Flood
Insurance Rates about to Skyrocket?
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Posted: 27 Nov 2013 04:00 AM
PST
Approximately 5.6 million property owners
in over 20,000 communities across the country rely on the National Flood
Insurance Program (NFIP) for flood insurance. A new law, the Biggert-Waters Flood Insurance
Reform Act of 2012, will force major changes in the NFIP. Despite efforts by
some on Capitol Hill to delay the
act, it looks set to take effect. According to an article in Insurance Journal
last week, FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate said:
“There are challenges to
implementing the law when premiums may exceed $10,000 in more high-risk areas
where homes are not easily elevated or bought out.”
How many will be
affected?
The Insurance Journal
article also explained:
“Last year’s legislation
promises premium increases to 1.1 million homeowners who’ve received
subsidized, below-risk coverage and could sock even more homeowners whose
homes met older building standards or were deemed at lower risk under
previous flood maps. Under the old rules, they could retain their old rates
since they followed the rules when they bought or built their homes, but they
will soon lose those grandfathered rates under the new law.”
Could it impact home
sales in the regions impacted?
Again, we refer to the Insurance
Journal article:
“The changes also
promise to make it unaffordable for people in chronic flood zones to keep
their homes, and they have put a damper on home sales in areas where benefits
extended to current homeowners can’t be passed along to prospective buyers.”
What can be done to
delay the changes?
Write your Member of Congress
and Senators. Congress has legislation in the House, H.R. 3370 and Senate, S.
1610, to delay changes to the NFIP.
According to the National
Association of Realtors, these bills would:
§ prudently defer rate
increases until FEMA completes the affordability study mandated by law
§ create a system for
targeted rate relief
§ establish an office
of the Advocate for flood insurance rate and mapping concerns.
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