Luke Sharrett for The New York Times
Homeowners in storm-damaged coastal areas who had flood insurance — and
many more who did not, but will now be required to — will face premium
increases of as much as 20 percent or 25 percent per year beginning in
January, under legislation enacted in July to shore up the debt-ridden National Flood Insurance Program. The yearly increases will add hundreds, even thousands, of dollars to homeowners’ annual bills.
The higher premiums, coupled with expensive requirements for homes being
rebuilt within newly mapped flood hazard zones, which will take into
account the storm’s vast reach, pose a serious threat to middle-class
and lower-income enclaves. In Queens, on Staten Island, on Long Island
and at the Jersey Shore, many families have clung fast to a modest
coastal lifestyle, often passing bungalows or small Victorian homes down
through generations, even as development turned other places into
playgrounds for the well-to-do.
While many homeowners are beginning to rebuild without any thought to
future costs, the changes could propel a demographic shift along the
Northeast Coast, even in places spared by the storm, according to
federal officials, insurance industry executives and regional
development experts. Ronald Schiffman, a former member of the New York
City Planning Commission, said that barring intervention by Congress or
the states, there would be “a massive displacement of low-income
families from their historic communities.”
After weeks of tearing debris from her 87-year-old, two-story house on
the bay side of Long Beach, N.Y., Barbara Carman, 59, said she
understood the need to stabilize the flood insurance program, but she
compared coming premium increases to “kicking people while they’re
down.”
Ms. Carman and her husband, who had hoped to retire in a few years, were
reconsidering whether they could afford to remain on the coast on fixed
incomes. But she said she feared that even selling their home could be
hard.
“Only wealthy people could afford it, I guess, not middle-class people,”
she said. “You’re going to price us out of here.”
The heightened financial pressure has emerged as an unintended
consequence of efforts to stop the government subsidization of risk that
has encouraged so many to build and rebuild along coasts increasingly
vulnerable to extreme weather. Supporters of the effort acknowledged
that it would squeeze lower-income residents but said it was vital for
the insurance program to reflect the risk of living along the shore.
“The irony is, if we allowed market forces to dictate at the coast, a
lot of the development in the wrong places would never have gotten
built,” said Jeffrey Tittel, director of the Sierra Club’s chapter in
New Jersey. “But we didn’t. We subsidized that development with low
insurance rates for decades. And we can’t afford to keep doing that.
Should a person who lives in an apartment in Newark pay for someone’s
beach house?”
Because private insurers rarely provide flood insurance, the program has
been run by the federal government, which kept rates artificially low
under pressure from the real estate industry and other groups. Flood
insurance in higher-risk areas typically costs $1,100 to $3,000 a year,
for coverage capped at $250,000; the contents of a home could be insured
up to $100,000 for an additional $500 or so a year, said Steve Harty,
president of National Flood Services, a large claims-processing company.
Premiums will double for new policyholders and many old ones within three or four years under the new law.
Across the board, rates will begin rising an average of 20 percent after
Jan. 1, according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency; rate
increases had previously been capped at 10 percent. For properties older
than the flood insurance program, where premiums cost half as much as
for newer buildings, those discounts are being phased out, through
yearly rate increases of 25 percent.
Second homes and businesses will see these increases next year without
exception. Primary homes will lose their discounted rates if repairs
cost more than half the value of the home, if the home has had recurring
flood damage or if the owner refuses an offer of money to help elevate
or relocate the building — the exact situations being confronted by many
homeowners affected by Hurricane Sandy. The discounted rates disappear
if owners sell, let their policies lapse or make major improvements.
The practice of grandfathering is also being discontinued: homes that
were built in areas deemed safe at the time, but later added to flood
hazard areas, will no longer be treated as though they are on high
ground.
At the same time, avoiding the expense of flood insurance will become
harder for middle-class homeowners, many of whom have historically
dropped their policies after a few uneventful years even though it is
required for homeowners with federally backed mortgages who live in flood-prone areas. Lenders who do not enforce the requirement will face higher penalties.
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