Flood Mapping Flaws Bring Broad Response
Washington,
DC—Problems with the way the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) conducts federal flood
mapping have resulted in a broad-based, bipartisan call for
change that straddles state and federal jurisdictions.
Twenty-seven members of the U.S. Senate, a
considerable bipartisan group pointing out the importance of the
issue, have joined with Idaho Senators Mike Crapo and Jim Risch
in a letter to FEMA officials calling for changes in the way
federal flood plain maps are drawn. Outdated methods of FEMA
planning can drive up the costs for insurance to property owners
who find themselves designated as inside a federal flood plain
area, despite existing protections.
The Senators say that too often, the agency
ignores the existence of levees or other structures that can
affect the extent of flood damage, forcing property owners to
purchase costly flood insurance that may not be needed.
“’Without’ levee modeling methods assume an existing levee or
flood control structure that exists in physical reality does not
exist for the purposes of modeling, reducing the precision of
flood maps and eroding public confidence in the mapping process
itself,” wrote Crapo, Risch and other Senators in the letter to
FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate. The Idaho Senators say they
have been urged to act by members of the Idaho Legislature and
state officials. The issue has affected residents ranging from
Idaho’s
Silver Valley
to the Treasure
Valley, and is growing in impact in
Boundary County
as increased development is proposed along the
Kootenai
River.
“We support FEMA’s efforts to maximize
taxpayer dollars by choosing simpler, more cost effective
modeling techniques when appropriate. However, in cases where
FEMA treats a flood control structure as if it has been
completely wiped off the map, we may be unnecessarily devaluing
property and hurting the economies of cities, towns, counties
and businesses. This approach is particularly troubling since
FEMA has the tools at its disposal to obtain more precise data,”
the Senators added.
“Back in the late 1970s and early 1980s
when FEMA was developing flood plain maps for Boundary County,
the lands along the Kootenai River were mapped as being within
the 100-year flood plain,” said county flood plain coordinator
Mike Weland, “but because much of the landed was protected by
dikes and levies and by the Libby Dam, no additional studies
were done to determine what the actual base flood elevation was,
resulting in a lot of land being designated ‘unnumbered A flood
zone.’ When I was hired to my position in 1997, FEMA didn’t look
at unnumbered A flood zones when they tested the county for FEMA
compliance and the county didn’t require that FEMA standards be
met, as there were no established standards. Since Hurricane
Katrina and the flooding that hit New
Orleans, FEMA started looking at
development in unnumbered A flood zones the same as they look at
numbered A zones, where a base flood elevation was established
and the requirements are known. Now, they’re saying the county
has to comply, and that it’s up to the property owner to prove
base flood elevation through advanced engineering studies before
they can develop. That’s an expensive proposition for a land
owner who knows the land they own hasn’t gotten wet in even the
highest recent flood years. If it’s marked on the FEMA map,
they’re stuck.”
The Senators agreed with Idaho officials
that the so-called “without levees” analysis can result in
inaccurate maps and force property owners to purchase costly and
unneeded flood insurance policies that can run as high as $2,000
annually. They said FEMA can correct the process by working more
closely with local communities to ensure that correct modeling
and recognition of structures like levees are correctly
represented when federal flood maps and documents are created.
The matter was brought to the attention of
the Senators by Idaho State Senator Joyce Broadsword of Sagle.
Brig. Gen. Bill Shawver of the Idaho National Guard helped
confirm how FEMA mapping was conducted and provided a statewide
view of the problem.
While it may seem a simple problem
affecting a few people who might choose to build in a place at
risk of being washed away, Weland said the problem affects
everyone in the county.
“Every two or three years, FEMA sends
someone in from Seattle
to conduct a ‘community assistance visit,” he said. “I don’t
know about it until he or she comes to my office and drops off a
stack of pictures of houses that might or might not be in the
flood plain. By federal mandate, I have to provide documentation
to show that FEMA standards have been met and present an
elevation certificate signed and certified by a licensed
engineer, prove that the structure was there before the FEMA
maps were adopted, or provide proof that the developer has
adequately shown me through historic proof that the specific
site isn’t in danger of flooding. If I don’t or can’t, the
entire county can be placed on probation and denied flood
insurance, and flood insurance is a requirement of nearly all
lenders. If the county loses FEMA flood insurance coverage
through the National Flood Insurance Program, land sales
basically become a cash and carry proposition.”
He said he experienced his first CAV visit
just a few weeks after being hired, and out of six places cited
for concern, no records could be found for three of them.
“By assessor’s records, they weren’t there
before 1982 and there was no record on file that they’d been
built,” he said. “No permits had been issued by the county. FEMA
put us on notice that the county was in violation and threatened
to withdraw the county from eligibility for the National Flood
Insurance Program. Rather than face the loss of potential land
sale financing, county commissioners spent taxpayer money to
hire an engineer to determine base flood elevation. Each of them
met FEMA standards, but one only by an inch. It cost the county
about $700. All three were in numbered A zones, so there were
standards to measure by.
“Under current FEMA requirements, if one
person builds in an unnumbered A zone without a county permit,
costing $35, the whole county can be held hostage. And I don’t
think the county is going to be able to afford the studies FEMA
requires on lands that have been protected for years by the
dikes and levies the pioneers of this community built.”
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