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Coastal Communities Challenge Updated FEMA New England Flood Maps

Kennebunk Code Enforcement Officer Paul Demers points to different areas of town that could be affected by revised FEMA flood maps.
Ryan Caron King
/
New England News Collaborative
Kennebunk Code Enforcement Officer Paul Demers points to different areas of town that could be affected by revised FEMA flood maps.

In the wake of hurricanes Harvey and Irma, observers are predicting that premiums for a cash-strapped federal flood insurance program are likely to rise. Along the Atlantic coast, meanwhile, communities from Rhode Island to Maine are already mounting a related challenge to the program: the accuracy of federal flood maps maps that designate who must pay those premiums in the first place.

Insurance broker Robert Foley鈥檚 home, in the , happens to fall within a zone that the Federal Emergency Management Agency says stands a significant risk of what鈥檚 called a 100-year flood. That doesn鈥檛 mean dangerous flooding will occur only once every hundred years, just that there鈥檚 a small but significant flooding risk every year that storm-driven waters will rise well above ground level.

So when he built his home 30 years ago in a marshy area, he raised it high and tried to flood-proof it.

鈥淲e put in vents and put in flow-through vents so if there ever were a flood the water would flow through and not get up into the second floor,鈥 Foley says.

He hasn鈥檛 had a flood yet, and the investments helped secure the best possible rate for federal flood insurance required by his federally backed mortgage. He built his first floor a foot above the 10-foot water mark 鈥 the level that federal flood maps indicated a 100-year flood would reach, at his location.

Kennebunk officials say revised FEMA flood maps could affect properties here, on Great Hill Road.
Credit Ryan Caron King / New England News Collaborative
/
New England News Collaborative
Kennebunk officials say revised FEMA flood maps could affect properties here, on Great Hill Road.

Now FEMA is proposing updates to the maps, and they would raise the likely flood elevation by three feet. That puts dozens of properties in town that were previously outside the flood hazard zone right in the bull鈥檚-eye.

鈥淎nd when their house may have been fine prior to that, they鈥檙e now finding they are at base-flood elevation 14 [feet] when they were built at 11, and now they are three feet below base-flood elevation,鈥 Foley says. 鈥淭heir premiums will triple, and probably greater than that.鈥

Some by as many as ten times, as high as $8,000, Foley says.

That pole-vault of an insurance hike is why Wells and many communities up and down the New England coast are challenging FEMA鈥檚 maps. It鈥檚 not that they don鈥檛 want buildings to be properly insured, but that they think FEMA is in many cases overstating the risk 鈥 and, in some cases, understating it.

鈥淭he maps may be mostly correct as they are 鈥 but they can be more correct,鈥 says Nathan Dill, who specializes in hydrodynamics for the New England-based Ransom consulting group.

Six coastal Maine towns 鈥 including , , and 鈥 are hiring Dill for a big data-crunching project to make maps more accurate than what FEMA is offering, and more useful for flood planning beyond basic insurance issues.

Kennebunk officials say revised FEMA flood maps could affect properties here, on Peninsula Drive.
Credit Ryan Caron King / New England News Collaborative
/
New England News Collaborative
Kennebunk officials say revised FEMA flood maps could affect properties here, on Peninsula Drive.

Dill uses massive digital data sets for on- and off-shore topography that can bore in to just a few meters from one data point to the next. It鈥檚 called two-dimensional modeling.

鈥淲e will simulate a number of historic nor鈥檈aster-type storms that occurred, and then we鈥檒l simulate a number of possible tropical storms or hurricanes that could occur, and then use the results from that modeling analysis to determine what the flood hazard statistics are,鈥 he says.

FEMA actually uses similar high-tech methods in the rest of the country. But its New England maps rely instead on historic data from 18 widely dispersed tide gauges that dot coastal waters, plus some records of high-water marks from big storms, like the blizzard of 鈥78.

Kerry Bogdan, a senior FEMA engineer for the region, says that such one-dimensional analyses are appropriate here because New England鈥檚 gauge records go way back, in some cases more than a century.

鈥淲e鈥檙e getting numbers based on, 鈥楾his actually happened here, it was observed here,鈥 versus the two-dimensional is all computer-simulated storms,鈥 she says.

FEMA will consider the computer-generated hazard analyses, as long as they can be validated by testing them against real-world storms of the past.

Robert Foley, also a state representative, says many more low lying properties like his will be added to federal flood zone maps, costing some homeowners a bundle for new flood insurance. The opening in his foundation, seen here, is designed to let floodwaters flow through.
Credit Fred Bever / Maine Public
/
Maine Public
Robert Foley, also a state representative, says many more low lying properties like his will be added to federal flood zone maps, costing some homeowners a bundle for new flood insurance. The opening in his foundation, seen here, is designed to let floodwaters flow through.

But New England communities say there鈥檚 another big problem with FEMA鈥檚 methods 鈥 overreliance on the risk posed by a phenomenon known as wave setup. Leslie Fields, a coastal coastal geologist at Cape Cod鈥檚 Woods Hole Group, says that鈥檚 when a storm surge piles up waves inshore.

鈥淩eally wave setup is a process that attenuates. Once that wave breaks on that barrier beach, that wave energy is reduced, and that increase in water level dissipates, it disappears as you get to the inner edge of the flood plain,鈥 she says.

The argument has helped several communities get FEMA to change its maps, including Boston and other Boston Harbor municipalities. Fields is now working with several more in Massachusetts, from Marshfield to Manchester-by-the-Sea, to get FEMA to lower its risk assessments. But she counsels local clients to temper the anger they sometimes direct at the overstretched agency.

鈥淔EMA鈥檚 job is a hard one 鈥 to model the whole coast,鈥 she says.

In Rhode Island, some state officials have asked FEMA to consider raising the maps鈥 predicted flood levels higher, so far without result. Back in Maine, the coastal towns will need to present comprehensive new data to FEMA by the end of the year to get consideration of whether the flood risk here is overstated.

And Foley has a tip 鈥 if your home is newly captured by FEMA鈥檚 provisional flood maps, it鈥檚 a good idea to get flood insurance now, before the new maps are finalized. That way, he says, you can be grandfathered at a lower premium rate.

Copyright 2017

A Columbia University graduate, Fred began his journalism career as a print reporter in Vermont, then came to Maine Public in 2001 as its political reporter, as well as serving as a host for a variety of Maine Public Radio and Maine Public Television programs. Fred later went on to become news director for New England Public Radio in Western Massachusetts and worked as a freelancer for National Public Radio and a number of regional public radio stations, including WBUR in Boston and NHPR in New Hampshire.

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SOMOS CONNECTICUT is an initiative from 海角换妻, the state鈥檚 local NPR and PBS station, to elevate Latino stories and expand programming that uplifts and informs our Latino communities. Visit CTPublic.org/latino for more stories and resources. For updates, sign up for the SOMOS CONNECTICUT newsletter at ctpublic.org/newsletters.

SOMOS CONNECTICUT es una iniciativa de 海角换妻, la emisora local de NPR y PBS del estado, que busca elevar nuestras historias latinas y expandir programaci贸n que alza y informa nuestras comunidades latinas locales. Visita CTPublic.org/latino para m谩s reportajes y recursos. Para noticias, suscr铆base a nuestro bolet铆n informativo en ctpublic.org/newsletters.

Fund the Facts

You just read trusted, local journalism that鈥檚 free for everyone, thanks to donors like you.

If that matters to you, now is the time to give. Join the 50,000+ members powering honest reporting and a more connected 鈥 and civil! 鈥 海角换妻.