Experts suggested that more data and education are needed as Texas and the rest of the country build in known flood plains.
Texas Tribune is legit one of the best independent media not funded by any billionaire asshats, please do support them if you can!
If we’re so desperate for places to build maybe a declining birth rate is a good thing
Florida does the same. Shortly after moving out of the state, we heard from a friend still there that a builder was approved to build 500 new homes in the wetlands around Northport and port Charlotte. For those that don’t know, the current homes already have major flood issues just from normal rain and are underwater every hurricane. This is just making it worse.
And I guess they refuse to build the homes on elevated stilts because capitalism right?
I’ve seen it happen multiple times. Most notably where a small town was wiped off the mountainside by a landslide. My senior geologist suggested they rebuild some miles away on a more stable site, but they insisted on rebuilding rigjt where the old town was.
About 10 years later, the town was wiped off the mountainside by another landslide.
So much tax money is wasted on cities built on unsuitable land, New Orleans being a prime example.
If there is a acknowledgement that what you are building is in a natural flood zone, why not build according to the environmental conditions of the area?
There must be homes designs that don’t look like the typical “American dream” single family home.
Something on stilts comes to mind.
This would work for areas that flood gradually. The flooding that happened had fast moving water. And water of that volume moving that fast is like an unstoppable force. I would trust that structure to hold up.
probably would be too expensive, and cost prohibitive, and even if they make that kind of house flooding can be severe enough where it can still destroy a house.
A house that looked almost exactly like this was swept away by the flood. It was an incredibly sad story (the family described the event in great detail). The family probably did everything they could’ve done. At a certain point the government NEEDS to intervene. A family can’t reasonably do their own weather analysis, flood plane analysis, or build and maintain their own alert system.
I disagree (the government should offer the service to those that want it) families should be able to overbuild their house to the point that it resists almost all flooding by making it out of large enough I beams or steel pipe.
I don’t know if I would call the deaths unnatural
Nobody ever talks about Engels, it’s all “Marx, Marx, Marx”
a lemmy.zip user downvoting in defense of this what a surprise bit far from your instance position on the spectrum huh? @SheeEttin@lemmy.zip
@treadful@lemmy.zip another 👆 always great to lose imaginary points in favor of exposing people “secretly” being fascist bootlickers through their downvotes
You’re being a tool. Stop it.
a @MegaUltraChicken@lemmy.ml taking stance against someone talking down on people downvoting others sharing a piece of information on social injustices? color me shocked, i wouldnt fit all .ml users to be like you but surely not unexpected to find one, your admin is an extremist and have it very well documented
If lenders require insurance, and insurers won’t cover it, shouldn’t it stop happening anyway?
The problem there is that the national flood insurance program heavily subsidizes flood insurance and artificially drives down the cost of living in a flood zone.
Depends where your “flood zone” is… If your coastal you get heavy subsidies, if your inland (barring being near some large rivers and lakes) you are subsidizing the coast.
I have to pay flood insurance for a dry brook that hasn’t flooded in its history. It costs over $1,200 a year for my 160k house. If I could get private flood insurance the cost would be 2 to 300, possibly even less.
You may be able to dispute that. I had a similar requirement, and it turns out the maps they based their decisions on were very out of date. I live on a hill that even a 30 foot swell wouldn’t touch. It took a while,and we had to work with the state emergency agency, but we were able to remove the requirement.
Yeah, there is a whole LOMA (Letter of Map Adjustment) process. However it’s super confusing, and I am 95% sure I will have to hire a land surveyor for 1-2k to get it done, due to no recent maps of the area.
Good, detailed article. Very informative.