The nation's flood insurance program doesn't know the elevation of 750,000 high-risk homes with discounted policies, according to the National Research Council.
The omission could complicate efforts to phase out subsidized insurance rates in the National Flood Insurance Program, said researchers who contributed to a technical that suggests the program needs to modernize the way it collects data and sets rates.
Duration of flooding not considered
The report suggests that FEMA, or towns, could determine the elevations of many homes at once using truck-mounted LIDAR, a technology that measures distance by analyzing the reflected light of a laser. That could be cheaper than hiring engineers for each house, the report says.
"In the short term, FEMA's going to have to do something to get an estimate of those [elevations]," said Ross Corotis, a committee member and a professor of engineering at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
The report doesn't make recommendations, but it does offer conclusions about the state of the program, which is about $24 billion in debt following Hurricane Katrina and Superstorm Sandy. FEMA officials requested the study.
One finding describes aging technological aspects of the program. When it was being devised, officials identified 30 different topographical categories that could be used to help establish the price that homeowners would pay, Corotis said. Those who live in a deep mountain valley, for example, might pay more than someone in a flat field.
In the end, officials used just one topographical designation. That means people facing different depths of flooding were grouped together when ascertaining prices, even though they face different exposures to damage. The result is that some people pay too little, while others pay too much. In the insurance world, this is called a cross subsidy.
The program also does not take the duration of a flood into account, just the depth of inundation. The length of time that a home is waterlogged can lead to mold, more damage and other losses, the researchers said.
It also doesn't consider incremental protections offered by levees, or partial levees. The program deems that a certified levee will protect homes behind it from a 100-year storm. But sometimes they fail, and that risk could be considered.
On the other hand, the program doesn't account for noncertified levees at all. But it might perform some protective role during frequent, smaller storms.
All of that could be considered in a "comprehensive risk analysis," the report said. That could provide more accurate rates while fulfilling another function of the program: communicate to the public the real risks it faces, so it can prepare for them.
"People need to make decisions being aware of that risk," Corotis said. "If the granularity isn't there, it's not a very effective tool to help them do that."
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