Residents, Realtors concerned about flood insurance
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Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Some residents and Realtors are hoping to make
their mark on a federal flood insurance program.
Citizens Against Forced Flood Insurance, a fledging group started by
Realtors with Century 21’s Beachside offices, has attracted about 200
residents from the city, as well as Fountain Valley and Westminster, to
air concerns over the National Flood Insurance Program and the effect it
has had on their expenses.
“The first goal here is to bring this issue out into the open so that
local politicians understand the gravity of our situation,” said Adam
Rodell, a Realtor and new Huntington Beach resident who helped organize
the group’s first meeting Saturday.
Rodell’s concern stems from mandatory flood insurance that he and
other residents in his neighborhood must now buy, after residents in the
area have done without it for almost 30 years.
The city has been part of a National Flood Insurance Program, run by
the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which offered discounted
insurance to residents with loans and mortgages backed by federal
institutions. In 1996, flood insurance rates were cut by 50% because of
improvements to the Santa Ana River aimed at bringing it up to 100-year
flood capacity, officials said.
Those improvements were completed by the Army Corps of Engineers in
November 1999, leading federal officials to reassess the flood dangers in
the city and and neighboring cities. Redrawn flood zone maps were
released June 14, and they found the levels of the Wintersburg Channel,
which runs from Garden Grove through to the Bolsa Chica wetlands, did not
meet 100-year flood standards.
Residents living around the channel are now required to buy insurance
but not at the discounted rate through the federal program.
“I’m totally frustrated,” said Larry Richey, a 55-year-old retiree who
now finds himself required to buy flood insurance while living on a fixed
income. “I’ve been exempt for the 30 years I’ve lived here, and now I pay
$700 in premiums.”
Richey maintains that he is not in any flood danger, and that his
85-home neighborhood was mistakenly put into a flood zone. Richey’s
insurance, Rodell added, is twice what it costs for fire insurance in the
city.
In May, the office of Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Huntington Beach), who
was involved with the improvements of the Santa Ana River, sent out
notices and a flood zone map to residents, urging them to check if they
would be affected by the changes and to buy insurance accordingly for the
discounted rates.
“The main problem we see is that many people now have to pay flood
insurance because of the change, when they never had to buy it before,”
said Kathleen Hollingsworth, district director for Rohrabacher. “They had
never been in a flood zone before and did not think the mailer applied to
them.”
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