UPDATE: NATIONAL FLOOD INSURANCE PROGRAM RE-AUTHORIZATION

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UPDATE: NATIONAL FLOOD INSURANCE PROGRAM RE-AUTHORIZATION PREPARED BY MONROE COUNTY COMMISSIONER HEATHER CARRUTHERS FOR THE SOUTH FLORIDA REGIONAL PLANNING COUNCIL & THE TREASURE COAST REGIONAL PLANNING COUNCIL MEETING OCTOBER 12, 2018

NFIP FUN FACTS Mortgage + Flood Insurance 17,000,000 Pre-1975 = Pre-FIRM 5.1 million = 27% to 51% of premium 2

FEMA S ACTUARIAL ACCURACY??? We do not have a good understanding of flood risk. We don t have sufficient data to accurately <10% set rates. 3

WHAT S IN A PREMIUM? 44% of NFIP premium goes to pay claims Industry average is 87% for homeowners insurance Most insurance companies operate at a 35% expense ratio, leaving 65% for claims Private insurance companies generate most of their income from earned investments on their reserves Until 2012, NFIP did not invest any reserves 4

STATES WITHOUT NFIP POLICIES 5

TOP 10 NFIP STATES BY POLICY COUNT Policies In Force as of 8/31/18 Covered properties, residential and commercial SOURCE: https://www.fema.gov/policyclaim-statistics-flood-insurance Texas, 748,269 Florida, 1,776,121 35% All Others, 926,022 Louisiana, 503,689 Georgia, 87,378 California, 230,479 New Jersey, 224,420 South Carolina, 204,730 New York, 178,160 North Carolina, 134,604 Virginia, 105,931 6

TOP 10 NFIP STATES BY INSURED AMOUNT Coverage In Force as of 8/31/18 Texas, $208,831,368,800 Louisiana, $132,605,157,700 California, $66,721,698,200 New Jersey, $56,466,037,500 South Carolina, $64,087,490,800 Florida, $441,996,618,600 Covered properties, residential and commercial 34% New York, $49,001,650,500 North Carolina, $33,808,703,900 SOURCE: https://www.fema.gov/policyclaim-statistics-flood-insurance All Others, $203,165,873,100 Georgia, $23,523,507,500 Virginia, $27,930,765,500 7

TOP 10 NFIP STATES BY PREMIUM COLLECTED Premium In Force as of 8/31/18 Covered properties, residential and commercial SOURCE: https://www.fema.gov/policyclaim-statistics-flood-insurance Florida, $976,395,923 27% Texas, $433,468,863 All Others, $839,222,195 Louisiana, $335,280,790 California, $185,356,027 New Jersey, $215,883,429 South Carolina, $137,407,878 New York, $205,144,617 North Carolina, $110,359,071 Virginia, $77,956,689 Georgia, $61,062,474 8

TOP 10 NFIP STATES BY TOTAL CLAIMS PAID Total Payments from 1/1/1978 to 8/31/2018 Covered properties, residential and commercial Texas, $15,848,030,941 Louisiana, $19,572,156,874 California, $572,438,866 New Jersey, $6,032,892,216 South Carolina, $812,438,269 New York, $5,410,081,751 North Carolina, $1,240,000,994 Virginia, $721,950,659 SOURCE: https://www.fema.gov/policyclaim-statistics-flood-insurance 8% All Others, $9,609,798,986 Mississippi, $3,043,452,674 Florida, $5,170,373,389 9

$7,520,283,000 $51,340,009,600 $78,966,359 $38,032,621 $132,946,356 $79,007,418,000 $137,867,710,600 $154,119,106 $271,118,086 $697,480,515 $662,113,340 $1,492,540,211 31,044 SFRPC NFIP STATS AS OF 8/31/2018 348,423 202,923 P O L I C I E S I N F O R C E Broward Miami-Dade Monroe SFRPC = 582,390 COVERAGE Broward Miami-Dade Monroe SFRPC ANNUAL PREMIUM Broward Miami-Dade Monroe SFRPC CLAIMS PAID SINCE 1978 Broward Miami-Dade Monroe SFRPC 10

