I don't have flood insurance, because in my part of the Vegas valley, it would be a 10K year event for me to flood, given the massive and deep culvert* about 5 football fields from my house, and also all the houses on my street are built above street level, for drainage purposes.
That said? In different parts of my valley, it really is a necessity, even as much as the valley has done for flood control. And given where I'm seriously considering retiring, I'll totally be getting it.
Back to California, as these sorts of storms become more common with climate change? Yes, everybody who's not east of the High Sierra needs to consider it.
*Said culvert is as wide as a 2 lane street and deep enough to put a 2 story house in. There's also a 30 foot (9M) elevation gain between my house and the top of the culvert, so yes, if flooded hard enough to overtop that? Holy. Shitballs.
Also, I will say that my greater metro area makes national or international news about every 5 to 10 years for flooding. The floods happen in areas where the flood control hasn't been completed, or on the Vegas Strip, which, some 60 years ago was built over the top of the wash that funnels water through that part of the valley -- at the place where it formed a sort of internal delta, so it was deceptive just how much water came through when it poured rain. The first 2 floors of the LINQ parking garage are considered a part of the flood control district, and every local knows that when it rains, you don't go there.
The flood control district would dearly love to demolish that parking garage and install the drainage that is needed, but the property owners don't want to sell, eminent domain would be astounding, and attempts to partner the cost of a demo and rebuild have never succeeded. ~sigh~
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Date: 2023-01-26 04:21 pm (UTC)That said? In different parts of my valley, it really is a necessity, even as much as the valley has done for flood control. And given where I'm seriously considering retiring, I'll totally be getting it.
Back to California, as these sorts of storms become more common with climate change? Yes, everybody who's not east of the High Sierra needs to consider it.
*Said culvert is as wide as a 2 lane street and deep enough to put a 2 story house in. There's also a 30 foot (9M) elevation gain between my house and the top of the culvert, so yes, if flooded hard enough to overtop that? Holy. Shitballs.
Also, I will say that my greater metro area makes national or international news about every 5 to 10 years for flooding. The floods happen in areas where the flood control hasn't been completed, or on the Vegas Strip, which, some 60 years ago was built over the top of the wash that funnels water through that part of the valley -- at the place where it formed a sort of internal delta, so it was deceptive just how much water came through when it poured rain. The first 2 floors of the LINQ parking garage are considered a part of the flood control district, and every local knows that when it rains, you don't go there.
The flood control district would dearly love to demolish that parking garage and install the drainage that is needed, but the property owners don't want to sell, eminent domain would be astounding, and attempts to partner the cost of a demo and rebuild have never succeeded. ~sigh~