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Search resuls for: "Yanjun Liao"


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Heavy rains from Hurricane Helene caused flooding across western North Carolina, like here in Asheville. Melissa Sue Gerrits/Getty ImagesBut only about 2.6% of the 4.3 million properties across the state — or around 115,000 properties — had flood insurance as of June 2024, according to private provider Neptune Flood Insurance, which analyzed data from the government-backed National Flood Insurance Program. North Carolina Department of Insurance communications director Jason Tyson estimated that about 139,000 properties in the state have flood insurance through the NFIP. Part of the problem with flood insurance is a common misconception that regular home insurance covers flooding, which is rarely the case, four experts knowledgable about flood insurance and disaster management told Business Insider. "We don't think of western North Carolina and the Appalachian mountains as an area that has significant flood risk."
Persons: Hurricane Helene, Melissa Sue Gerrits, Neptune, Jason Tyson, Sue Gerrits, Trevor Burgess, Jeffrey Schlegelmilch, Schlegelmilch, Margaret Walls, they're, there's, It's, it's, Helene, Jeremy Porter, Burgess, Yanjun Liao, Liao Organizations: Service, North, Climate Office, Neptune Flood Insurance, Flood Insurance, North Carolina Department of Insurance, The North, Information Center, Business, Getty, National Center for Disaster Preparedness, Columbia Climate School, FEMA, Associated Press, Resources Locations: Hurricane, North Carolina, Asheville, , The, The North Carolina, Black Mountain , North Carolina, State, North, Florida , Louisiana, Texas, Asheville , North Carolina
That's because the National Flood Insurance Program — the government-sponsored public insurance program that is the largest flood insurer in the U.S. — needs to be reauthorized by Sept. 30 to continue to issue new policies or increase coverage on existing policies. "There are very few private insurers that offer any type of flood insurance," said Daniel Schwarcz, a professor of law at the University of Minnesota Law School who focuses on insurance law and regulation. In that report, from 2011, it estimated a one-month NFIP lapse could affect about 40,000 closings. "There is no need to take the risk that the flood insurance program will lapse when you could close ahead of Sept. Then in 2021, FEMA implemented Risk Rating 2.0, a new pricing system that would accurately reflect the cost of an area's risk.
Persons: Jaret Seiberg, Cowen, Jeremy Porter, Daniel Schwarcz, Cowen's, Yanjun Liao, Liao, Schwarcz, Foundation's Porter, Porter Organizations: Getty, Federal Reserve, National Flood Insurance, Federal Emergency Management Agency, First Street Foundation, University of Minnesota Law School, National Association of Realtors, FEMA, Resources Locations: U.S, New York, Washington ,
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