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By BEN EVANS
Associated
Press
WASHINGTON
- Despite promising changes, Congress has shown little enthusiasm for
taking the unpopular steps that experts say are necessary to fix the
nation's main flood insurance program.
Recent
flooding in the Midwest has brought the issue back to the forefront.
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, back-to-back storms in 2005, dispelled any
notion that the insurance program was self-sustaining. They threw it
roughly $20 billion into debt and called attention to major structural
flaws.
Nearly
everyone acknowledges it cannot pay off the debt, much less pay for
losses in future storms. But so far, Congress has done little more than
raise the program's borrowing limit, essentially handing taxpayers a
series of shaky IOUs.
A
failure to act could leave the public vulnerable to large bailouts of
the program and help perpetuate a false confidence among some property
owners that they do not need coverage.

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Congress
has been slow to address what many see as problems with the National
Flood Insurance Program that reimburses owners for flooding damage
caused by storms. Hurricane Isabel in 2003 caused damage to
many properties, especially in Hatteras village. Above is the
Village Marina Motel which floated off its foundation in the storm.
Photo by
Barrier Island Images |
"The early
rhetoric was, 'We're going to fix this. We're not going to tolerate
this continued exposure of taxpayers to unlimited subsidies,'" said
Robert Hunter, a former director of the flood program who now oversees
insurance issues for the Consumer Federation of America. "They've done
nothing to fix it. It's just unbelievable."
The
National Flood Insurance Program was created in 1968 to protect
homeowners and reduce federal costs from natural disasters. Run by the
Federal Emergency Management Agency, it provides nearly all the flood
coverage in the United States. Private agents sell the policies.
Homeowners can get up to $250,000 in structural coverage and an
additional $100,000 for contents.
On average,
residential premiums are about $400 per $100,000 of coverage. The rates
typically do not reflect the real risks and therefore shift costs from
policyholders to taxpayers generally.
After the
deadly 2005 hurricane season, the Government Accountability Office
added the program to a short list of "high risk" areas in the
government that the agency believes deserve urgent attention.
The
starting point for an overhaul, experts say, is raising rates for the
more than 5 million policyholders, particularly those with high-risk
coastal properties or vacation homes who pay heavily subsidized rates.
Other recommendations include requiring coverage in more areas,
enforcing tougher building and land-use policies, and updating old
flood maps so homeowners know their true risks.
"To really
fix the program doesn't include a great deal of good news," said David
John, an expert on insurance policy at The Heritage Foundation. "For a
politician, this is a no-win situation. But unfortunately, delay makes
it a no-win situation for the taxpayer."
Legislation
addressing some of the issues stalled last year.
This year,
the House has made some progress. But critics say a bill passed by the
House Financial Services Committee last month barely tackles the
problem.
The bill
includes only modest rate increases, allowing premiums to rise a
maximum of 15 percent per year instead of the current cap of 10
percent. The measure has drawn attention largely for a provision to
expand the program by adding wind coverage.
The
committee chairman, Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., said the bill is aimed
at gradually putting the program on sound financial footing. Trying to
fix the problems overnight would be a "very serious blow" to
policyholders, he said.
The bill,
Frank and his aides noted, doubles spending on flood mapping. Starting
in 2011, it would allow higher premium increases of up to 25 percent a
year for the riskiest and most heavily subsidized vacation properties
and second homes.
"The
bill will reduce the level of subsidy," he said.
But Frank
dismissed questions about the massive debt, calling it a loan from one
government agency to another.
Hunter, who
worked in the Ford and Carter administrations, said that "the money
doesn't come from nowhere. The taxpayers pay it."
John said
that if the hurricane that hit Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula this past
week had aimed toward the East Coast, "you would have yet again
multibillion-dollar bailouts."
He added,
"I firmly believe that people should be able to live wherever they want
to live, but they should also then bear the cost of doing so."
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On
the Net:
National
Flood Insurance Program: http://www.FloodSmart.Gov
Information
on the House bill, HR 3121, can be found at http://thomas.loc.gov
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