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It’s hurricane season—and extreme weather events are on the rise. Along with the catastrophic losses that families face after the flood is the economic burden on taxpayers through the National Flood Insurance Program. It’s the financial lifeline for those who carry flood insurance and an essential funding source for both disaster preparation and recovery efforts. However, the program is also $25 billion in debt, and more than a quarter of that total is from properties that flood repeatedly. It’s a growing issue affecting more than just coastal cities. Host Dan LeDuc discusses the flood that devastated Nashville, Tennessee, in 2010 with Roger Lindsey, chairman of the Tennessee Association of Floodplain Management and practice leader for Stormwater and Floodplain Management for Nashville’s Metro Water Services, and Laura Lightbody, who directs Pew’s flood-prepared communities work. To listen to the second episode, visit “The Financial Toll of Flooding—Part 2."
Tennessee Flood Risk and Mitigation
Vulnerable Communities Are Using Innovative Financing to Prepare for Natural Disasters
Before the Flood: The Value of Mitigation
Repeatedly Flooded Properties Cost Billions
Flooding Disasters Cost Billions in 2016
Shoring up Communities: Investing in resilient infrastructure