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OT-- N. Orleans insurance

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Just Curious

09-17-2005 13:03:35




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I lived in a small town once and was inquisitive to get insurance on the house I was going to build, that’s why I moved to the country, any way’s from where the land was located it was about 200 yards from a small creek that ran thru the corner of the city and the insurance man and the bank loan officer tells me yeah go ahead and build there you will need flood insurance because your in a flood plain of the city and let me tell you it wasn’t the cheapest I’m just curious those people in new Orleans they live basically lower than the level of the sea so what kind of insurance do they have, is it a special insurance or what and surely the insurance company knows at anytime mother nature can break one of those levies or whatever the case maybe that close to the water, i understand if their house or whatever is paid for they probablly wouldn't need it, kind of would like to know I guess it is like living in tornado alley get blown away rebuild and wait for the next one to do the same thing just curious

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Rauville

09-18-2005 06:16:24




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to Just Curious, 09-17-2005 13:03:35  
I was in Austin, MN last week and drove through the areas that had flooded a year ago when the watershed north of town received 12 inches of rain. In the last year the city has received FEMA grants to buy out and raze flood damaged homes. Good idea...until you try to figure out why developers are now building mutli-family structures on the same sites!



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JRM

09-17-2005 18:22:16




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to Just Curious, 09-17-2005 13:03:35  
This will get ugly before it gets resolved. The government of Miss. is suing 5 insurance companies to get them to pay claims for flooding due to the hurricane even though no premium dollars were collected for this risk. While I certainly feel for those that lost everything, I am sickened by this action. We'll all pay far more for insurance in the future if this lawsuit prevails. How will insurance companies even stay in business if they have to pay claims for risks they never collected payments for?

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Stum

09-17-2005 14:50:49




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to Just Curious, 09-17-2005 13:03:35  
Flood insurance is only available through the Federal Government.Maximum payout is $250,000.According to CNN, 65% of the people affected in N.O. did not carry flood insurance.



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Matt from CT

09-17-2005 16:59:55




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to Stum, 09-17-2005 14:50:49  
I think it may be a while before "all the numbers" come out.

If you take an urban city like New Orleans, how many people actually own their own homes and thus subject to mortgage requirements for carrying Flood Insurance? I'm certain it's a lot less than 65%!

Now, did they look at just property owners w/ Flood Insurance, or did they also look at renters w/ FI, too? That's just my general observation...those raw numbers alone don't paint a whole picture.

Of the people who owned property to rent, then you get into whether it was financed property or owned outright, and if owned outright if they took the risk of not paying for the insurance.

Most places it's the land that's most valuable, not the actual structure. So you're a slum lord. So you own a building outright that's only going to cost $50-75k to rebuild. Land under it is worth $100k. That'll still be there afterwards. So you take the risk, say screw it, I make more money now, and if the storm knocks it down, I rebuild, the rents cover the rebuild cost easily, I'm out a some equity but within 15 years I'll have it all back.

As to Buickanddeere's point, I'm a bit more nuanced.

I have a *big* problem with using flood insurance to allow new development in very risky areas. Used to be the typical example was the 2nd homes on the ocean front -- although they've become more strict on that, I still don't see a lot of social value in subsidizing the wealthy to have seaside retreats.

For existing communities located decades and centuries though, it is a way to continue with life without undue economic disruption.

Think of New Orleans if Flood Insurance wasn't available -- what bank would loan money to buy homes there? The people who already owned property wouldn't be able to sell; property prices would spiral down; and you'd see an existing community completely collapse.

----- ----- --

BTW...one story I listened to NPR was from a middle class Black family from the 9th Ward -- the radio person jokingly asked that it sounds like you need a MBA to fill out the forms, and the woman laughed -- her sister has one, and she's three classes away from earning hers and they both had agreed the forms where tough! Anyway, of her extended family they had lost 9 homes, but everyone except one uncle had Flood Insurance.

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bo

09-17-2005 17:12:42




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to Matt from CT, 09-17-2005 16:59:55  
Yeh...stupid to build in areas of hazard. But..having said that, North America has the most violent weather of any country in the world. Just what part of the country is safe? All of Texas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Illinois, Kansas and which ever I missed is in a tornado alley.. All of the east coast..all..is in a hurricane area. All of the west coast is in a earthquake and other things...mud, fire and water area.

How about we limit building where there is a lack of fresh water...that eliminates much of the western states...they're having serious problems with water now..

The northeash...only problem there is snow..not much of a big deal as it can be pushed away.

