National Acadamies Report Released: Levees and the National Flood Insurance Program: Improving Policies and Practices
Recently, the National Academies Press (NAP) released a report produced by the Committee on Levees and the National Flood Insurance Program Improving Policies
and Practices; Water Science and Technology Board; Division on Earth and Life
Studies; and the National Research Council titled, Levees and the National Flood Insurance Program: Improving Policies and Practices (2013). The 332-page prepublication report (available free with a one-time registration) discusses how,
[t]he Federal Emergency Management Agency's (FEMA) Federal Insurance and
Mitigation Administration (FIMA) manages the National Flood Insurance Program
(NFIP), which is a cornerstone in the U.S. strategy to assist communities to
prepare for, mitigate against, and recover from flood disasters. The NFIP was
established by Congress with passage of the National Flood Insurance Act in
1968, to help reduce future flood damages through NFIP community floodplain
regulation that would control development in flood hazard areas, provide
insurance for a premium to property owners, and reduce federal expenditures for
disaster assistance. The flood insurance is available only to owners of
insurable property located in communities that participate in the NFIP.
Currently, the program has 5,555,915 million policies in 21,881 communities3
across the United States.
The NFIP defines the one percent annual chance flood (100-year or base flood)
floodplain as a Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA). The SFHA is delineated on
FEMA's Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRM's) using topographic, meteorologic,
hydrologic, and hydraulic information. Property owners with a federally back
mortgage within the SFHAs are required to purchase and retain flood insurance,
called the mandatory flood insurance purchase requirement (MPR). Levees and
floodwalls, hereafter referred to as levees, have been part of flood management
in the United States since the late 1700's because they are relatively easy to
build and a reasonable infrastructure investment. A levee is a man-made
structure, usually an earthen embankment, designed and constructed in accordance
with sound engineering practices to contain, control, or divert the flow of
water so as to provide protection from temporary flooding. A levee system is a
flood protection system which consists of a levee, or levees, and associated
structures, such as closure and drainage devices, which are constructed and
operated in accordance with sound engineering practices.
Recognizing the need for improving the NFIP's treatment of levees, FEMA
officials approached the National Research Council's (NRC) Water Science and
Technology Board (WSTB) and requested this study. The NRC responded by forming
the ad hoc Committee on Levee and the National Flood Insurance Program:
Improving Policies and Practices, charged to examine current FEMA treatment of
levees within the NFIP and provide advice on how those levee-elated policies and
activities could be improved. The study addressed four broad areas, risk
analysis, flood insurance, risk reduction, and risk communication, regarding how
levees are considered in the NFIP. Specific issues within these areas include
current risk analysis and mapping procedures behind accredited and
non-accredited levees, flood insurance pricing and the mandatory flood insurance
purchase requirement, mitigation options to reduce risk for communities with
levees, flood risk communication efforts, and the concept of shared
responsibility. The principal conclusions and recommendations are highlighted in
this report.
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