Environment

Inland flooding from hurricanes, heavy rains a frequent problem in Florida

  • Better engineering from the early days of state development could not stop the flooding

From Jim Singletary’s Deltona home, the open ocean is an hour’s drive away, the water seen from his house is called a “creek” and, until two years ago, he could say his house was not it has not flooded in 37 years.

Hurricane Ian, however, broke through the floodplain, washed away his 2,555-square-foot home and displaced a Boeing engineer who had been stationed on the ground. for more than a year.

Like four out of five property owners in Florida, Singletary didn’t have flood insurance, so he had to pay his savings to replace everything up to the foot mark. 4 in his house – and kitchen cabinets. It’s a similar sight to what the public recently witnessed in large numbers when Hurricane Helene battered the mountainous, inland Appalachia region of the Carolinas, Tennessee and Georgia.

A flooded horse barn outside the home of Kevin and Dianna Babington on October 8, 2024 in Loxahatchee Groves, Florida.

Non-coastal damage from Helene’s damaged facilities is not expected to be a significant loss for insurance companies because most of the damage was uninsured – less than 1% of the affected counties insurance against the flood, they leave victims, like Singletary after Ian. to repair the damage in their pockets, industry experts say.

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