Cancelling the Flood: Increasing FEMA Community System Participation in Food-Prone Communities
Abstract
Flooding is the most frequent severe weather threat and the costliest natural disaster facing the nation. The Community Rating System (CRS) rewards flood-prone communities for improving floodplain management, enhancing preparedness, and mitigating flood risk. This thesis employs appreciative inquiry (AI) to study CRS success in the three most flood-prone states Florida, Texas, and Louisiana as well as local initiatives of coastal and fluvial communities to enhance community resiliency. These states share comprehensive floodplain management planning across all four CRS series, with effective public outreach, open space preservation, enforcement of regulations, and an integrated mitigation program. Sea Bright, NJ succeeded largely because of Superstorm Sandy upgrades that most coastal flood communities could replicate.Wilkes-Barre, PA has benefited from substantial flood mitigation projects, including reducing repetitive loss properties, which return on investment (ROI) validates. This thesis determines that planning with ROI, expanded training, and repetitive loss analysis reduces flood risk. Due to the heightened frequency and cost of flooding-related disasters, the nation must utilize CRS to meet two competing Congressional goals: National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) fiscal solvency and affordability of flood insurance. CRS bridges this gap by providing discounts in those communities that reduce the overall risk to the federal treasury, a win win for all.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Sep 01, 2023
- Accession Number
- AD1224756
Entities
People
- Thomas D Mcgroarty
Organizations
- Naval Postgraduate School