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1 [1] (November 26, 2019)

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                                                                                       Updated November  26, 2019

A   Brief Introduction to the National Flood Insurance Program


The National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) is the
primary source of flood insurance coverage for residential
properties in the United States. The NFIP has two main
policy goals: (1) to provide access to primary flood
insurance, thereby allowing for the transfer of some of the
financial risk of property owners to the federal government;
and (2) to mitigate and reduce the nation's comprehensive
flood risk through the development and implementation of
floodplain management standards. A longer-term objective
of the NFIP is to reduce federal expenditure on disaster
assistance after floods. As a public insurance program, the
goals of the NFIP are different from the goals of private-
sector insurance companies. It encompasses social goals to
provide flood insurance in flood-prone areas to property
owners who  otherwise would not be able to obtain it, and to
reduce the government's cost after floods. The NFIP also
engages in many noninsurance activities in the public
interest: it identifies and maps flood hazards, disseminates
flood-risk information through flood maps, requires
community  land-use and building-code standards,
contributes to community resilience by providing a
mechanism  to fund rebuilding after a flood, and offers
grants and incentive programs for household- and
community-level investments in flood-risk reduction.

Over 22,000 communities in 56 states and jurisdictions
participate in the NFIP, with more than 5 million policies
providing over $1.3 trillion in coverage. The program
collects about $4 billion in annual premium revenue. Floods
are the most common natural disaster in the United States.
All 50 states, plus DC, Puerto Rico, Guam, American
Samoa, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the Northern Mariana
Islands have experienced flood events since May 2018.

Structure of the NFiP
The NFIP  is managed by the Federal Emergency
Management   Agency (FEMA)   through its subcomponent
the Federal Insurance and Mitigation Administration
(FIMA). A  core design feature of the NFIP is that
communities are not required to participate in the program
by any law or regulation, but instead participate voluntarily
in order to obtain access to NFIP flood insurance.
Communities  that choose to participate in the NFIP are
required to adopt land use and control measures with
effective enforcement provisions and to regulate
development in the floodplain. FEMA has set forth in
federal regulations the minimum standards required for
participation in the NFIP; however, these standards have
the force of law only because they are adopted and enforced
by a state or local government. Legal enforcement of the
floodplain management standards is the responsibility of
the participating NFIP community, which can elect to adopt
higher standards as a means of mitigating flood risk. In
addition, FEMA  operates a program, called the Community


Rating System, to incentivize NFIP communities to adopt
more rigorous floodplain management standards.

NFIP  flood insurance policies are sold only in participating
communities and are offered to both property owners and
renters, and to residential and nonresidential properties.
NFIP  policies have relatively low coverage limits,
particularly for nonresidential properties or properties in
high-cost areas. The maximum coverage for single-family
dwellings (which also includes single-family residential
units within a 2-4 family building) is $100,000 for contents
and up to $250,000 for building coverage. The maximum
available coverage limit for other residential buildings is
$500,000 for building coverage and $100,000 for contents
coverage, and the maximum coverage limit for
nonresidential business buildings is $500,000 for building
coverage and $500,000 for contents coverage.

Flood  Mapping
The NFIP  approaches the goal of reducing comprehensive
flood risk primarily by requiring participating communities
to collaborate with FEMA to develop and adopt flood maps
called Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs). An area of
specific focus of the FIRM is the Special Flood Hazard
Area (SFHA).  The SFHA  is defined by FEMA as an area
with a 1% or greater risk of flooding every year. FIRMs
provide the basis for setting insurance rates, identifying
properties whose owners are required to purchase flood
insurance, and establishing floodplain management
standards that communities must adopt and enforce as part
of their participation in the NFIP. There is no consistent,
definitive timetable for revising and updating FIRMs for a
particular community. Generally, flood maps may require
updating after significant new building development in or
near the flood zone, changes to flood-protection systems, or
environmental changes in the community. Statutory
guidelines set out the procedure for developing new FIRMs
for a community. For example, FEMA  is required to
conduct extensive communication and outreach efforts with
the community during the mapping process, which includes
several review and comment periods of 30 to 90 days.
Communities  and individuals also have legal recourse to
appeal during the FIRM updating process. After a map is
finalized and adopted by a community, it can still be
revised to correct for errors in map accuracy. To correct
these inaccuracies, FEMA allows individuals and commun-
ities to request letters amending or revising the flood map.

The  MandkaoryPucaeRqimnt
In a community that participates or has participated in the
NFIP, property owners in the mapped SFHA  are required to
purchase flood insurance as a condition of receiving a
federally backed mortgage. Federal agencies, federally
regulated lending institutions, and government-sponsored


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