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Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Yes, Virginia, You Pay Subsidies Not Just To Banks But To Flood-Prone Homes Of The Rich

You are supporting the habits of the rich in more ways than you know, including their love of water views.

Readers may recall that we wrote about the Biggert-Waters Act, a bill to address rising losses in a Federal flood insurance program that had run on a self-supporting basis until the late 2000s. As New Jersey Spotlight explained:

Congress created the National Flood Insurance Program in the late 1960s after Hurricane Betsy hit New Orleans, causing over a billion dollars in damage. Flood insurance was nearly impossible to secure from the private market, so lawmakers felt the federal government had a duty to step in and provide help to residents along the coast. The program was set up to be self-sustaining, borrowing from the U.S. Treasury only when necessary, and it generally worked for several decades. But beginning in 2005, Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, Wilma and several other storms caused it to blow through its budget and go $24 billion in debt.

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3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Build a house on a flood plain and YOU pay for flood damage, not the rest of us.

JoeAlbero said...

4:23, The Salisbury Zoo is 100% in a flood plane zone. WHO pays for the repairs when damage happens, (which has happened NUMEROUS times over the years)? YOU DO.

Anonymous said...

Most of the Eastern Shore is a flood plain.