A week after Hurricane Helene overwhelmed the Southeastern
U.S., homeowners hit the hardest are grappling with how they could possibly pay
for the flood damage from one of the deadliest storms to hit the mainland in
recent history.
The Category 4 storm that first struck Florida’s Gulf Coast
on September 26 has dumped trillions of gallons of water across several states,
leaving a catastrophic trail of destruction that spans hundreds of miles
inland. More than 200 people have died in what is now the deadliest hurricane
to hit the mainland U.S. since Katrina, according to statistics from the
National Hurricane Center.
Western North Carolina and the Asheville area were hit
especially hard, with flooding that wiped out buildings, roads, utilities and
land in a way that nobody expected, let alone prepared for. Inland areas in
parts of Georgia and Tennessee were also washed out.
The Oak Forest neighborhood in south Asheville lives up to
its name, with trees towering over 1960s era ranch-style houses on large lots.
But on Sept. 27, as Helene’s remnants swept through western north Carolina,
many of those trees came crashing down, sometimes landing on houses.
Julianne Johnson said she was coming upstairs from the
basement to help her 5-year-old son pick out clothes that day when her husband
began to yell that a giant oak was falling diagonally across the yard. The tree
mostly missed the house, but still crumpled part of a metal porch and damaged
the roof. Then, Johnson said, her basement flooded.
On Friday, there was a blue tarp being held on the roof with
a brick. Sodden carpet that the family torn out lay on the side of the house,
waiting to go to the landfill. With no cell phone service or internet access,
Johnson said she couldn’t file a home insurance claim until four days after the
storm.
“It took me a while to make that call,” she said. “I don’t
have an adjuster yet.”
Roof and tree damage are likely to be covered by the average
home insurance policy. But Johnson, like many homeowners, doesn’t have flood
insurance and she’s not certain how she’ll pay for that part of the damage.
Those recovering from the storm may be surprised to learn
flood damage is a completely separate thing. Insurance professionals and
experts have long warned that home insurance typically does not cover flood
damage to the home, even as they espouse that flooding can happen anywhere that
rains. That’s because flooding isn’t just sea water seeping into the land –
it’s also water from banks, as well as mudflow and torrential rains.
But most private insurance companies don’t carry flood
insurance, leaving the National Flood Insurance Program run by the Federal
Emergency Management Agency as the primary provider for that coverage for
residential homes. Congress created the federal flood insurance program more
than 50 years ago when many private insurers stopped offering policies in
high-risk areas.
North Carolina has 129,933 such policies in force, according
to FEMA’s latest data, though most of that protection will likely be
concentrated on the coast rather than in the Blue Ridge Mountains area where
Helene caused the most damage. Florida, in comparison, has about 1.7 million
flood policies in place statewide.
Charlotte Hicks, a flood insurance expert in North Carolina
who has led flood risk training and educational outreach for the state’s
Department of Insurance, said the reality is that many Helene survivors will
never be made whole. Without flood insurance, some people may be able to
rebuild with the help of charities but most others will be left to fend for
themselves.
“There will absolutely be people who will be financially
devasted by this event,” Hicks said. “It’s heartbreaking.”
Some may go into foreclosure or bankruptcy. Entire
neighborhoods will likely never be rebuilt. There’s been water damage across
the board, Hicks said, and for some, mudslides have even taken the land upon
which their house once stood.
Meanwhile, Helene is turning out to be a fairly manageable
disaster for the private home insurance market because those plans generally
only serve to cover wind damage from hurricanes.
That’s a relief for the industry, which has been under
increasing strain from other intensifying climate disasters such as wildfires
and tornadoes. Nowhere is the shrinking private market due to climate
instability more evident than in Florida, where many companies have already
stopped selling policies — leaving the state-backed Citizens Property Insurance
Corporation now the largest home insurer in the state.
Mark Friedlander, spokesman for the Insurance Information
Institute, an industry group, said Helene is a “very manageable loss event,”
and estimates insurer losses will range from about $5 billion to $8 billion.
That’s compared to the insured losses from the Category 4 Hurricane Ian in
September 2022 that was estimated in excess of $50 billion.
Friedlander and other experts point out that less than 1% of
the inland areas that sustained the most catastrophic flood damage were
protected with flood insurance.
“This is very common in inland communities across the
country,” Friedlander said. “ Lack of flood insurance is a major insurance gap
in the U.S., as only about 6% of homeowners carry the coverage, mostly in
coastal counties.”
Amy Bach, executive director of the consumer advocacy group
United Policyholders, said the images of the flood destruction in North
Carolina shook her despite decades of seeing challenging recovery faced by
victims of natural disasters.
“This is a pretty serious situation here in terms of people
disappointed. They are going to be disappointed in their insurers and they are
going to be disappointed in FEMA,” Bach said. “FEMA cannot match the kind of
dollars private insurers are supposed to be contributing to the recovery.”
This week, FEMA announced it could meet the immediate needs
of Helene but warned it doesn’t have enough funding to make it through the
hurricane season, which runs June 1 to Nov. 30 though most hurricanes typically
occur in September and October.
Even if a homeowner does have it, FEMA’s National Flood
Insurance Program only covers up to $250,000 for single-family homes and
$100,000 for contents.
Bach said that along with homeowners educating themselves
about what their policies do and don’t cover, the solution is a national
disaster insurance program that does for property insurance what the Affordable
Care Act did for health insurance.
After Hurricane Floyd in 1999, the state of North Carolina
started requiring insurance agents to take a flood insurance class so they
could properly advise their clients of the risk and policies available, Hicks
said. The state also requires home insurance policies to clearly disclose that
it does not cover flood.
“You can’t stop nature from doing what nature is going to
do,” Hicks said. “For us to think it’s never going to be this bad again would
be a dangerous assumption. A lot of people underestimate their risk of
flooding.”
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