Flood management plan to lower insurance rates
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Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- City officials have adopted a flood management
plan that should lower the insurance rates of many residents for another
year.
The City Council, which approved the plan last week, expects insurance
rates will be cut by about 15% for residents living in local flood zones.
“We’re a very flat city, and almost 100% of our rainwater and storm
runoff has to be pumped out into a flood channel,” said Councilman Tom
Harman, adding that flooding during stormy weather is expected in the
area. “The majority of the city is only about 5 to 10 feet above sea
level.”
For the last six years, residents have received a 10% reduction on their annual flood insurance premiums because of the city’s participation
in the National Flood Insurance Program’s Community Rating System, which
is sponsored by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
The rating system, measured on a scale of one to 10, with one being
the highest, rewards communities that have taken steps to eliminate
flooding hazards with insurance rate reductions. Traditionally, the city
has held a Class 8 rating, but the most recent rating study reclassified
Surf City as Class 7, which will boost the maximum flood insurance
premium reduction to 15% on Oct. 1.
The flood management plan took almost a year to develop and identifies
hazards such as poor drainage or pump disrepair across the city, as well
as proposals to eliminate their associated risks and damage. It’s
required by FEMA to be eligible for the reduced insurance rates.
“I’ve experienced flooding in my own neighborhood,” said Walt White,
who served as a community member on the flood management team that drew
up the plan. “The three areas we need to concentrate on are the Santa Ana
River, runoff from local heavy rains and the Orange County storm
channels.”
Four county flood control district channels run through Huntington
Beach, which also has four of its own storm channels to ease flooding.
There are 16 pumping stations to transfer water to the flood channels.
“We need to update our storms drains as soon as possible,” said Gerald
Chapman, chairman of the city’s Planning Commission. “And our biggest
problem is the county’s channels, which were originally built to handle
65% of a 25-year flood.”
Today’s standards require flood channels to accommodate 100% of
100-year flood, but the county’s bankruptcy in 1994 diverted funds from
channel improvements to pay off debts, city officials said. If the
improvements were done, flood insurance premiums could be much lower
because the channels would be certified by the Army Corps of Engineers,
they added.
Between 1988 and 1998, the city suffered about $4.3 million in flood
damage from El Nino and other winter storms, damage to the city’s pier
and other flooding. Since last year, the city has been working on a
three-year, $6.4-million project to improve drainage along Goldenwest
Street and Intrepid Lane, improve a pumping station and make general
improvements to the Slater, Murdy and Michael storm channels for runoff
and flood water, city officials said.
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