So..in reality, the coastal areas are popular whipping areas but remember the flooding along the Mississippi? Problems everywhere.

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paul

09-17-2005 21:15:07




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to bo, 09-17-2005 17:12:42  
As you say, most places to build - anywhere - are at danger for some sort of natural disaster. That is a given, & acceptable. Just how it is.

Building 9 feet below sea level in an area that should expect strong hurricanes is _not_ acceptable. That is a double whammy - setting yourself up to fail.

It is just plain silly to spend gobs of money to rebuild the low-lying spots. Of course rebuild New Orleans, and the rest of the coasts that were so devistated.

But the govt controls my low ground, I can't even plant crops in a 'wetland'. how the heck can these folks rebuild houses in that sunken wetland????

That is foolishness.

--->Paul

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Matt from CT

09-17-2005 18:29:44




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to bo, 09-17-2005 17:12:42  
You'd be surprised bo...Northeast has much more than just snow :) New England anyway

(Although I can't stand it when they look for Federal Aid just because it was an unusually big snow storm...It snows here, live with it!)

'38 Hurricane that hit us still ranks in the top 10 in lives lost. City I work in had 94 fatalities from the '53 Worcester Tornado. And I live in an area that's protected by a large series of Corps of Engineers dams so that dozens and dozens of mill villages and small cities remained economically viable after the severe flood hazard they were at became realized.*

===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===

Ok, one final aside before bed...

Many of those villages it may not have been unreasonable to build originally. Many started in the 1830s, in communities dating to the early 1700s.

One might argue there wasn't a lot of historical knowledge of floods yet...BUT --

One of this summer's reads was Man & Nature, written by George Perkins Marsh in 1862 <-- Yes, 1862 as in Civil War time.

And one of his observations from then in New England was increasingly worse flooding caused by poor farming practice -- not only where hills being denuded to low-value farming reducing the forest cover to slow the run-off...the soils being lost where silting up the rivers and raising the river beds.

Adding my own interpretation to the "big picture" you get this:

The biggest reason for the mass push cutting down the forests where to grow more sheep for the Mills that were built, and provide fuel for the railroads that ran to the Mills. And losing forests and losing soil as side effects of needing wool and fuel...caused the villages to become much more likely to flood.

Prior to the "great Merino Wool Craze" in the 1830s, New England farms tended necessarily to rotate -- they'd clear new land for crops, when fertility declined they'd move on and the old land would re-forest and re-cover. With sheep, you didn't need manpower to tend the fields...cut all the trees down (railroads made a market for the wood), grow sheep. Before Mills, Sheep, and Railroads you had maybe 10-20 out of every 200 acres in use for farmland at a time. After the 1830s any where you could clear trees was put into marginal production.

Which is all to say...some of these communities, whether in New England or on the Mississippi or elsewhere may have not be that all unreasonable in regards to flooding when they were built, but the unintended consequences of later developments made them much more vulnerable.

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ntmcj

09-17-2005 19:39:36




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to Matt from CT, 09-17-2005 18:29:44  
Around here, developers continually drain and fill wetlands. Any spot that remains dry and firm for a certain number of years does not qualify as wetland even though it may have been marsh or swamp years ago. We've had a drought for the last several years. This not only puts homes newly built at risk, it puts at risk homes that had been built for years as the wetlands no longer function.



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bo

09-17-2005 19:49:50




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to ntmcj, 09-17-2005 19:39:36  
Yeh...it happens. Here, a bunch of high end homes were built on unstable soil. Now they're all sinking, shifting and cracking foundations. The insurance companies won't pay and the local towns aren't responsible. The developers that built the houses are gone. The folks are stuck. No value, can't sell, monster bills to repair. Life is a ...can I type a female dog?



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bo

09-17-2005 18:44:42




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to Matt from CT, 09-17-2005 18:29:44  
Yeh..I live in New Haven for a few years..I know your weather well. The Naugatauk and Housatanic flooded in the 50s..badly...they rebuilt the valley towns. They strengthened the water control and they haven't flooded in years. Your snows are heavy and wet and knock down power lines.
I now live in upstate NY...every few years we have a blizzard...fire up the generator and we're fine after a few days...maybe the Guard gets called out for some search and rescue...but..it still stands...the north east is generally ok...an ice storm..power outage but the rest of the country...whooooboy...they have houses doing a slalom down a hill. Population is 300 million in this country....soon..it'll be twice that..where you gonna put them where it's safer?

