There are flood rate maps. Rates are determined by risk and zones.
http://www.floodsmart.gov/floodsmart...flood_maps.jsp
When we moved into a community that had no beach access, I looked into a neighboring community where property owners had beach access with the thought of buying a cottage and renting it out, just so we would have beach access as property owners. I abandoned that idea when I found out the federal flood insurance cost more than the P&I on a 150K cottage. And that was over 20 years ago so I doubt the cost has dropped.
Too bad. Sometimes things don't work out as expected. Should have had flood insurance.
I don’t know about all of the Sandy victims but I do know that most of the beach front house damaged in NJ were second homes or investments properties and that the majority of the posters on this board couldn’t afford to own one of them. We’re talking $1 million and up. I’m pretty sure most of them were insured, but if not… Well, who the hell buys a million bucks worth of beach front property and doesn’t by flood insurance for it?
I'm sure there are lots of ordinary people that suffered too, especially in NYC and area. Those will be the people most in need of help, especially those who have no place to live anymore.
I suppose someone with no assets has nothing to protect and may feel there's no need for liability insurance. But you'd think they would have an interest in protecting their property. I remember when HO insurance was also called "fire insurance". Is HO insurance more expensive on PR?
Yes, I know owners of beachfront homes in MD who pay in excess of $10K for flood insurance to protect expensive property in the highest risk zones. Those who inherit such properties sometimes fail to buy that insurance because they are not willing to pay the price for something they inherited.
Anybody who lives on the waters edge should have flood insurance. FEMA will help you to the tune of around $35,000 but only once. The next time you are flooded and you didn't buy flood insurance FEMA will tell you too bad so sad.
I hate to say it but FEMA should have brought in those FEMA trailers as an emergency measure so these people have heat and a shower.
Yeah. But I think what they really want is for FEMA to wave a magic wand and give them their life back the way it was before Sandy. Gonna be a rotten Christmas for many in the hard hit areas. But the good news is a victim of Sandy won a million dollar lottery. Lucky lucky lucky!
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