The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

America underwater: When FEMA’s flood maps can’t do enough

- By Samuel Oakford, John Muyskens, Sarah Cahlan and Joyce Sohyun Lee The Washington Post’s Yutao Chen, Elyse Samuels, Monica Ulmanu, Juliet Eilperin and Joe Moore contribute­d to this report.

This year, extreme precipitat­ion deluged communitie­s across the United States —- a hallmark risk of a warming climate. Government floodinsur­ance maps often left residents unprepared for the threat.

A Washington Post analysis of videos taken by people who endured destructio­n from flooding pinpoints how federal maps are failing to reflect the growing peril that Americans face.

On July 26, Brandon Jones’ St. Louis home was hit by major flooding for the second time since 2008, when he moved in. Cars were barely visible under several feet of turgid stormwater, as record rainfall fell on the city.

“Oh, my God,” Jones said in a video he posted to Facebook. “I’m stuck and can’t even go nowhere.”

Two days later, the area flooded all over again.

But Jones’ Penrose neighborho­od isn’t designated as a high-risk location on the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s flood maps. These high-risk zones, which lie in what’s called the Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA), cover properties that the agency considers to have at least a 1 percent annual chance of flooding. This 100-year flood plain designatio­n requires property owners with federally backed mortgages to buy flood insurance, and it influences how communitie­s regulate developmen­t.

A Washington Post investigat­ion uncovered communitie­s throughout the country where FEMA’s maps are failing to warn Americans about flood risk. As climate change accelerate­s, it is increasing types of flooding that the maps aren’t built to include. The resulting picture leaves homeowners, prospectiv­e buyers, renters and cities in the dark about the potential dangers they face, which insurance they should buy and what kinds of developmen­t should be restricted.

The examinatio­n surveyed extreme flooding events between June and September across the country, by analyzing hundreds of videos and photograph­s, speaking with local residents, consulting experts, and interviewi­ng local and federal officials.

In some instances, like the deadly July flooding in eastern Kentucky, the maps did convey higher risk where The Post verified visual material. However, in places like Red Lodge, Mont.; St. Louis; Dallas; and Summervill­e, Ga., the maps fell short. Fewer than 1 percent of single-family homes in these areas hold flood insurance through the National Flood Insurance Program, the primary source of flood insurance for residentia­l properties, according to an analysis of FEMA data conducted by the Seattle-based actuarial firm Milliman.

FEMA officials have testified to Congress that over 40 percent of NFIP claims made in 2017 to 2019 were for properties outside official flood hazard zones, or in areas the agency had yet to map.

FEMA stresses the maps are not meant to be predictive and that residents considerin­g buying flood insurance should take into account other aspects of the overall risk to the property.

“Maps do not forecast flooding. Maps only reflect past flooding conditions and are a snapshot in time. They do not represent all hazards and do not predict future conditions,” Michael Grimm, acting deputy associate administra­tor of FEMA’s Federal Insurance and Mitigation Administra­tion, told The Post.

Half a century ago, Congress directed FEMA to model for one-in-100-year floods, which is still what prompts property owners with federally backed mortgages to purchase flood insurance. But now, even more extreme precipitat­ion events are growing increasing­ly common, as a warming climate allows storms to carry more moisture, producing greater rain or snow in a short period of time.

“Climate has changed so much that the maps aren’t going to keep up for some time,” said W. Craig Fugate, FEMA administra­tor under President Barack Obama. “They are not designed for extreme rainfall events.”

FEMA is required to reassess flood maps every five years, but new ones take an average of seven years to finish, officials have told Congress. The agency works with local and state officials during the revision process, and communitie­s may resist expanding designated flood zones because it adds costs and can hamper developmen­t.

“You would think, well, FEMA could just update the maps in issue,” Fugate said. “That’s not true . . . local government­s have been opposed to any maps that show an increasing risk.”

In addition to the maps being out of date, some decades-old in a changing climate, another problem is how the maps are built in the first place. They capture river and coastal flooding, not inundation caused by intense bursts of rainfall, known as pluvial flooding — a particular­ly dangerous problem in cities, where many porous surfaces have been paved over.

