The
National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) was
created by the
Congress of
the United States in 1968 through the
National Flood Insurance
Act of 1968 (P.L. 90-448).
It enables property owners in participating communities to purchase
insurance protection from the government
against losses from flooding. This insurance is designed to provide
an insurance alternative to disaster assistance to meet the
escalating costs of repairing damage to buildings and their
contents caused by
floods. Participation in
the NFIP is based on an agreement between local communities and the
federal government which states that if a community will adopt and
enforce a
floodplain management
ordinance to reduce future flood risks to
new construction in Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHA), the federal
government will make flood insurance available within the community
as a financial protection against flood losses. The SFHAs and other
risk premium zones applicable to each participating community are
depicted on Flood Insurance Rate Maps. The
Mitigation Division within the
Federal Emergency Management
Agency manages the NFIP and oversees the floodplain management
and mapping components of the Program.
The intent was to reduce future flood damage through community
floodplain management ordinances and provide protection for
property owners against potential losses through an insurance
mechanism that requires a premium to be paid for the protection.
The NFIP is meant to be self-supporting, though in 2004 Congress
found that repetitive-loss properties cost the taxpayer about $200
million annually. Congress originally intended that operating
expenses and flood insurance claims be paid for through the
premiums collected for flood insurance policies.
NFIP borrows from the
U.S.
Treasury
for times when losses are heavy, and these loans
are paid back with interest.
The program was first amended by the Flood Disaster Protection Act
of 1973, which made the purchase of flood insurance mandatory for
the protection of property within SFHAs. In 1982, the Act was
amended by the
Coastal
Barrier Resources Act (CBRA). The CBRA enacted a set of maps
depicting the John H. Chafee Coastal Barrier Resources System
(CBRS) in which federal flood insurance is unavailable for new or
significantly improved structures. The program was further amended
by the
Flood
Insurance Reform Act of 2004, with the goal of reducing "losses
to properties for which repetitive flood insurance claim payments
have been made."
Criticisms
As critics predicted, the NFIP encouraged people to locate in areas
more susceptible to flood damage. Prior to the NFIP's existence,
insurance coverage for flood losses was not provided by any private
insurance carriers. Insurance losses stemming from flood damage
were largely the responsibility of the property owner, although the
consequences were sometimes mitigated through provisions for
disaster aid. Today, owners of property in flood plains frequently
receive disaster aid
and payment for insured losses, which
in many ways negates the original intent of the NFIP. Consequently,
these policy decisions have escalated losses stemming from floods
in recent years, both in terms of property and life.
Moreover, certain provisions within the NFIP increase the
likelihood that flood-prone properties will be occupied by the
people least likely to be in a position to recover from flood
disasters, which further increases demand for aid. Some factors
contributing to increased demand for aid are:
- Flood insurance for properties in flood prone areas are
mandatory only to secure loans, which makes it somewhat more likely
that flood prone properties will be owned by seniors that have paid
off their mortgage, or investors that have acquired the property
for rental income.
- Flood insurance only covers losses for the owner of the
property, and claims are subject to caps, which further increases
the likelihood that the property will be occupied by renters vs the
property owner.
- Flood prone properties are more likely to be offered for rent
because of the owner's increased risks and/or costs associated with
occupying the property themselves.
- Flood prone properties are more likely to be offered for rent
at a discount, which attracts lower income groups, seniors, and
infirm groups.
External links
References