Popular Searches:  AIG  china  sunamerica+aig  LIFE  financial  health

Lawsuit: Flood Insurance Neglects Species Threats

 

Friday, Sep 04,2009, 9:24:00 AM   Click:

PHOENIX_An environmental group is trying to slow development near ecologically fragile dry washes and desert riverbeds in Arizona by targeting the federal agency that provides the flood insurance essential to building there.

WildEarth Guardians' novel approach in its lawsuit against the Federal Emergency Management Agency says FEMA has the same responsibility to protect endangered species as any other agency. Issuing insurance without checking to see if development will harm plants and animals violates the Endangered Species Act, the lawsuit says.

WildEarth said Wednesday that it filed the lawsuit in Tucson federal court. The group alleges that FEMA's National Flood Insurance Program encourages new development in flood plains where most of the state's endangered species live.

Officials with FEMA weren't immediately available for comment.

WildEarth is seeking an injunction that would require FEMA to consult with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on the effects of its flood insurance program. The group also wants FEMA to stop issuing new policies for flood plain areas where construction would harm endangered species or their habitats.

The lawsuit cites numerous state and federal agencies that agree the areas in and around washes and riverbeds support most of the state's endangered and threatened species. Yet flood insurance policies are issued without determining if the development they're covering will hurt them.

"Every agency out there that has concerns about resources ... has determined that it's really important to maintain these intact riparian ecosystems," said Steven Sugarman, WildEarth's attorney. "But at the same time, FEMA is out there authorizing construction and development in these areas."

Of special concern are areas along the San Pedro, Verde, Gila and Colorado rivers, which are especially rich in endangered species according to the suit.

Lenders generally require property owners and developers to obtain flood insurance in areas FEMA determines are at risk. As of April, nearly 36,000 policies covered structures worth about $7.7 billion in Arizona.

"Absent the guarantee of insurance I think builders wouldn't be taking this financial risk," said John Horning, WildEarth's executive director. "That's the irony of the program. It had and has good intentions, but I think it's turned into a program that subsidizes and promotes development in ways that put people in harm's way and increases environmental damage."

Sugarman said the suit is the first to challenge flood insurance policies in the Southwest under the Endangered Species Act. FEMA has consulted with other agencies about its program's effect on endangered species only twice before, in Puget Sound, Wash., and in the Florida Keys.

In New Mexico, Sugarman said, FEMA is talking with Fish and Wildlife about how the flood insurance program may affect endangered species, but it hasn't opened a formal consultation.

Horning said that the aim is eventually to have FEMA consider the effect of an insurance program against flooding on habitat and species not only in Arizona but throughout the West and the nation.

"The National Flood Insurance Program encourages development that block the arteries of Arizona life," said Horning. "In the short term, of course, people just want to be able to do what they want. But we have learned much about the coast and along the Mississippi that development of flood plains does not make much sense. "

  • Print

You may also be interested in:

Discuss this news

Click Here to see all comments
Please aware of self to obey the Internet related policy laws and strictly forbid to release porn, violence.
Appraisal:

Name:

Email:

Content:

Featured

Copyright: PR Newswire Source: PR Newswire Wordcount: 1307 Metro Atlanta school children to write about the benefits of exploitation; top essayists honored at Friday luncheon before the ING Georgia

ING Names Winners of "ING Run For Something

Copyright: PR Newswire Source: PR Newswire Wordcount: 1307 Metro Atlanta school

Copyright: The Associated Press. All rights reserved. May This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Source: Associated Press Wordcount: Obama willing to represent the

AP Political NewsBrief at 4:01 pm EDT

Copyright: The Associated Press. All rights reserved. May This material may not

TALLAHASSEE - Floridians dealing with the mess of Chinese drywall could be facing a double-whammy, the state's insurance commissioner said Tuesday. Not only do the insurers have no obligation to

Toxic Drywall Might Have Insurance Repercussions

TALLAHASSEE - Floridians dealing with the mess of Chinese drywall could be

HARTFORD, Conn. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - The Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc. (NYSE: HIG) announced today that it has been named one of the world s most ethical companies Ethisphere Institute for

The Hartford Named One Of The World's Most Ethical

HARTFORD, Conn. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - The Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.

NEW DELHI, INDIA -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 06/03/09 -- Analyst Choice has combined some of the best financial and technical minds worldwide to bring you an array of free quality equity research and

AnalystChoice.com Free Investment Opinion on PGR, NWL,

NEW DELHI, INDIA -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 06/03/09 -- Analyst Choice has combined

Copyright: The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Source: Associated Press Wordcount: Among the earnings stories for

Earnings roundup: DuPont, Delta Air Lines

Copyright: The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be

MILWAUKEE_Private provider of mortgage insurance MGIC Investment Corp. 's loss for the second quarter widened, the company said Thursday that crimes have increased due to rising unemployment, falling

MGIC 2Q loss widens, plans to shift new business

MILWAUKEE_Private provider of mortgage insurance MGIC Investment Corp. 's loss

MOST POPULAR