State Attorney General Ashley Moody announced this week that she “is fighting the Federal Emergency Management Agency to lower flood insurance rates for Floridians.”
Moody and nine other attorneys general took legal action against the Biden administration over a new policy that uses a methodology to determine flood insurance premiums.
“Under the Equity in Action plan, FEMA is making flood insurance unattainable for many policyholders by raising rates, going against congressional mandates that the National Flood Insurance Program provide affordable coverage,” Moody’s office noted.
“Insurance premiums are on the rise. Now, under President Biden, FEMA is taking action that will make flood insurance rates rise even further. That is why, I am fighting back against the Biden administration to lower flood insurance rates for the Floridians who depend on this coverage,” Moody said.
Moody and the attorneys general of nine other states filed a complaint for an injunction against FEMA’s Rick Rating 2.0—Equity in Action methodology. This new methodology for calculating flood insurance “defies both law and logic,” they insisted.
The complaint states: “In fundamentally changing how it calculates rates for federal flood insurance, the agency bypassed nearly every substantive and procedural requirement under law. Perhaps as a result, this new approach makes no sense. While the agency paints a picture of nuanced calculations using massive data repositories that reveal a property’s individualized risks, the reality is much simpler: Flood insurance is going to be more expensive. Under Risk Rating 2.0—Equity in Action (‘Equity in Action’), the agency ignores historical observed flood events in favor of future flood hypotheticals to determine the present flood risk of each insured property.”
In Florida, 76 percent of the population lives in coastal areas prone to flooding. Almost half of Florida’s population lives in flood zones that require insurance. 80% of flood insurance policy premiums will increase due to FEMA’s Equity in Action methodology. There are 468 NFIP participating communities in the state, with more than 1.3 million flood insurance polices in the FEMA program. The Equity in Action methodology does not take into account any mitigation efforts a community does in calculating premium costs—raising insurance costs for Floridians.
In the complaint, the attorneys general argue that the Equity in Action methodology is unlawful and arbitrary and capricious.
Moody is joined in this legal action by the attorneys general of the following states: Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota, South Carolina, Texas and Virginia.