What Happens When FEMA Buys Your House?
As hurricane damage mounts, the government is buying—and sometimes seizing—homes in flood-prone areas, sparking concerns over property rights and accusations of discrimination.

It's been a rough hurricane season. Between them, Hurricanes Helene and Milton have devastated many communities throughout the southeast. Rebuilding what was lost will take years.
But as devastating as these storms have been, they are sadly not unique. Property damage from storms and flooding is on the rise. Storms resulting in over a billion dollars in damages have become more frequent in recent years.
The prospect of repeatedly having to rebuild properties in storm-prone areas has led some governments to pursue an unusual solution to the problem: buy the properties themselves. Some local governments, in partnership with federal agencies such as the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), have developed programs that use disaster relief funds to purchase homes in flood- or storm-prone areas. This isn't the only way, or even the best way, to reduce the destruction from increasingly severe natural catastrophes. But the idea is that keeping such vulnerable properties vacant will save money in the long run because they won't need to be continually rebuilt after storms.
Such buyouts are hardly ideal and can lead to some perverse situations. In 2021, an NPR investigation revealed that HUD was selling homes in flood-prone areas to unsuspecting buyers even as it was buying out homes in the same neighborhoods under a flood mitigation program. While not ideal, in a world where government disaster relief is a given, a voluntary buyout program could make fiscal sense in some circumstances. Voluntary buyout programs have been implemented in over a thousand counties and have been used to relocate almost 50,000 households throughout the country.
The situation is very different when the buyout ceases to be voluntary. A little-known provision in the Hazard Mitigation and Relocation Assistance Act of 1993 authorizes local governments to implement a mandatory buyout program for flood-prone areas. So far, just three localities—Cedar Rapids in Iowa, Minot in North Dakota, and Harris County in Texas—have adopted a mandatory buyout program. The Harris County program is the largest of the three and is expected to forcibly purchase 585 households and 390 businesses by 2026 and turn the land into green space.
Most local governments have been wary of taking advantage of mandatory buyout authority, and for good reason. While states have the power of eminent domain and may use federal funds for this purpose under the law, the process is always fraught and ripe for abuse. With a voluntary buyout, governments must offer a purchase price high enough to entice homeowners to sell. But when the buyout is mandatory, governments have the incentive to low-ball their payments. Such programs can also raise other issues. Harris County faced accusations of discrimination since its mandatory buyout program had operated chiefly in majority-Hispanic neighborhoods while majority-white neighborhoods with similar flood risk profiles were offered voluntary buyouts or other flood mitigation options.
Instead of taking people's homes, the government should be looking for other ways to reduce flood risk. Both the federal and state governments have long encouraged development in storm-prone areas by offering below-market-rate flood insurance and other forms of assistance. These subsidies should stop, and the government should do more to make people aware of the risks faced by homeowners in vulnerable areas. Governments could also focus on increasing efforts to make vulnerable areas more resilient to storms. Research suggests that a dollar spent on resilience saves as much as $13 in avoided future losses.
Beyond these matters of dollars and cents, there is a question of values. America is a nation founded by risk-takers, where liberty and property rights are given priority. The desire to protect the lives of American citizens—as well as the public purse—is commendable, and the government should, of course, not subsidize risky behavior. But the desire for safety cannot become an excuse to force people out of their own homes.
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They flip them causing the market to be flooded.
Uh... let's say you have a bathtub full of water. You take a one pint glass, fill it up from the tub, then pour it back into the tub.
How long will it take the tub to overflow; i.e. "flood the (market)"?
CB
All houses are not always on the market.
Correct. So? A house being flipped is "out" of the market only for the time it takes to dandy it up. Flipping a house is a zero sum game. As in knocking one down to build another.
Now the flip will likely move the house from one price bracket to another, or why do it. That will have an effect on the market SEGMENT that might be interested in the house, but the total market size itself hasn't changed. It is still what it is.
CB
As soon as your place the one pint glass into the water since it has volume too causing the tub to overflow.
The bear is white because it is at the north pole.
None - you don’t bury survivors.
Every month has 28 days in it.
Incorrect, hillary burys the survivors in her back yard
Her arrival helped Foster in a new era of burying living people.
It adds a whole new dimension of fun!
The greatest comedian appearance on The View of all time. "I thought it was a matter of record?"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RivvoW8Tyag
"then pour it back into the tub."
