Archive for the ‘insurance’ Category

Residents in New York find faulty FEMA flood maps

Thursday, January 28th, 2010
Image from FEMA

Image from FEMA

Thousands of residents across New York and the country are finding the new FEMA maps that indicate flood zones to be incorrect.

So What’s the Big Deal?

If your house is deemed to be in a flood-zone, you’ll be required by law to purchase flood insurance, which can cost hundreds to thousands of dollars a year. This is big complaint amongst those who are already struggling to pay their mortgage.

The flood maps are also affecting cities that are trying to attract more growth and residents. If a city is in a flood plain, a person looking to buy a home is most likely going to look at homes where it’s not required to purchase flood insurance.

Other Flood Map Problems

What is really causing the blood pressure of many people to rise is an incorrect map of their area. All over the U.S. city officials are finding errors on maps. For example, a stream clearly seen in an aerial photo or map is located in a totally different spot on the FEMA map. Other FEMA maps include landmarks and items such as drainage ditches that no longer exist. Essentially, old maps that are now out-dated were converted into a digital format to represent present-day areas.

The process to appeal the findings on a FEMA flood map can cost cities thousands of dollars in surveying costs to prove they aren’t in a flood zone. The process to get a map changed can take well over a year.

Read more about FEMA flood map concerns.

Flood insurance is always something home and business owners should consider, whether they’re in a flood zone or not. One never knows when a pipe will burst and cause damage that “regular” insurance won’t cover.

Learn more about preparing for a flood.

Tioga County Residents Flood Insurance News

Sunday, December 6th, 2009
Graphic from Tioga County website

Graphic from Tioga County website

Much anticipated flood maps will be displayed on Tuesday, December 8, 2009 from 4:00 pm to 8:0 pm at the Tioga County Office Building (56 Main St in Oswego). The maps are only preliminary, but will give residents an idea about if their homes are in a flood plain.

Information from the National Flood Insurance Program will be included at this event as anyone who lives in a flood plain will have to purchase flood insurance. PressConnects.com reports:

“Tioga County residents and municipalities suffered millions of dollars in flood damage in the last several years, culminating in a devastating flood in June 2006 and a flash flood five months later.

The new maps are part of a five-year, $1 billion program to provide updated, digitized flood maps for 92 percent of the nation’s population.”

Mary Colvin, the Mitigation Division of FEMA’s Region II, was interviewed and she advised:

“While most locations in Tioga County do not have significant changes, the Village of Nichols is protected by a levee system that may not meet mapping standards…The fact that the Nichols levee may not provide adequate protection means an increase in the number of flood-prone properties there.

…The single biggest mitigation option is flood insurance…If you’re currently out of the flood zone, but are going into it under the new maps, you should buy it now. That way, your current, less risky flood zone designation can be ‘grandfathered’ in.”

Learn more about flood insurance basics.

With the cold winter months already upon us, there are more than just floods from natural disaster. Home and business owners often neglect to weatherize a building. Freezing weather can lead to frozen pipes, which will bring flooding. Is your home insured for damages caused by broken pipes? Learn more about preventing burst pipes.


How not to file a flood insurance claim

Thursday, November 5th, 2009
Photo by Noah Sussman

Photo by Noah Sussman

A man in Tioga County, New York called his insurance company. He reported his washing machine’s hose broke and his whole basement flooded and his personal items had extreme water damage. Thank goodness he had flood insurance because he filed a claim for his damaged television stand, parts of a sound system, and couch. The man’s flood insurance would have come in handy if all his reports were true.

An insurance company is not going to hand over a check to any person that claims they have sustained water damage in the home. Claims are always investigated. Upon investigation, it was found that the TV stand and sound system were not damaged by water…and they did not even belong to the man making the false claim. The couch that was said to have sustained flood damage was found to not even have been in the basement at the time of the flooding.

The report of the flooded basement due to the broken washing machine hose was true. The New York man making the report could have probably received payment for an honest flood insurance claim to remediate any wet carpets or wet documents or prevent mold damage. But instead, he now gets to face 4th-degree insurance fraud charges, a 1st-degree charge on the count of faking business records, and a possible 4-year jail sentence: all this over trying to get $5,300 in “free” cash. When it comes to flood insurance claims, the insurance companies will not be fooled. More on this story.

Find out real facts about flood insurance and how it can help home and business owners recover after a flood.

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