WASHINGTON—The Consumer Federation of America (CFA) exhorted members of the House of Representatives to reject legislation that would modify the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) and extend it for five years (H.R. 5114). CFA called on Congress to instead extend the program for a shorter period and to evaluate “ far-reaching changes” to the program, such as ending it or spurring private insurers to underwrite flood risk.
“While this legislation includes necessary revisions to the NFIP, it does not propose the sweeping overhaul needed to fix long-term, structural flaws that are harming consumers and taxpayers,” said J. Robert Hunter, CFA director of insurance, former Federal Insurance Administrator, and Texas Insurance Commissioner. Hunter ran the NFIP in the 1970s.
Lost in the Flood Plain The NFIP was intended to end unwise construction in high-risk flood plains throughout the country, while providing affordable coverage for people who really needed it. In return for taxpayer funding for the development of flood risk maps and the provision of subsidized insurance for older buildings, new construction was to be done wisely, and full “actuarial” rates were to be paid for flood coverage.
Dr. Frankenstein, I Presume “The NFIP was brilliantly designed, but it has failed to live up to its promise” said Hunter. “Politics and inept administration have made it a sort of Frankenstein monster, encouraging and even subsidizing unwise construction. Millions of consumers have also been misled into thinking their homes or businesses were not in harm’s way because FEMA has completely mismanaged the process of updating flood insurance maps,” he said.
The NFIP has a chronic budget defi-
cit that now totals $19 billion because
flood insurance rates in many areas
have been kept below the real cost of
providing the coverage. This has led
“The NFIP was brilliantly
designed, but it has failed
to live up to its promise.”
J. Robert Hunter
CFA Director of Insurance
to growing taxpayer subsidies of risky coastal development, often benefiting affluent builders and homeowners.
Fees-Fie-Fo-Fum Additionally, considerable evidence has demonstrated that FEMA has failed to fix the costly “Write Your Own” program, which allows insurers that assume no flood risk to charge high fees for servicing flood policies, especially at times of severe flooding. This program also creates an incentive for insurers to try and pass off wind damage claims that they should pay to the federal government by contending that these damages were really caused by flooding.
Unleash Insurance Industry
and/or Torpedo NFIP
As a result of these serious, system-
ic problems with the NFIP, CFA has
called on Congress to either end the
insurance aspects of the program or to
significantly involve the private sec-
tor insurance market in offering flood
coverage.
“If the private sector has some ‘skin
in the game’, insurers would have a fi-
nancial incentive to make sure FEMA
and communities in flood plains are
updating and enforcing flood maps,”
said Hunter. “Insurers would also re-
sist pressure from politicians to lower
rates below cost. Politicians would re-
sist pressure from insurers to have rates
that were excessive. These checks and
balances would help keep flood insur-
ance prices reasonable,” he said.
If Industry Won’t Play …
If insurers show no interest in under-
writing flood risk as part of the NFIP,
which is a strong possibility, CFA has
recommended that Congress extend
the NFIP for no more than two years
and conduct a study about how to
phase it out over a long period of time,
such as thirty years. Such a long tran-
sition period will help protect low-
and moderate-income consumers who
need flood coverage. The study should
examine a number of key questions:
•How should Congress responsibly
phase-out the insurance part of the
program?
• What is the proper transition period to allow all parties time to adjust to the lack of a federal insurance program?
• How can low- and moderate-income homeowners and renters be protected during and after the transition?
• What requirements should be placed on communities in flood plains and on FEMA regarding flood maps? (Keeping the mapping and community participation requirements in current law would provide private insurers with sufficient information to begin to take risk.)
• How can private insurers be encouraged to take some, and ultimately all, of the existing flood risk?
• If flood insurance is widely available in flood plains, should its purchase be required?
About CFA The Consumer Federation of America describes itself as “a non-profit association of more than 280 groups that, since 1968, has sought to advance the consumer interest through advocacy and education.” It works to advance consumer policy on a variety of issues before Congress, the White House, federal and state regulatory agencies, state legislatures, and the courts.
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