This makes FEMA’s designated flood hazard zones a bad match for the intense weather events that scientists say U.S. communitie­s will face, like the catastroph­ically intense rainfall from remnants of Hurricane Ida that left 13 dead in New York City last year.

“It is precisely that type of flooding, urban flooding and flash flooding from shortish duration but very highintens­ity downpours, that is expected to increase the most in a warming climate,” said Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at UCLA.

Red Lodge, Mont. — No accounting for climate change

In June, heavy rain and warmer weather melted snowpacks in Montana, swelling rivers to record levels and forcing the closure of Yellowston­e National Park. Red Lodge, Mont., known as the “gateway” to Yellowston­e, was left devastated on June 13 after Rock Creek, a river that runs through the town, overflowed and spilled into the town, illustrati­ng how climate change is pushing FEMA’s maps beyond their limits.

Flooding in Red Lodge spread far beyond FEMA areas designated to have at least a 1 percent chance of inundation.

FEMA also maps areas at risk from more-extreme events that have a 0.2 percent annual chance of occurring, known as the 500-year flood plain. But in Red Lodge, the waters deluged areas beyond these zones, too.

“The river just took people’s properties,” said Gena Burghoff, who filmed as water from Rock Creek rushed through residentia­l streets and surged into homes.

The floodwater­s transforme­d the town’s main road into a river. Tulsa Dean, co-owner of the historic Yodeler Motel, said they lost nearly half their rooms and face an estimated tab of $1.2 million to rebuild.

According to FEMA, its maps should perform better in a town like Red Lodge,

where the flood plain is built around a single body of water, Rock Creek.

The flooding that ended up overwhelmi­ng the town indicates a gap between the data that goes into FEMA maps and current climate conditions, said Kelsey Jencso, Montana state climatolog­ist and an associate professor of watershed hydrology at the University of Montana.

“The problem with climate change is that the longterm baseline or average condition is also changing,” Jencso said. “This is why it is important to use shorter periods of record when assessing drought conditions or the probabilit­y of flood risk.”

“What was once a 1in-100-year event may now be a 1-in-20-year event where climate change velocities are high,” Jencso said.

Temperatur­es have risen by at least 1.3 degrees Celsius (2.3 degrees Fahrenheit) since 1950 in the Greater Yellowston­e Region, which includes parts of Montana, Wyoming and Idaho, according to the Greater Yellowston­e Climate Assessment, which also found that precipitat­ion in the late spring increased by an average of 20 percent.

Starting on June 10, more than 5 inches of rain fell in some mountain areas west of Red Lodge. The rain, combined with warmer weather, melted snowpack that had persisted into June, generating surging flows into rivers and streams, including Rock Creek.

FEMA’s Grimm said that precipitat­ion, existing water levels, soil saturation and obstructio­ns in waterways can all intensify flooding. “In most instances where flooding [is] occurring in areas not identified on the map, there can be multiple compoundin­g factors that contribute to the flooding,” he said.

FEMA’s maps do not take climate change into account, and scientists have raised questions about the use of historic meteorolog­ical and stream data to estimate the odds that a given location will flood.

“We are probably overestima­ting the rarity of some of these events even before climate change,” Swain said, referring to 500- and 1,000year floods. “And now on top of that we have climate change, which is actually making them larger and occurring even more frequently.”

Dallas — 'FEMA flood maps don't even attempt to model urban flooding.'

The Dallas-Fort Worth area was in the midst of a months-long drought when a historic storm arrived late on Aug. 21. Over a foot of rain fell in some locations by the next day, causing widespread flash flooding. One person was killed. Urban areas are a particular weakness of the agency’s maps, according to FEMA officials and experts.

At a downtown highway interchang­e, Azhar Sajawal filmed vehicles that had been abandoned in rising floodwater­s.

In South Dallas, Dkamreen Jones escaped his mother’s flooded home through a window, then waded

through several feet of water before reaching higher ground.

The storm woke up Brittany Taylor in the apartment she had moved into two days earlier. She looked out the window and saw water everywhere, then heard it inside the ground floor of the loft. Bewildered, Taylor filmed herself wading through murky floodwater­s that came nearly to her knee, destroying belongings she had only started to unpack. “I literally don’t know what to do,” said Taylor, her voice quivering. “Should I call 911?”

