Flood Insured Victims May Be Eligible For Up To $30,000 In Additional Aid 

Release Date: December 10, 2005
Release Number: 1603-210

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BATON ROUGE, La. -- Owners of homes and businesses who have been declared substantially damaged by their community from flood damages caused by Hurricane Katrina or Rita and who have flood insurance through the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) may be eligible for an additional $30,000 in Increased Cost of Compliance (ICC) funds to bring their home or business into compliance with floodplain ordinances. The U.S. Department of Homeland Secsurity’s Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) administers the NFIP, including the ICC program.

“The Increased Cost of Compliance program is a good opportunity for home and business owners to invest in mitigation techniques to reduce the likelihood of future flood damage,” said Federal Coordinating Officer Scott Wells. “With ICC funding, communities will be rebuilt stronger and safer.”

Local floodplain ordinances may require changes to buildings that have been repeatedly or severely damaged by flooding. ICC benefits can be used to help pay for these required improvements. ICC funding can be used for one of four actions to bring property into compliance with local floodplain ordinances:

Individuals can file ICC claims in two instances:

ICC claims must be filed separately from flood damage claims under standard flood insurance policies. Money available through an ICC claim is in addition to claim settlement from a flood insurance policy.
Once the local community determines the home or business to have suffered substantial or repetitive damage, owners should contact the insurance company or agent who wrote the flood policy. The insurer will assign a claim representative who will help process the ICC claim.

After initiating the claims process, individuals should get estimates from contractors for planned mitigation activities. A partial ICC claim payment can be made to the policyholder, and full payment will be made once the work is completed and documented as in compliance with the local floodplain management ordinance. ICC funds can be augmented with low-interest Small Business Administration disaster loans

Property owners living in areas participating in the NFIP can purchase flood insurance from most major insurance carriers who sell homeowners or business policies or by calling the National Flood Insurance Program at 1-800-427-4661.

FEMA prepares the nation for all hazards and manages federal response and recovery efforts following any national incident. FEMA also initiates mitigation activities, trains first responders, works with state and local emergency managers, and manages the National Flood Insurance Program.

Last Modified: Monday, 12-Dec-2005 10:17:12