Iowa officials estimate it will cost $15 million to bring the state up to speed on flood plain maps.
Only 50 of Iowa’s 99 counties have complete maps that meet federal standards.
The outdated or incomplete maps are problems because large parts of the state face unknown risks and don’t qualify for federal flood insurance.
Some families whose homes were damaged or destroyed by this year’s flood say they couldn’t buy flood insurance because they didn’t live in communities or counties covered by the National Flood Insurance Program.
Lori McDaniel of the Iowa Department of Resources told a flood task force on Wednesday that the cost to upgrade maps would be $150,000 per county, for a total of nearly $15 million. She says it’s too early to determine if updated maps could have prevented flood damage.
Topics Flood
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Travelers: Vendor Issues Over Half of Wedding Insurance Claims in 2025
Sentry to Sponsor PGA Tournament at Torrey Pines
Acrisure Goes After Former Owners of Businesses it Acquired for Leaving to Compete
Georgia Brokers and Agents Alarmed After Court Ruling Expands Liability for Them 

