Louisiana residents without flood
insurance face uncertainty
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[August 22, 2016]
By Sam Karlin
BATON ROUGE, La. (Reuters) - Quenton Robins
watched on Sunday morning as a giant metal claw clamped down on his
mother's ruined belongings, snapping wooden cabinets with an audible
crack as the operator of a giant mechanized arm slowly cleared a mound
of debris from her yard in Baton Rouge.
Five feet (1.5 meters) of water swept through the homes in the quiet
Park Forest neighborhood just over a week ago, shocking residents who
had been told they did not live in a flood zone.
"It's not a flood zone," said Robins, a 27-year-old Navy veteran. "At
least it didn't used to be."
As efforts in Louisiana turn from rescue to recovery, renters and
homeowners who do not have flood insurance are facing an uncertain
financial future.
Private insurers do not cover flood damage and flood insurance in the
United States is underwritten by the Federal Emergency Management
Agency. Homeowners who live in designated high-risk flood zones are
required to carry flood insurance if they have a federally backed
mortgage.
In Louisiana, an estimated 42 percent of homes in high-risk areas have
flood insurance, according to FEMA. Only 12.5 percent of homeowners in
low and moderate-risk zones do.
Many of the areas hit hard by record rainfall last week were not
considered at high risk for flooding.
Those residents without flood insurance are eligible for up to $33,000
in FEMA individual disaster assistance funds, although most will likely
receive less than that, based on payments following other major
disasters.
After Hurricane Katrina in 2005, FEMA paid $6.6 billion to approximately
1.07 million households and individuals in Louisiana, Mississippi and
Alabama, an average of just over $6,000 per grant, according to agency
figures. Superstorm Sandy in 2012 produced an average payout of under
$8,000 for about 180,000 residents of New York and New Jersey.
FEMA spokesman Rafael Lemaitre said the individual assistance is
intended to supplement insurance and to provide short-term relief for
immediate needs.
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Debris is seen floating in flood water in front of a damaged home in
St. Amant, Louisiana, U.S., August 21, 2016. REUTERS/Jonathan
Bachman
"It's not designed to make survivors whole again," said Lemaitre,
adding that FEMA recommends all homeowners obtain flood insurance
regardless of the risk in their area. He also said residents could
apply for low-cost loans from the Small Business Administration.
FEMA has approved more than $55 million in aid so far and some
106,000 Louisiana residents have registered for emergency assistance
after the record floods, which killed at least 13 and damaged more
than 60,000 homes.
U.S. President Barack Obama plans to visit Baton Rouge on Tuesday.
Down the street from Robins' mother, retired widow Betty Bailey sat
in the shade of her carport, waiting for her damaged possessions to
be taken away.
Bailey, who did not have flood insurance, said she moved to the
neighborhood in part because it is not in a flood zone. When she
applied for FEMA aid, she said they recommended she look into loans
to cover her losses.
"How do they know I can afford a loan with all the bills I already
have?" Bailey said. "That's not right."
Looking out at her neighborhood, Bailey added, "Some of these houses
will never be built back."
(Additional reporting and writing by Joseph Ax; Editing by Bill
Trott)
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