Flood Insurance Costs Could Rise for Ohio City
Leaders in a northwestern Ohio city that has seen more than its share of flooding say the Federal Emergency Management Agency has threatened to put the its flood insurance program on “probation.”
Officials in Findlay say that could increase the cost of flood insurance premiums.
The Courier newspaper in Findlay reports that FEMA wants the city to resolve more than 100 property issues the agency has identified, or else it might force the higher premiums.
Findlay’s mayor says she doesn’t believe the city’s flood insurance program status is in jeopardy. She thinks what is happening now is because the city is trying to join a rate-reduction program for flood insurance.
The city has had five major floods since 2007 that have brought millions of dollars in damage.
- When the Cloud Goes Dark: Data Center Claims And Specialized Adjusting Expertise
- Secret Codes and Yuan Fees Get Ships Through Iran’s Hormuz Tollbooth
- Public Adjuster Accused of Swiping $600,000 in Hurricane Ian Insurance Payments
- Top 20 Vehicles Sold in United States in Q1 2026