CB
How many illegal immigrants is the government paying to poor the cup out?
Someone didn't recognize as flip remark when they saw it.
And now the comments have been flooded with responses.
It’s a wave of buying and selling.
Storms resulting in over a billion dollars in damages have become more frequent in recent years.
A more useful, but slightly more convoluted way to say that would be: billions worth of stuff to be damaged is more frequently in the paths of hurricanes in recent years.
Or: billions more dollars worth of stuff has been put into the paths of hurricanes in recent years.
Yes, that scans a bit better.
The same properties now in the path of storms have gain value due to inflation and other market conditions. If a hurricane had blown them away 5 years ago instead of today, the damage would have been a lot less, if damage is measured in $$.
Not to mention, millionaires and billionaires build hugely expensive houses right smack in the path of hurricanes. If we only let cheap mobile homes to be placed there, the damage would be a lot smaller, too.
This. Measuring the strength of a storm in the dollars of damage it causes is ridiculous. Give me a Picasso and I can cause millions of dollars in damage with a glass of water.
sparking concerns over property rights and accusations of discrimination.
“Are those… are those firing squads?”
“yes”
“Why are blacks 17% of those shot when they're only 14.5% of the population?”
Shhhhh…
Data that fails to show racism is racist.
Storms resulting in over a billion dollars in damages have become more frequent in recent years.
Is this what we call "the best kind of correct" or is this just plain wrong(ly worded)?
Let me propose another way of framing the algebra problem, re-ordering the equation and moving some parentheticals around:
Billion dollar damage valuations from storms have become more frequent in recent years.
a+b*c is different than a+(b*c)
Not the way I do order of operations it isn't.
Doh! -Rick James
Right, which proves I'm almost as sloppy Josiah.
Unfortunately, what I meant was (a+b)*c
Let's see if Josiah clarifies his mathematical typo.
An ignorant error. a+b*c is the same as a+(b*c). The order of operations is MDAS. (MAGAts can look it up later. The educated can plug in 1,2,3 for a,b,c and see the answer is 7 in either case)
Absolutely amazing the lengths statists will go to to emulate the markets they have destroyed.
One intervention begets another and another and another and so on and so on...
Property rights??? You have no rights, only privileges the bureaucrats in D.C. allow you to have.
George Carlin/ You have no rights:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hWiBt-pqp0E
I watched some of News Nation last night and it was disgusting how the number of D.C. sycophants came out of the woodwork to defend FEMA. People like Dan Abrams and others couldn't spew enough garbage.
FEMA land grab is a CoNsPiRaCy ThEoRy!!!
'What Happens When FEMA Buys Your House?'
It gets filled with immigrants?
It's been a rough hurricane season.
No grasshopper, it has not.
Either that or every hurricane season is rough (somewhere).
But they said so on the news!
"What Happens When FEMA Buys Your House?"
You'll get a whole $750 just like the Maui fire victims did for their houses.
What could be fairer than that?
No, that was a loan. Now you have to pay it back - with interest.
But Zelensky gets another $5 billion and israel gets a couple more billion.
Washington sure has its priorities straight, don't they?
Propaganda, to be believed, must be mostly true, an then sneak in the lie on the coatails of the truth.
"the government is buying—and sometimes seizing—homes in flood-prone areas, "
The government (implying Fema) is not buying homes: " the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) does not buy homes directly from property owners, but it does fund programs that help local communities purchase flood-prone homes. These programs are called voluntary flood buyouts and are a way to help communities become more resilient to flooding. " And the seizing of homes: a lie.
"FEMA cannot seize your property or land. Applying for disaster assistance does not grant FEMA or the federal government authority or ownership of your property or land. When you apply for disaster assistance a FEMA inspector may be sent to verify the damage on your home. This is one of many factors reviewed to determine what kind of disaster assistance you may be eligible for. If the results of the inspection deem your home uninhabitable, that information is only used to determine the amount of FEMA assistance you may receive to make your home safe, sanitary and functional."
No, "the government" was meant to imply government at any level. The text of the article explicitly mentions programs that are operated by counties. FEMA does pay up to 75% of the cost of those programs, so even though it is true that FEMA doesn't seize property, they are cutting checks to the people who do.
