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How Ida’s Inland Path Reveals Hidden Risk of Hurricane Floods

How Ida’s Inland Path Reveals Hidden Risk of Hurricane Floods

The remnants of Hurricane Ida tore through New York, New Jersey and the Northeast early Thursday, dumping torrential rain that shut down transit systems, washed away streets and left at least nine people dead. The storm highlights the potential for flooding along the coast, but also shows that areas further inland may also face significant risk.

New York and New Jersey both declared emergencies after Central Park was deluged by 7 inches (18 centimeters) of rain, a record for the day. Rivers from Philadelphia to New England are at record levels or flood stage. Emergency officials on Wednesday evacuated about 3,000 people living near a dam in Johnston, Pa., according the Associated Press.

The downpour is the latest example of extreme weather that’s testing U.S. infrastructure not designed to endure such conditions. Many homes in the mountainous Appalachia region that includes Pennsylvania face peril from inadequate flood protection and a longstanding practice of underestimating storms. That’s where the Federal Emergency Management Agency plays a part. In the U.S., 95% of residential flood insurance is underwritten by a branch of FEMA.

The agency also makes the maps that designate broad flood risk zones and help determine the need for such insurance. If a home is in one of the the severe risk areas, homeowners with a federally backed mortgage must buy insurance from the National Flood Insurance Program.

Yet FEMA’s mapping efforts have been called into question by First Street Foundation, the research nonprofit behind a report last year that evaluated flood risks for every property in 48 contiguous states. Using techniques pioneered by the insurance industry, First Street found 6 million additional homes that should be in the severe flood-risk zones

How Ida’s Inland Path Reveals Hidden Risk of Hurricane Floods

Much of that elevated risk was along the spine of Appalachia, stretching from Georgia and North Carolina through Pennsylvania. Flooding in Tennessee killed at least 22 people in last month, and this week’s downpours from Ida caused flash flood warnings in West Virginia and tornado watches from North Carolina to New Jersey. Earlier this year, the remains of Tropical Storm Fred caused flooding so dangerous that counties in North Carolina reported homes being ripped from their foundations.

First Street’s flood risk assessments show that there were as many as 19% more homes at risk in the counties that flooded in Tennessee than federal models showed, according to Matthew Eby, the organization’s executive director. Some counties in Tennessee and West Virginia have as much as 30% more homes at risk in First Street’s data compared to FEMA’s estimates.

“FEMA is constantly working to improve the production of the Flood Insurance Rate Maps,” spokeswoman Jaclyn Rothenberg said in a statement, adding that First Street is taking them out of context as the maps are meant to give a snapshot of risk rather than predict floods. Even though FEMA has updated several maps in these areas, Eby said they still underrepresent flood risks.

Flooding peaks across the southern Appalachian Mountains in late winter to early spring. Researchers have found a second increase in annual deluges occurring between August and October, which is likely due to the remnants of tropical systems, according to report by the National Weather Service.

“These maps still don’t directly take into account precipitation flooding or the impact heavy rains have on small waterway flooding,” First Street’s Eby said. In other words, just the kind of flooding caused by hurricane tails.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.