Wicker, Hyde-smith Introduce Bill to Protect Flood Insurance Policyholders

Press Release

Date: March 28, 2022
Location: Washington, DC
Issues: Environment

U.S. Senators Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and Cindy Hyde-Smith, R-Miss., today introduced legislation to give policyholders more options as the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) prepares for a nationwide implementation of its new National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) premium rate structure this week.

The Homeowner Flood Insurance Transparency and Protection Act would allow NFIP policyholders to retain existing premium rates rather than being forced into new NFIP Risk Rating 2.0 (RR2.0) rates until FEMA meets certain accountability and transparency requirements.

"Many Mississippi communities are at risk of flooding and rely on the National Flood Insurance Program as a lifeline. I have heard from residents across the state that they are concerned about rising flood insurance premium rates under FEMA's new Risk Rating 2.0 system. Mississippians should not be penalized with high insurance rates calculated under FEMA's bureaucratic process," Wicker said. "I am proud to join Senator Hyde-Smith and our Senate colleagues to introduce this bill which would provide the transparency our state needs to see from FEMA."

"FEMA is charging full force to impose Risk Rating 2.0 no matter the consequences. This legislation would protect homeowners and the overall health of the NFIP while FEMA responds to outstanding bipartisan concerns and questions about the methodology and rollout of this program," Hyde-Smith, the lead sponsor of the bill, said. "Policyholders deserve to know how much they are going to be paying over the full course of this program and why, especially during a time of record inflation and gas prices."

FEMA is on course to fully implement RR2.0 nationwide on Friday, April 1. It started the RR2.0 rollout in October despite warnings that it will increase premium costs for almost 80 percent of policyholders and that price increases could drive as many as 900,000 of them to cancel flood insurance coverage--including an estimated 60,000 in Mississippi.

The legislation is intended to protect policyholders while forcing FEMA to address concerns that it developed RR2.0 without adhering to statutes requiring:

Public notice and comment
Established policyholder premium appeals process
Economic impact analysis
Independent peer review
Assurance of data reliability
In addition to Wicker, U.S. Senators, Bill Cassidy, R-La., John Kennedy, R-La., and Marco Rubio, R-Fla. are original cosponsors.


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