New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
'cept for all them cyclones y'all get down there.
Poor old landlocked Oklahoma is looking better all the time ... Dusty
I'll put up with a hurricane as I know about where it's coming from and approximately when its going to get here(there are currently two potential problems in the Atlantic) but an earthquake or tornado.....no thanks.
I'll remember you said that when the East Coast is getting hammered . Dusty
"The National Flood Insurance Program was $24 billion in debt at the beginning of 2014 as a result of Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Sandy."
I'm OK up to a high 3 or a low 4. After that, I'm out of here because that is a whole other level of weather insanity.
When your new bike comes with a gaping hole where torque belongs, then you change pipes. Doesn't matter which make of bike, you're just going after the renowned Guzzi/BMW/Harley/Ducati torque you're entitled to...
Congress created the EPA, the EPA creates and enforces the laws through he DoJ.Totally unconstitutional.
Interesting idea. What about on existing property? Pay off, but not allow rebuild? What happens to ownership and maintenance of the empty land, in your plan?
actually that is Fed Flood Insurance policy in many places. Once the property is destroyed, the owner is paid but the policy is not renewed at the same location. You might look at N Padre Island south of Port A. There are several legacy condos/hotels right against the shore and all the later buildings are probably 250 yards inland.
Does a force 4 or 5 hurricane care about 250 yards?Serious question.
Remember that old Ron White routine about the guy who tied himself to a tree during a Florida hurricane:"If you're in a hurricane, it's not that the wind is blowing, it's what the wind is blowing - being tied to a tree ain't gonna help if you're hit by a Volvo!"
I have never understood while people do not feel the need to assume any risk or responsibility for their choices..
But lots of people live in trailer parks because they were born into relative poverty and have little choice.
All depends on what is in those 250 yards. Some kinds of cover will reduce the impact of storm surge, some won't. One of the things that has made the impact of storms worse over the past few decades is the draining, development and water starvation (i.e., redirection of supporting rivers) of wetlands, particularly in Louisiana. Without these heavily vegetated swamplands, storms sweep further inland with greater damage. Even a small area of barrier island or swamp can break up the storm's worst impact.And, as atavar said, the property further inland may be classed differently in the insurance tables. My home in San Antonio, very close to a frequently flooded creek, was classed as least risk under flood insurance - a house three lots closer was classed among the most at risk.
There have been a couple of comments about people not having insurance for hurricanes, or 'exploiting' flood insurance that shouldn't be issued. If you haven't dealt with this, you may not understand the issue fully.Flood insurance (federally supported) provides coverage only for damage from rising water. It does not cover the damage from storm surge, hurricane force winds, or anything like that - only if the damage is caused by water (in rivers, lakes, ponds, or as a result of rain) that comes upward into the protected property. To make the program affordable and equitable, large pools of participants in widely separated areas of the country are grouped together to calculate premiums, on the basis that floods are very unlikely to occur in multiple geographies at once. The flood insurance program is supposed to run on a break-even basis over the long run, and should not be confused with disaster relief.Standard, privately issued home and business insurance is supposed to cover hurricane damage (storm surge, winds, falling trees, and so on). It has always done so (till recently, keep reading). Private issuers can (and do) set rates not by pooling and averaging risk, but by risk history for very specific and relatively small areas - think zip code size or less. Hurricane insurance has already become prohibitively expensive in many areas of Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas. Even people in New Jersey and elsewhere in the northeast are having trouble getting coverage.Where things get really messy is that the private insurers have now started arguing that wind-driven water (i.e., storm surge, where the water level does not rise, but the water is carried or pushed heavily by the wind) is rising water and they refuse to cover it - saying the flood insurance should. The flood insurance program says (and always has) that wind-driven water is not a flood - from their view, it's more like hail damage (wind-driven water and ice). Home and business owners on high land that has never flooded in recorded history are being told by their private insurer that they should have had flood insurance and claim against it - where up until recent years, the claim was always against the private insurer. The flood insurance program says it won't (and isn't even allowed to) cover such damage.Either way, the person paying the premiums is left holding the bag even with a legitimate claim - and the private insurers say "go ahead - sue me". Hard to pay for a lawyer when you're rebuilding your life with nothing but a deed and a debt...
This is all Harley Davidson's fault . By product of entirely too much chrome reflecting the Sun's rays causing beach erosion , floods , hurricanes , tornadoes , hell , maybe us Okies can file a lawsuit and blame our recent rash of earthquakes on the MoCo . Hmm , that last part actually kind of makes sense , where's my attorney ? Dusty
Yup - two things here. One, the program is supposed to run break-even over the (very) long run; there was a period a while back (20-30 years ago) when people were claiming its premiums were too high because it was getting a surplus. A run of events like those of the past decade, particularly storms hitting more highly developed areas, will dramatically skew the situation. Second, while the people on the coast hit by storm surge and hurricane winds won't be claiming against flood insurance, all the people inland affected by rising water from the accompanying heavy rains will. All three storms caused extensive flooding over very wide areas inland.If one agrees that climate change is occurring (I do, but others may not), the risk of increasing volatility of weather patterns and resulting increased likelihood of major floods puts the program in a very difficult place going forward - something that has been pointed out by its administrators.
Only the cause of climate change is debatable.