The House of Representatives passed yet another short-term re-authorization of the National Flood Insurance Program. The most recent extension will keep the program going through November 18. This is just the most recent in a series of short-term extensions to the NFIP. Apparently there are legislative efforts to extend the program for the next five years.
No bank will lend on a property in a flood-prone area without flood insurance. So when the NFIP lapses (as it did last year), it makes it nearly impossible to sell a home in a flood area, and any scheduled sales are held up due to the lack of insurance. Regardless of whether it makes sense for the government to encourage people to build homes in a potential flood zone is a separate issue, because these houses already exist and are dependent upon the NFP. This is the system we are largely stuck with.
In light of this, some groups, such as the National Association of Realtors (NAR), are advocating for a long term extension of the NFIP. In a press release, the NAR stated that “the NAR strongly supports the NFIP and believes that a 5-year extension of the program’s authority to issue flood insurance is essential to a properly functioning real estate market”.
There really is no excuse for Congress not to extend the NFIP as the many real estate transactions are utterly dependent upon it. Since 2002, the program has been allowed to lapse 11 times, and then retroactively re-authorized.