$5,927,515,000 $4,699,784,300 $4,973,160,200 $11,416,315 $9,081,285 $8,103,809 $62,117,497 $38,241,388 $60,239,626 $82,240,416 $37,666,261,900 $53,266,721,400 $55,047,213 $83,648,622 $242,838,926 20,397 21,827 P O L I C I E S I N F O R C E TCRPC NFIP STATS AS OF 8/31/2018 142,412 17,390 Indian River Martin Palm Beach St. Lucie TCRPC = 202,026 COVERAGE Indian River Martin Palm Beach St. Lucie TCRPC ANNUAL PREMIUM Indian River Martin Palm Beach St. Lucie TCRPC CLAIMS PAID SINCE 1978 Indian River Martin Palm Beach St. Lucie TCRPC 11

PERCEIVED PROBLEM WITH NFIP Bad years, bad storms, high claims, increasing debt 12

PREVIOUS NFIP FIXES Premium increased from $1,989 to $49,252 Impact of the sale trigger to the actuarial rate as a result of the Biggert-Waters Act of 2012 NFIP Reauthorization October 12, 2018 13

CURRENT PREMIUM GLIDEPATH TO FULL RISK ACTUARIAL RATES Rating Type HFIAA - 2014 All Primary Homes Second Homes and Rental Properties Commercial Properties Lapsed Policies on Non- Primary Homes 5-18% increase/year 25% increase/year 25% increase/year Full Risk Rate 14

WHAT MIGHT PREMIUMS COST? PRIMARY HOME, ABOVE FLOOD Primary Home 5% Annual Increase 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 Premium $0 $250 $500 $750 $1,000 $500.00 $525.00 $551.25 $578.81 $607.75 $638.14 $670.05 $703.55 $738.73 $775.66 15

WHAT MIGHT PREMIUMS COST? PRIMARY HOME, BELOW FLOOD Primary Home Premium $0 $2,000 $4,000 $6,000 $8,000 $10,000 18% Annual Increase 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 $2,000.00 $2,360.00 $2,784.80 $3,286.06 $3,877.56 $4,575.52 $5,399.11 $6,370.95 $7,517.72 $8,870.91 16

WHAT MIGHT PREMIUMS COST? NON-PRIMARY PROPERTY, ABOVE FLOOD Second Home, Rental Property, Commercial Property 25% Annual Increase 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 $3,000.00 $3,750.00 $4,687.50 $5,859.38 $7,324.22 Premium $0 $5,000 $10,000 $15,000 $20,000 $25,000 $9,155.27 $11,444.09 $14,305.11 $17,881.39 $22,351.74 17

WHAT MIGHT PREMIUMS COST? NON-PRIMARY PROPERTY, BELOW FLOOD Second Home, Rental Property, Commercial Property 25% Annual Increase 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 $9,500.00 $11,875.00 $14,843.75 $18,554.69 $23,193.36 Premium $0 $10,000 $20,000 $30,000 $40,000 $50,000 $60,000 $70,000 $80,000 $28,991.70 $36,239.62 $45,299.53 $56,624.41 $70,780.52 18

IMPACT OF INCREASING FLOOD INSURANCE PREMIUMS ON PROPERTY VALUES Insurance Premium $500 = Property Value $10,000 Source: The Rand Corporation Property Type Premium Difference 2018 vs. 2027 Current Property Value 2027 Value (based only on premium increase) Primary Home @ 5% Increase $225.66 $350,000.00 $343,600.00 Primary Home @ 18% Increase $6,870.91 $350,000.00 $212,600.00 Second Home, Rental & Commercial Property at BFE $19,351.74 $500,000.00 $113,000.00 Second Home, Rental & Commercial Property below flood $61,272.52 $500,000.00 ($735,700.00) 19