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bo

09-17-2005 14:31:58




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to Just Curious, 09-17-2005 13:03:35  
Insurance. If you self finance your home, you need no insurance. If you mortgage, the mortgage holder will insist on full insurance coverage to protect their interests. If the area you build in is in a documented flood plain, the mortgage holder will require you to carry flood insurance.
House insurance is through a private company. Flood insurance is through the Federal government but serviced by your house insurance carrier.
If you have a hurricane and your roof blows off and it rains into your house, your house insurance will cover it. If you have a hurricane and your roof blows off and then it floods because of rising water...storm surge...rising creek water, your house insurance will NOT cover you, your flood insurance will to the extent of the policy.

You buy flood insurance on the dwelling and/or contents. If you live in a flood plain and you don't finance, it's up to you whether you get any kind of insurance at all. It would be stupid to live without insurance. At least the house insurance....flood insurance...depends on how much you can stomach risk...if you can't stomach it, get it.

New Orleans..there is some commentary that there were about 85,000 flood policies written for homes there. That's the minority of homes. Most didn't have it. They are flat out of luck. They get nothing. Those that had it will collect to the extent of the policy if the house is totaled and ....most will be.

What do the people do without insurance....nothing,,,,unless the federal government provides something...read this as your taxes.

The only other thing the uninsured can do is claim a capital loss on their income taxes. Remember, they will only reduce their taxable adjusted gross and will only save to the extent of their tax rate.

I hope this is clear and answers some of your questions.

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buickanddeere

09-17-2005 14:13:46




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to Just Curious, 09-17-2005 13:03:35  
Anybody who resides in the flood plane of a river system, below sea level, downwind of dirty industry, beside an airport etc. They deserve every bit of misery they suffer. Why do they expect the taxpayer/government, insurance companies and the Almighty to help them when ever the inventible occurs?



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Joe in MN

09-18-2005 07:11:30




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to buickanddeere, 09-17-2005 14:13:46  
I THINK YOUR RIGHT, TO ADD TO THAT, THE CITY PLANNER'S NAME IS "JIM BEAM".....



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Mike M

09-17-2005 16:40:49




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to buickanddeere, 09-17-2005 14:13:46  
You might want to rethink that. I'm sure many who are by dirty industry or airports were there long before the developers bought up land (or now they can take it)and built next to THEM.



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buickanddeere

09-17-2005 19:11:06




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to Mike M, 09-17-2005 16:40:49  
What is seen around here are developers purchasing cheap land beside the airport, dump etc. Then building houses on it and people purchasing without even driving around the block to see what is on the other side. Now the homeowners are suing the airport, packing plant etc that was there years before their houses were built.



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dr.sportster

09-18-2005 05:18:42




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to buickanddeere, 09-17-2005 19:11:06  
Now the new yuppie thing is to move next to the race track then complain about the engine noise.Only good thing is the NHRA has so much money they just pay the fines and keep racing past curfew until the complainers move and race fans buy the homes.



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paul

09-17-2005 21:21:47




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to buickanddeere, 09-17-2005 19:11:06  
Friend of mine bought a house a decade ago - new development, was a good deal.....

His back yard is not as big as it should be. There is a steep berm going up from the back of the house. House in 3rd lowest in the subdivision.....

Well, that berm is the back wall of a sanitary landfill. A big one, for the Twin Cities area of Minnesota. Big, big dump pit. It's full, sealed over. Was sealed before the housing development went in.

As you look out the window, you see airplanes. They are next to a mid-sized municiple airport. Been there for over 1/2 a century.


Why do people buy in such locations?

--->Paul

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bo

09-17-2005 19:16:22




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to buickanddeere, 09-17-2005 19:11:06  
Nature of the beast. My gun club is around the corner from my house. The skeet/trap shooting is nice to hear...for me. The area around it is now being built up with expensive housings. Only a matter of time before the complaints come. So?

There is no such thing as "fair". The politically connected will win every time..been that way for years and years. The not politically connected lose. Not fair you say? That's the American way...the majority rules.

Do you think that the southern people are happy with the influx of northerners into their cities taking over the local politics and changing generations of life styles?

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Bo

09-17-2005 14:39:32




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 Re: OT-- N. Orleans insurance in reply to buickanddeere, 09-17-2005 14:13:46  
I don't remember him asking about someone helping them. Look at it from another perspective, if you dig real hard into your own life, you'll find that you've been helped by others. For example, my kids are grown and gone but I still pay school tax so that other people's kids can go to school. I still pay for roads that I'll never drive, I still pay for trains that I'll never ride and for a bunch of other things that I'll never get any use out of ..... ...but you might.

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