New maps reveal post-flood migration patterns across the US
kinder.rice.eduSurely some FEMA buyback is also fire risk? Not that most isn't flood related, but there are other reasons people get asked not to rebuild.
FEMA flood buyback schemes ( https://www.congress.gov/crs-product/IN11911 ) operate under a broader umbrella: FEMA Hazard Mitigation ( https://www.congress.gov/crs-product/R46989 )
Hazard mitigation for flooding is essentially to not be there on a flood plain when the water comes.
Sure, some might take a Queensland Australia approach and build houses on stilts for the water to run under. Some locations might benefit from water diversion.
In general, though, there's too much dirt to shift, to much water to pump, etc. to realistically do anything other than be flooded or be elsewhere.
New Orleans flooded despite having an army build levees.
Fire hazards are generally easier to mitigate - enforce fire breaks, enforce fuel load reduction schemes, etc.
Give this time - where I live the moisture content levels of the forest floors are at an all time low in recorded history - the fire hazard is rising and the suitability of adjacent land for cropping is falling.
As that trend continues I'd expect to see some state or federal assistence toward relocating productive agriculture to regions formally too wet and boggy to crop.
>The maps also show which people relocated by accepting a federal buyout and which ones relocated on their own. Nationwide, we see the vast majority of movers, about 14 out of every 15, are not participants in the federal buyout program. They are neighbors who relocated through conventional real estate transactions.
Doesn't that mean someone else moved in?
Original title "FEMA buyouts vs. risky real estate: New maps reveal post-flood migration patterns across the US" compressed to fit within title limits.
This article claims that that FEMA’s buyout investments “pay off” at roughly $4–$6 saved for every $1 spent. It includes a link to a study, but nowhere in the study does it say this. Instead this is an aggregated estimate for hazard mitigation overall, not a result specific to the FEMA buyout program.
What kind of propaganda post is this?
Fairly typical university public outreach "propaganda" in which grant recipients are encouraged by various means to write about their work in plain language for a general public and to be copublished both on a university public blog and elsewhere such as (say) the New Scientist, or (as in this case) The Conversation
* https://theconversation.com/fema-buyouts-vs-risky-real-estat...