LATEST NFIP LEGISLATIVE ACTION Reauthorized until November 30, 2018 Likely to secure short-term reauthorization into 2019 New leadership in house as of January 2019 20

IN THE MEANTIME, WHAT IS FEMA DOING? ADMINISTRATIVE CHANGES Purchasing re-insurance Reducing WYO payments RATING REDESIGN Proximity to flood hazard Storm surge Non-storm precipitation Structure resiliency Elevation Number of floors Coverage options Deductibles Amount of coverage POLICY CHANGES Disaster deductible for local governments 21

SUGGESTED CHANGES TO NFIP 22

IMPROVE DATA COLLECTION AND ACCURACY Ensure greater cooperation between FEMA and local governments in the mapping process Increase collection of elevation certificates at the property level 23

MAINTAIN ACCESS TO AFFORDABLE FLOOD INSURANCE Use good data to establish accurate rates Create a sustainable glide path to full risk rates Ensure private insurers take up a range of risk Provide re-entry to NFIP if private options become unaffordable 24

INCREASE THE RISK POOL Expand use of Preferred Risk Policy Strengthen enforcement Prohibit cherry-picking by private insurers >20% Oregon, 2007 Vermont, 2008 New Mexico, 2008 Ohio, 2011 North Carolina, 2018 25

IMPROVE FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Reduce administrative costs by cutting payments to WYO firms. They bear no risk. They consume a third of premium. Invest reserves as other insurance companies do. 26

RATE PROPERTIES BY VULNERABILITIES, NOT USE Businesses power local economies Higher premiums on commercial/rental properties = higher rents = less affordable housing Second homes are vital to Florida s economy A building is a building is a building 27

MITIGATE RISK Create programs to help homeowners pay for expensive mitigation techniques like elevation Provide mitigation credits for homeowners who floodproof in other proven ways Increase funding to retire repetitive loss properties 28

PROTECT THE ECONOMY Unavailable and unaffordable flood insurance Has the greatest impact on the most vulnerable Will cause economic collapse The glidepath to actuarially sound rates must be sustainable. 29

FLOODS ARE A NATIONAL PROBLEM 17 million properties lie in the 100-year flood plain. 16.4 million people live in the coastal floodplain. 12% of them live below the poverty level 23% of them are under age 5 and over age 65 94% of NFIP policies are in coastal states. Few private insurers cover flood in the floodplain. House Climate Change Solutions Caucus Meeting Monroe County Presentation May 24, 2017 30

COASTAL ECONOMIES DRIVE THE NATION Home to 39% of Americans Generate 46% of national GDP ($6.6T) Generate 51M jobs Generate 56% of our nation s energy Home to all ocean ports Home to commercial and recreational fishing industries If America s coastal shoreline counties were their own country, that country would rank third in global GDP, behind the U.S. and China. SOURCE: http://stateofthecoast.noaa.gov NFIP Reauthorization October 12, 2018 31

WHERE IS THE FLOOD RISK? CONSOLIDATED FEMA FLOOD MAP GEOMORPHIC FLOOD INDEX MAP SOURCE: Dataset of 100-year flood susceptibility maps for the continental U.S. derived with a geomorphic method by Caterina Samela & Salvatore Manfreda (Università degli Studi della Basilicata, Potenza 85100, Italy) and Tara J. Troy (Lehigh University, Bethlehem, PA 18015, USA); published in ScienceDirect by Elsevier Inc., 2017 House Climate Change Solutions Caucus Meeting Monroe County Presentation May 24, 2017 32

NATURAL DISASTERS ARE EVERYWHERE Is it time for a National Natural Catastrophic Fund? Should NFIP be NCIP? 33

QUESTIONS? Commissioner Heather Carruthers (305) 292-3430 boccdis3@monroecounty-fl.gov 34