In other words you're saying the government is buying and seizing private property in disaster areas.
they are just going thru different channels, agencies, to hide what they are doing. Kind of like the Biden family 20 plus offshore accounts to companies that do nothing
Call me paranoid, but I have to wonder why FEMA was so singularly ineffective following Helene. They not only did a miserable job but threatened to arrest anyone who voluntarily did the job they were supposed to be doing.
Why would they do that? Well, if they wanted people to get so discouraged that they moved out, that's a good way to do it. Then various politically connected developers can come in and buy the properties for cheap.
Remember, you heard it here first. Within six months to a year, there will be lawsuits out the wazoo concerning property in the places hit by Helene. Property owners will be evicted by eminent domain. Or maybe I'm just paranoid...
They're not 'singularly ineffective following Helene'.
They're completely useless after *every* situation.
The issue is that FEMA is about *managing* recovery services and they're focused on that. Not *providing* recovery services but managing them. So they do what they have to do to be in charge - helping people is a side effect at best.
As one person described FEMA after working with them, "They couldn't find their own ass with both hands."
They botched the Katrina hurricane as well.
FEMA along with 90% of the rest of the government needs to be abolished.
If I am not mistaken prior to Katrina, FEMA only handed out money to state and local governments to handle the "emergency". They did not actually DO anything.
Come to think of it, they still don't DO anything.
"I have to wonder why FEMA was so singularly ineffective following Helene." Perhaps you could wonder why the MSM is mostly ignoring this story, unlike when they loudly and persistently blamed Bush for both FEMA and local (Democrat) government screw-ups following Katrina.
But those that have been paying attention to media bias don't wonder.
We've seen what happens when the gubmint confiscates enough homes under faith-based asset-forfeiture looting. THAT was when the mortgaged-based derivatives market Crashed in 2008, G Waffen Boosh scratched his simian haid and voters elected Obama twice.
> a voluntary buyout program could make fiscal sense in some circumstances.
No it doesn't.
You know what makes sense? Removing government as 'insurer of last resort'.
Bam! Done. Problem solved.
You want to live in an area with high chance of damage to your property? *You* deal with it.
Some local governments, in partnership with federal agencies such as the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), have developed programs that use disaster relief funds to purchase homes in flood- or storm-prone areas.
So, this seems like a place where interagency, or even state/federal, cooperation might actually be really useful. If we know with reasonable certainty that an area is flood/storm-prone, to the point that FEMA has had to come bail it out (no pun intended) more than once or twice, and the government elects to purchase it in order to avoid further disaster relief expenditure and continual rebuilding – then not only should the land/property owners get fair compensation, but the government should then convert the area into something useful which can weather storms/floods.
Very specifically, I’m thinking prisons. We keep rightfully lamenting the overcrowding and inhumane conditions and the potential for abuses - but we never consider real solutions. THIS is a real solution. Take the flood/storm-prone lands, and build heavily reinforced prisons there – built specifically for purpose of being impenetrable, both against adverse weather and to contain the convicts. Heck, if you do the architecture right, you could probably even put it on heavily reinforced stilts (think oil rigs) that wouldn’t even be meaningfully affected by storm surge because they’re designed to weather them.
It’d be an opportunity to modernize our prison system, it would be an effective use of the land, and it would give us more room to warehouse the criminal elements of our society (including illegals). We wouldn’t be wasting dollars rebuilding regions that are just going to get wiped out again by mother nature (Matthew 7:26), and it’d be a one-time investment of those dollars on something that provides a very needed function.
I don’t relish the taking of people’s homes or property by capitalizing on a storm. I’m all about small government, but I also understand that a government of the People has a proper purpose. This is one of them. If the region is more prone than most to hurricanes or tornadoes or forest fires – then let’s use that land for something useful. Prisons are the best option. They’re designed to withstand assault, we are desperately lacking in available prison space (especially over the last four years of border incursions by criminal aliens and the rampant destruction caused by drug users), and the area is otherwise a money pit when it comes to residential/commercial property damage if a storm hits.
I would absolutely support that as a legitimate use of taxpayer dollars.
To build prisons or more housing for another twenty million rapefugees.
Prisons. Specifically and exclusively prisons.
What about people in non-flood-prone areas like the folks in the mountains around Ashville, NC ? They didn't have flood insurance because they weren't in an area that was historically subject to flooding. Most had homeowners insurance sufficient to cover most of the costs of rebuilding, but it is not available because homeowners insurance doesn't cover flooding even if it is caused by a weather event. Where do they go for assistance ?