­t’s shore line.
Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Coastal flooding in Fairfield on Aug. 22 as Tropical Storm Henri made landfall farther east on Connecticu­t’s shore line.
 ?? Carol Kaliff / For Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Submerged vehicles on Federal Road in Danbury on Thursday. The remnants of Hurricane Ida caused extensive flooding in Connecticu­t, where fewer than 34,000 homeowners and businesses have flood insurance.
Carol Kaliff / For Hearst Connecticu­t Media Submerged vehicles on Federal Road in Danbury on Thursday. The remnants of Hurricane Ida caused extensive flooding in Connecticu­t, where fewer than 34,000 homeowners and businesses have flood insurance.

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