Sandy Relief
- TheDancinMonarch
- Supporter

- Posts: 4779
- Joined: Tue Jun 16, 2009 10:23 pm
- I am a fan of: Old Dominion
- Location: Norfolk VA
Re: Sandy Relief
I don't claim to be a FEMA flood insurance expert. I just say this as simply as possible. If you live by the ocean, with all the pleasures of that, and the ocean comes to claim your home, then you will have my condolences. But don't expect to get into my wallet so you can affect repairs.89Hen wrote:I don't think you are an expert on FEMA flood insurance.TheDancinMonarch wrote:You should have to bear the full cost of insurance to protect your property as opposed to the give-away government flood insurance.
I live in an area of Norfolk that has never flooded but I have flood insurance as the harbor is but a few blocks away. It's not that expensive bcause of the history. But I know people with homes on the ocean on the Outer Banks with government flood insurance and their premiums are less than mine and they have the ocean in their front yard. And they don't even thank me or anyone else for our subsidy.
- BDKJMU
- Level5

- Posts: 36392
- Joined: Wed Jul 01, 2009 6:59 am
- I am a fan of: JMU
- A.K.A.: BDKJMU
- Location: Philly Burbs
Re: Sandy Relief
It may be really expensive for shi**y coverage, but the bottom line is the fed flood insurance program isn't bringing in enough in premiums to pay out claims. 18 billion in the hole before Sandy, add 9 billion to that with the supplemental Congress just passed. The taxpayers shouldn't have to subsidize this. Maybe you don't need to be paying any more, but a lot of people on/near do. Premiums should reflect risk. And if that means a lot of people & businesses near/on the water can't afford it, so be it.89Hen wrote:I don't know how much of your post is fact and how much is speculation. Flood insurance for a homeowner is capped at $250,000 and it's really expensive. I have the full $250,000 coverage, but I only have dwelling coverage (won't cover personal possessions damaged by flood) and I have the highest deductible allowed ($5000) and my premium is $2,051 this year. That's some shitty coverage for that much money and you can't shop around... it is what it is.GannonFan wrote:There's plenty of places around here that qualified for disaster relief and they tend to be very low lying, in some cases even butting right up to waterways that are prone to flooding even in regular storms (to answer the criticism that this was a once in a lifetime event - rather, for many of these areas, these events happen at least annually). Why do we keep building or keep allowing people to build right up against a large river that will flood, and then subsidize the insurance for them to live there. There is a big difference between the Jersey shore and the guy building a house on a flood plain 50 miles from the shore right next to a big creek. Of course the former should be something that is protected and subsidized - as you say, millions of people use it. But that guy building his home next to a disaster doesn't tend to get much in the way of tourism, except when the FEMA guy come out once a year to bail him out.
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