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Flood Insurance
Flood insurance may be required by the lender if your home
is in a low-lying area and vulnerable to flooding. Your
homeowners policy will not cover you for any damage due to
flooding.
The
National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) defines flooding
as "a general and temporary condition during which the
surface of normally dry land is partially or completely
inundated. Two adjacent properties or 2 or more acres must
be affected." According to NFIP's definition, flooding can
be caused by any one of the following:
-
the
overflow of inland or tidal waters
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the
unusual and rapid accumulation or runoff of surface
waters from any source such as heavy rainfall
-
the
incidence of mudslides or mudflows caused by flooding
which are comparable to a river of liquid and flowing
mud;
-
or
the collapse or destabilization of land along the shore
of a lake or other body of water resulting from erosion
or the effect of waves or water currents exceeding
normal, cyclical levels.
Flood
insurance is a special policy backed by the federal
government, with cooperation from local communities and
private insurance companies. More than eighteen thousand
communities have agreed to stricter zoning and building
measures to control floods. Residents in these communities
are entitled to purchase flood insurance through NFIP.
(Those who own property in certain coastal barrier areas
are excluded from the federal program.)
About two hundred insurance companies, possibly including
the company that already handles your homeowner's or auto
insurance, write and service the policies for the
government, which finances the program through premiums.
The average flood policy premium is about $350 a year;
some people in low-risk zones can obtain flood insurance
for as little as $106 a year.
Even though flood insurance is relatively inexpensive,
most Americans are unprotected against flood loss.
According to the Federal Insurance Administration, of the
approximately ten million households in so-called Special
Flood Hazard Areas - the most vulnerable to flood - no
more than a quarter are covered by flood insurance. Yet in
these special hazard areas, flooding is twenty-six times
more likely to occur than a fire over the course of a
typical thirty year mortgage.
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following states: AZ, NM, ID, CA, MO - BK#0906222
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