House Democrats' Housing Bill Includes a $20 Billion Bailout of Federal Flood Insurance
A bill intended to make America's housing stock more climate-resilient also includes a big effective subsidy for the properties most exposed to the risks of climate change.

House Democrats' new housing bill devotes billions of dollars in new funding to making America's housing greener and more climate-resilient. It also spends much more money bailing out coastal homeowners most exposed to the rising sea levels caused by climate change.
Tucked away in the 135-page, $330 billion dollar legislation released by the House's Financial Services Committee yesterday is a provision that would wipe away all the debt the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) owes to the U.S. Treasury to cover the losses from its National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). That amounts to $20.5 billion in debt forgiveness.
NFIP, created back in the 1960s, offers low-cost insurance to homeowners in flood-prone communities. Because the premiums paid by homeowners don't cover actual flood risks to their properties, the program has continually had to borrow from the Treasury to cover its losses.
The gap between what the program collects in premiums and what it's had to pay out to policyholders has increased markedly in recent years thanks to more intense coastal development (which is effectively being subsidized by the NFIP) and more frequent flooding.
By 2017, the NFIP had accumulated $30 billion in debt to the Treasury. That same year Congress passed a bill wiping out $16 billion of that debt. But continued borrowing since has left it $20 billion in arrears.
House Democrats are now proposing to wipe the slate clean once again.
Typically bailouts of the NFIP have come when the program was about to hit the limits of its borrowing authority, says Ray Lehmann, a senior fellow at the International Center for Law and Economics. That's not the case today, given that the NFIP still has about $10 billion in borrowing authority.
"This is just straight out deciding bygones will be bygones. We're going to pretend there was never any debt to begin with," Lehmann tells Reason. "It's a shame that this is happening because there remain enormous structural problems with the program."
According to a February study from the First Street Foundation, NFIP premiums would need to be 4.5 times higher to cover the economic risk posed to properties with substantial flood risk. So long as that gap remains, taxpayers will continually have to bail out the NFIP.
There are some modest reforms in the works.
Come October, FEMA is supposed to roll out its Risk Rating 2.0 plan, which would raise premiums on some properties where the risk of flooding has increased. The rate at which these premiums can increase is nevertheless capped at 18 percent per year for most properties. Lehmann says this would mean it could take years until some properties are charged actuarially fair rates.
Even this change has proven politically controversial on both sides of the aisle. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D–N.Y.) has called for canceling Risk Rating 2.0. Sen. John Cornyn (R–Texas) earlier this week requested that the plan should be delayed.
"Our nation is still recovering from the pandemic, and thousands of families are struggling to make mortgage payments and keep food on the table," wrote Cornyn to FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell on Tuesday. "Failure to delay [Risk Rating 2.0] would mean current NFIP policyholders will not have time to determine how new rates will affect their businesses and homes during a period of unprecedented social and economic hardship."
Until NFIP policyholders are charged premiums that reflect the risk to their properties, the program will continue to operate at a loss and require future bailouts. The $20 billion bailout included in House Democrats' bill won't be the last.
That $20 billion is, notably, about three times the size of the $6 billion House Democrats' bill devotes to new climate resiliency grants and loans. In dollar terms, they're spending far more subsidizing the housing most exposed to the risks of climate change than protecting existing homes from its future impacts.
"The Democratic leadership is not shy about discussing the impacts of climate change and the things we need to do to adapt to climate change," says Lehmann. "If you can't even get [flood insurance reform] done, it's hard to imagine how you're going to get the Green New Deal done."
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Why not mention this John Stossel classic from 2004?
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Don’t build in a flood prone area.
Don’t force me to pick up the tab when someone builds in a flood probe area then gets flooded.
Don’t wash away the debt with taxpayer money.
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I think that it really depends. We were required to get flood insurance for our new house in PHOENIX, AZ. Apparently, we are below the 100 year flood one - except that was long before the modern trend to carefully guarantee that monsoon rains are well controlled. In our case, we have numerous flood retention areas, and easy drainage into the Central Arizona Project canal a mile downhill, and several hundred feet lower than us. That means that our excess rain is more likely to flood Tucson, more than 100 miles downstream, than our houses. Of course, that project was built better than half a century after that 100 year flood.
Strange because FEMA updates the 100-year flood maps. Maybe your area is overdue.
You can file an appeal to have the maps changed. I did this in 2003 when FEMA maps did not honor the 3 feet of fill the developer laid down before building our part of the neighborhood. They changed the flood plain boundaries. We still chose to buy flood insurance.
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Tucson is at a higher elevation than Phoenix.
You can build just fine in a flood prone area. Heck, you can build in the middle of a lake if you want to.
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Climate Chang isn't a threat to coastal properties, why do you think every major environmentalist is building coastal houses?
"Climate Chang" is the perfect name for this shit because it's the exact sort of shit the Chinese are pushing. For us, of course, not for them.
After Katrina, the program was obviously, uh, underwater. One thing they did was redraw the floodplain maps to generate more revenue. I know this because the obsolete buildings we redeveloped are now required to purchase flood insurance in order to obtain bank financing. They claim that the plain is at the estimated apex of a 100-year event. Well, we had that 100-year event three years ago, and the water never even crossed the riverbank, let alone about 75 yards away on a rising grade. So, we're not at risk and we're subsidizing them twice, once indirectly with our tax dollars and again directly through a completely arbitrary map generated to increase the risk pool.
There's only one excuse for STEALING that's more ridiculous than 'racist' and that would be 'climate change' (i.e. The Weather). Blame our tyranny on the weather say's the Nazi's...
“Blame it on the rain.” - Milli Vanilli
Goody. My taxes get to pay for people too stupid to not build in floodplains again and again. But, per Democrats, my taxes shouldn’t pay for health care for folks who won’t get vaccinated. come on, guys, one or the other.
My taxes shouldn't pay for anybody's healthcare; health insurance should be fully privatized and purely risk based.
Right now, they sadly mostly pay for cancer, diabetes, and heart disease caused by people stuffing themselves full with junk food, which is incidentally also tax-subsidized.
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Those multimillion dollar beachside mansions and their Democrat owners sure aren't go to pay for flood insurance themselves! That's why working Americans need to bail them out!
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Maybe, just maybe . . . if you can't afford the homeowners insurance because prohibitively expensive, due of the likelihood of disaster occurring, then maybe you shouldn't live in that locality.