The home insurance system is fatally flawed. As climate disasters intensify, it's becoming dangerously clear this system cannot protect us. We need a new model entirely — one focused on safeguarding people from financial consequences, not enriching insurers.
the only mechanism is by charging exorbitant premiums for those that have federal flood insurance in higher risk areas. when the FEMA flood plain maps are redrawn, eventually that makes it way to the federal flood insurance program for underwriting. and when you tell someone that federal flood insurance for their property is not $400 a year anymore, but $4,000 a year, that’s a pretty strong message.
of course, flood maps should all be more accessible with completely transparent rates so when people are looking at homes to buy / places to live, it isn’t a surprise within a mystery. and there should be a federal buyout program for people to sell off and relocate with a complementary federal housing development program to build new homes, shift zoning restrictions, and improve civic infrastructure for flood resilience whenever possible. all of these things would imply central planning and regulatory oversight rather than letting “markets”, which are notorious for being captured and cornered by capitalists doing speculation and arbitrage based on asymmetrical information access.
community relocation doesn’t have to be as destructive as we seem to prefer to do it in the US, and letting it just sort of “happen” under the current system over decades seems to be the way to maximize the human suffering and extract the most value for the worst people.
I don’t know a ton about it, but it seems like Obama put some mechanism in place that basically offsets the rising cost of insuring buildings that flood repeatedly onto everyone else in the program, so premiums seem to have very little connection with the actual number of times your house has flooded.