National Flood Insurance - 1989 To 2008 

Release Date: September 6, 2008
Release Number: 1768-149

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MADISON, Wis. -- The National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) had its roots in the 1800s as the country recognized the federal government must play a leading role in controlling and responding to floods.

Two previous chronological articles traced the evolution of a National Flood Insurance Program from its origins in a Supreme Court ruling of 1824 through major flooding events and other disasters that prompted the government's responses and shaped the program.

The following chronology illustrates a shifting of flood management emphasis to mitigating disaster damage, promoting flood insurance participation and improving floodplain mapping:

1989 - Hurricane Hugo wreaks havoc in the Carolinas, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Structures that had been built to meet the NFIP's requirements for floodplain management performed well.

1989 - FEMA revises the definition of "substantial improvement" and, for the first time, defines "substantial damage" - terms that affect floodplain management and reimbursement of disaster losses.

1990 - NFIP establishes the Community Rating System, which discounts flood insurance premiums in communities that voluntarily adopt measures that reduce flood losses or that increase the number of flood insurance policies.

1992 - Hurricane Andrew devastates south Florida.

1993 - The Great Midwest Flood of the upper Mississippi and lower Missouri River basins results in presidential disaster declarations for 505 counties in nine states and damage as high as $16 billion. Only about one in ten affected structures are covered by flood insurance.

1993 - Extensive flooding causes NFIP losses of more than twice the historic level and forces the program to borrow $100 million from the U.S. Treasury. This is the first time such borrowing has been necessary since 1984. The funds are repaid in fiscal year 1994.

1993 - Congress passes the "Volkmer Amendment" to the 1988 Stafford Act.

1994 - The National Flood Insurance Reform Act includes the most comprehensive changes to NFIP since 1973.

1995 - Congress passes the National Flood Insurance Reform Act.

1997 - Increased Cost of Compliance coverage is included in all new and renewed flood insurance policies.

1999 - More than 4.2 million flood insurance policies in effect with coverage of more than $534 billion, an increase of more than 250 percent since December 1990.

2000 - Congress passes the Disaster Mitigation and Cost Recovery Act.

2001 - NFIP eliminates its outstanding debt to the U.S. Department of the Treasury accumulated to pay flood claims since the 1970s. The debt had reached as much as $992 million.

2002 - FEMA consolidates the Temporary Housing Assistance and Individuals and Families Grant Programs into a single program called Federal Assistance to Individuals and Households (IHP) and establishes a maximum grant per applicant of $25,000.

2003 - FEMA becomes part of the newly-created U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

2003 - FEMA increases maximum claim payout for Increased Cost of Compliance coverage to $30,000.

2003 - NFIP has cash reserves of $580 million, which are available to pay future claims.

2004 - Tropical Storm Bonnie and Hurricanes Charley, Frances, Ivan and Jeanne strike Florida. Hurricane and tropical storm related disasters also are declared in Alabama, Delaware, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia.

2004 - FEMA pays out $1.9 billion in claims for 2004 and uses $225 million in NFIP borrowing authority to pay 2004 flood loss claims.

2005 - Hurricanes Katrina and Rita strike the Gulf Coast.

2007 - FEMA increases to $28,800 the maximum grant available under the Individuals and Households Program.

2008 - The NFIP has paid nearly $36 billion in claims since 1978 and today has 6 million policies in force in more than 20,600 participating communities.

NFIP loss experience indicates that $1 billion in flood damages are avoided each year as a result of NFIP floodplain management regulations for new construction.

 FEMA is accelerating  efforts begun in 1997 to update Flood Insurance Rate Maps nationwide.

Begun by our forefathers more than 180 years ago, the course of events and legislation passed over time have resulted in a comprehensive insurance system that covers flooding losses while providing the wherewithal to continue the practice of mitigating future losses.

FEMA coordinates the federal government's role in preparing for, preventing, mitigating the effects of, responding to, and recovering from all domestic disasters, whether natural or man-made, including acts of terror.

Last Modified: Monday, 08-Sep-2008 11:32:17