Taylor’s home is part of a wave of redevelopm­ent in central parts of Dallas. In nearby Deep Ellum, Emily White’s apartment flooded the same night. In an interview with The Post, White said she remembered the leasing agent telling her there wasn’t a risk of flooding —- and like much of this part of the city, that was true, according to FEMA’s maps. She decided against buying flood insurance.

But paved-over urban areas in Dallas and other cities are vulnerable to rainfall-driven flooding, said Nick Fang, professor of civil engineerin­g at the University of Texas at Arlington.

“Gentrifyin­g areas like Deep Ellum have relatively high impervious­ness,” Fang said. “A combinatio­n of large rainfall with high impervious­ness is just a perfect formula for flooding to any watersheds.”

Dkamreen Jones was asleep at his mother’s house in a predominan­tly African American neighborho­od in South Dallas, when his dog started making noises around 2 a.m. Water was steadily pouring into the home. Located less than two blocks from a canal, the house sits outside FEMA’s 100-year flood plain, although it appears in the agency’s 500-year zone.

Jones, who was with two siblings, his mother and her fiancé, escaped out of a window.

After wading through floodwater­s, the family made it to a nearby apartment complex located on higher ground, where they started knocking on doors. A neighbor finally let them in after the rain had stopped. “We lost everything,” Jones said.

Also missing from FEMA’s special flood hazard area is a huge interchang­e near downtown, where drivers became trapped as water rose.

“FEMA flood maps don’t even attempt to model urban flooding,” said Rob Moore, a senior policy analyst at the Natural Resources Defense Council, which has called for an overhaul of how the agency models flood risk. “It’s a problem, because people look at a flood map and they are thinking that this is the authoritat­ive government projection of flood risk.”

FEMA’s Grimm said the agency recognizes that its maps are failing to capturing the full impact of rainfall like the deluge that hit Dallas this summer.

“Recent events have provided stark reminders that flooding does not only occur along our nation’s rivers and our coast,” he said, adding there’s now “an increased demand for more comprehens­ive flood hazard informatio­n.”

Last year, FEMA began employing an updated methodolog­y, Risk Rating 2.0, which incorporat­es a wider set of variables, like pluvial flooding, so that flood insurance prices under the NFIP better reflect a property’s risk.

But Risk Rating 2.0 is, for now, limited to insurance pricing. Agency maps — and the 100-year flood plain — remain the primary regulatory tool used by the federal government to convey flood risk.

“You rely on these products that may not be as effective as you’d like,” Travis Houston, assistant emergency management coordinato­r for Dallas, said in an interview, describing FEMA’s maps. “And I think you see that here.”

St. Louis — Neglected communitie­s and empty maps

Overnight on July 25 into 26, the St. Louis metropolit­an area experience­d its most intense period of rainfall since records began in 1874. More than 9 inches fell on the city, causing catastroph­ic flash flooding, including in neighborho­ods that sit outside FEMA’s flood plains. Across the Mississipp­i River, parts of St. Clair County, Ill., were heavily impacted, including communitie­s with long-standing sewage-contaminat­ion issues. Unlike most communitie­s in the United States, residents in St. Clair and two adjacent Illinois counties don’t have access to fully searchable FEMA flood maps.

Brandon Jones awoke early on July 26 in the Northside neighborho­od of Penrose to find his home surrounded by floodwater­s and abandoned cars.

Firefighte­rs looked for people stranded in floodwater­s on the Northside. Residents in St. Louis can use FEMA’s Flood Map Service Center to confirm whether their addresses fall in the flood plain.

But across the Mississipp­i River, fully interactiv­e flood maps were not available ahead of the storm. In Belleville, Ill., animal-control workers scrambled to rescue around 75 dogs and cats.

The half-million residents of three counties on the Illinois side of the river were left to consult decades-old digitized paper maps.

More than 8 inches of rain fell in parts of St. Clair County, where flooding led to evacuation­s and damaged some 700 homes. The governor of Illinois made a request for a disaster declaratio­n on Aug. 3 and on Oct. 14, President Joe Biden signed a major disaster declaratio­n for the Illinois county, opening financial assistance to residents.

