The Homes in Dorian’s Path Are in a High-Risk Area. Why Do They Cost So Much? (original) (raw)
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Nonfiction
The streets of Manalapan, Florida are partially flooded on September 2 before Hurricane Dorian’s impact.Credit...Saul Martinez for The New York Times
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- Sept. 4, 2019
THE GEOGRAPHY OF RISK
Epic Storms, Rising Seas, and the Cost of America’s Coasts
By Gilbert M. Gaul
Hurricanes and other coastal storms create more costly damage than do earthquakes, tornadoes and wildfires combined, and 17 of the 20 most destructive hurricanes in history have occurred since 2000. At the moment of this writing, Hurricane Dorian, a Category 5 storm at its strongest, has pummeled the Bahamas and is heading toward the Southeast of the United States. Past storms have pitched houses into forests half a mile away or submerged them beneath the sea. Doors and windows jut from the sand “like weathered dinosaur bones,” we’re told by the two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Gilbert M. Gaul in this carefully researched and eye-opening book. But astonishingly, between 1970 and 2010, in coastal floodplains that are among “the most ecologically fragile and dangerous places on earth,” real estate values have risen and the population expanded.
How could this be? Through a strange, post-disaster land rush, Gaul explains, speculators and repeat developers busily rebuild “the riskiest and costliest houses” as part of what he calls “disaster capitalism.” “It is growing like crazy, especially after Sandy,” one mayor tells him.
Encouraging such capitalists, Gaul argues, is the federal government, which has removed personal risk from that which is risky. In 1950, it paid 5 percent of post-hurricane rebuilding costs, he notes, but now pays 70 percent and in some cases 100 percent. And one out of every three federally insured properties is a beach house, an investment property or second home.
In 2012 Congress considered a bill to link premiums to risk and raise rates for second homes, but the National Association of Realtors lobbied hard to defeat it. Such beneficiaries adopt a climate version of that famous sign from a few years back: “Get your big government hands off my Medicare.” So with $3 trillion worth of property at risk for catastrophic floods and storms, and the Department of the Treasury standing as the insurer of last resort, the monster storm we’re not tracking is the one heading toward the taxpayer.
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