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FEMA to Florida cities hit by hurricanes: Rebuild higher or lose your flood insurance

A damaged home caused by Hurricane Ian seen along Fort Myers Beach on Monday, October 3, 2022.
Al Diaz
/
Miami Herald
A damaged home caused by Hurricane Ian seen along Fort Myers Beach on Monday, October 3, 2022.

The Gulf of Mexico invaded thousands of homes on Florida鈥檚 west coast this year, and many will have to be gutted and rebuilt higher 鈥 some a full story off the ground.

The process makes communities safer the next time a storm comes aground, but it鈥檚 expensive and painful for the people who have to foot the bill, often without much financial help from the government.

Sidestepping that decades-old state and federal rule comes with pricey consequences, as Fort Myers Beach residents discovered last week.

FEMA announced that starting next year, Fort Myers Beach residents will no longer get a 25% discount on their flood insurance 鈥 an average increase of about $300 per resident鈥 because FEMA found that rebuilding efforts from previous storms weren鈥檛 good enough. And if the town makes any future mistakes in the rebuilding process from this year鈥檚 double whammy of Hurricanes Helene and Milton, residents could lose federal flood insurance altogether.

The National Flood Insurance Program provides nearly every flood insurance policy in the state of Florida, and flood insurance is required for any property with a mortgage in a flood zone. Without the NFIP, future development would come with huge hurdles.

鈥淔EMA will continue to provide technical assistance to Fort Myers Beach to meet the required program standards and end probation as soon as practicable,鈥 a FEMA spokesperson told the Miami Herald in an emailed statement.

Workers and friends of 鈥淏ella Mozzarella鈥 cleaned up the pizza and grill after Hurricane Milton made its way onshore in Ft. Myers Beach on Thursday, October 10, 2024.
Carl Juste
/
Miami Herald
Workers and friends of 鈥淏ella Mozzarella鈥 cleaned up the pizza and grill after Hurricane Milton made its way onshore in Ft. Myers Beach on Thursday, October 10, 2024.

The 2024 hurricane season was another above-average one, with record-breaking activity in July with destructive Hurricane Beryl, which hit Texas, and three hurricane landfalls in Florida: Category 1 Hurricane Debby in August, Category 4 Hurricane Helene in September and Category 3 Hurricane Milton just two weeks later.

November 30 marks the official end of another battering hurricane season and the start of yet another off-season of frantic rebuilding. All three landfalls in the Sunshine State caused flooding that will force thousands of Floridians to raze and rebuild their homes, thanks to a rule enshrined in both federal and state law. The 鈥50% rule鈥 requires homes with damage exceeding half the value of their home to be torn down and rebuilt to the newest standards. It鈥檚 a city planner鈥檚 dream, a force that ensures the new wave of homes built after a hurricane is more likely to survive the next one.

READ MORE: 鈥極n borrowed time.鈥 Why coastal Florida keeps rebuilding after storms like Hurricane Ian

But for residents, it can be a nightmare. After every storm, residents protest the high costs of reconstruction that often force people to sell, not stay. After Hurricane Ian, Cape Coral and Lee County after intense public pushback. And after Milton, some residents in the Sunny Shores neighborhood in Manatee County to find an exemption.

Experts say what happened in Fort Myers Beach is a warning for other governments just beginning the burdensome and lengthy rebuilding process.

鈥淎s the floodplain manager for a community, part of your job is to protect the residents from themselves,鈥 said Del Schwalls, a Florida-based floodplain management consultant. 鈥淵ou have to fight the mindset of 鈥榠t鈥檒l never happen to me, it鈥檒l never happen again鈥.鈥

鈥淎t some point in time, you鈥檝e got to stop throwing good money after bad.鈥

A town on probation

This spring, FEMA dinged five southwest Florida communities for issues with rebuilding in the wake of Hurricane Ian: Unincorporated Lee County, Cape Coral, Estero, Bonita Springs and Fort Myers Beach.

The federal agency said, at first, that the municipalities didn鈥檛 keep track of which homes needed to be razed and rebuilt and allowed some residents to rebuild with no permits. That meant homes were being built too low, leaving them in the path of future storm flooding. Officials protested, calling FEMA a 鈥渧illain in this nightmare.鈥

Eight months later, four out of five of those communities were found to be mostly in compliance with the rule. FEMA accepted the reports they filed with plans to fix the issues the agency found and their commitments to rebuild better in the future. All of them get to keep their hard-won discounts on federal flood insurance.

All except for Fort Myers Beach.

FEMA said the town still has not proved that all newly built or repaired homes in flood zones follow all the rules, that the town isn鈥檛 doing a good job of policing properties that aren鈥檛 following those rules and Fort Myers Beach has not demolished any properties that were built in flood zones without permission.

, FEMA officials said the punishment was a $50 fine for each flood insurance policy opened or renewed in the future, a loss of the 25% discount all residents enjoyed and at least a two-year probation.

Fort Myers Beach officials had no comment for the Miami Herald on the agency鈥檚 decision. Schwalls, who served as floodplain consultant to Lee County and Bonita Springs, said improper rebuilding after a storm is a statewide problem and he wasn鈥檛 surprised that FEMA found issues to correct in all five communities.

鈥淲hen you audit any community after a horrific hurricane like Ian you鈥檙e going to find mistakes,鈥 he said.

鈥淪omeone is substantially damaged but does repairs without a permit, that happens. It鈥檚 not that the city permitted that work, it鈥檚 that they didn鈥檛 catch it. But communities are supposed to catch that.鈥

An aerial photo of wrecked ships on water and land.
Pedro Portal
/
Miami Herald
Wrecked ships on San Carlos Island at Fort Myers Beach after Hurricane Ian, on Oct. 26.

However, he has noticed that FEMA has taken a stronger interest in recent years in making sure communities are following the rules about reconstruction after storms, potentially as a reaction to the increased tempo of disasters with massive repair bills. And they found plenty of problems in Southwest Florida, especially in Fort Myers Beach.

Schwalls said he expects more communities in the future to continue to try to challenge the 50% rule as climate change makes worse storms more likely. But he thinks the rule is 鈥渉ere to stay,鈥 at least if communities want to continue to enjoy heavily subsidized flood insurance from the federal government.

鈥淚t used to be a voluntary rule. Now it鈥檚 in the Florida building code. If every community dropped out of the NFIP you鈥檇 still have to do it,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here is no way out of it.鈥

This story was produced in partnership with the Florida Climate Reporting Network, a multi-newsroom initiative founded by the Miami Herald, the South Florida Sun Sentinel, The Palm Beach Post, the Orlando Sentinel, SA国际传谋 Public Media and the Tampa Bay Times.

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