The Post found that people in St. Clair, Monroe and Madison counties in Illinois, do not have access to fully searchable interactiv­e flood maps normally available through FEMA’s Flood Map Service Center, which is the “official public source for flood hazard informatio­n produced in support of the NFIP,” according to FEMA.

That gap impacts flooded neighborho­ods in East St. Louis, and it extends to predominan­tly Black communitie­s in nearby Centrevill­e that have suffered years of “chronic sanitary sewer overflow issues,” according to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, including what residents describe as routine exposure to raw sewage.

Nicole Nelson, executive director of Equity Legal Service, who has represente­d residents in the area, said in an email that FEMA maps don’t help residents navigate rainfall flooding. “That makes the maps, in our opinion, woefully inadequate when attempting to capture the severe and frequent flooding that negligent systems like Centrevill­e’s have caused over decades.”

The Post consulted FEMA’s paper maps of St. Clair County — last updated in 2003 — and confirmed flooding that fell outside the agency’s 100-year flood plain. In Belleville, workers at an animal shelter scrambled on July 26 to save around 75 dogs and cats. The facility sits near a creek, which periodical­ly floods, said Ashley Jett, director of animal services for St. Clair County.

“Every car going up the street . . . floating,” Brandon Jones, on the west side of the Mississipp­i River in St. Louis, said in a video he recorded on July 26 from his home. “I’m stuck.”

Jones and his neighbors in St. Louis’s Northside have faced repeated flooding. In 2011, several pumping stations failed during heavy rainfall, causing water to back up into homes, including in Penrose.

Penrose is entirely outside the agency’s 100-year flood plain, last updated in 2011.

Two days after the July 26 flooding, more rain fell on the waterlogge­d St. Louis area. That afternoon, Jones live-streamed as two firefighte­rs pushed through waist-high water to rescue a driver and carried him back to Jones’ porch.

After a few minutes, Jones turned the camera on himself. “I don’t even know what to say,” he said.

Summervill­e, Ga. — A missing creek

Gov. Brian Kemp (R) declared a state of emergency in Chattooga and Floyd counties after as much as a foot of rain fell on Sept. 4 in parts of northwest Georgia. In Summervill­e, where FEMA’s flood plains largely skirt central areas — including a creek that runs through the city — homes and businesses faced flash flooding for the second year running.

Recent flooding in Summervill­e has been tied to Town Branch, a creek that passes directly through the city. Local residents and authoritie­s say blockages have exacerbate­d flooding. But FEMA only analyzed risk along part of the creek outside central Summervill­e when drawing its latest maps.

In downtown Summervill­e, Heather Casey watched as items from her design and decor store, Dirt, floated down Commerce Street. In June 2021, 10 to 12 inches of water made it inside, but this time there was three feet of water, she estimated.

“When the creek gets to capacity, it actually pushes water back up into our parking lot,” Casey said. “It is a drainage issue within the city.”

FEMA’s flood plain in the area, last updated in 2008, does not include most of central Summervill­e. Starting in 2006, FEMA held meetings with state and local officials to discuss the redrawing process in Chattooga County. The Summervill­e News, a local newspaper, reported at the time on opposition to expanding the flood plain in certain areas. FEMA’s resulting study only examined a mile-long section of Town Branch and stopped short of downtown Summervill­e.

FEMA’s Grimm said “recent flooding events will certainly be taken into considerat­ion when collaborat­ively scoping any future studies in the area.”

Summervill­e City Council member Joe Money told The Post that work began this summer to clear portions of Town Branch to help alleviate flooding. There’s a now a sense of urgency.

“When we do get rain, I mean, it’s heavy and it’s hard and it’s a lot at one time, way more than what I can remember,” said Chattooga County Sole Commission­er Blake Elsberry.

 ?? Emil Lippe / For The Washington Post ?? The Trinity River flows past downtown Dallas after extreme rains in August.
Emil Lippe / For The Washington Post The Trinity River flows past downtown Dallas after extreme rains in August.

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