For immediate release
For more information, contact
Tammy Snodgrass at (573) 265-2993 or tsnodgrass@meramecregion.org
For immediate release
For more information, contact
Tammy Snodgrass at (573) 265-2993 or tsnodgrass@meramecregion.org
PHELPS COUNTY—Major flooding in Missouri can occur at any time of the year and cause millions of dollars of damage over a wide area. Missouri home and landowners should get ready for the rainy season by making sure their flood insurance is up-to-date and checking in with their Phelps County Flood administrator if they have any questions.
“Flood insurance helps businesses and private citizens recover after a flood,” said Randy Verkamp, Phelps County presiding commissioner.
While severe flooding usually comes in cycles, it is not limited to certain decades or areas, warns the National Weather Service. Since January 1993, Missouri received 29 disaster declarations involving flooding that exceeded local and state response capabilities, marking the most recent for the flood event from Dec. 23, 2015, through January 2016. Each year, Missouri communities experience numerous localized flooding events that do not merit a federal disaster declaration.
Residents in Beaver Creek Subdivision south of Rolla were victims of localized flooding in 2002 and 2015. Residents in Jerome were victims of flooding in 2008, 2011, 2013 and 2015, and residents of Newburg were victims of flooding in 2013 and 2015, along with many residents of rural Phelps County. The flooding that occurred in August 2013 was unprecedented, and many homeowners who had never had flooding issues before were faced with water in their homes and the damage it created. In 2015, flood levels in some locations rivaled the 2013 record.
If there is not a federal disaster declaration, flood insurance is the only financial protection for personal losses. Flood insurance is not provided in the basic homeowner’s, business or tenant’s policy. Flood insurance must be purchased under a separate policy through your local insurance agent in participating communities.
In Missouri, nearly 600 flood-prone cities and counties participate in the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). When a community enters the NFIP, it agrees to regulate floodplain development; in return it also makes flood insurance available in that community. Phelps County joined the NFIP in 1984.
“Phelps County participates in the flood insurance program, and homeowners have the option to buy the insurance,” Verkamp said.
Residents need not live in an actual floodplain to be exposed to the hazard of serious flooding.
For more information on flood plain regulations in Phelps County, persons should call Meramec Regional Planning Commission (MRPC) at 573-265-2993. MRPC serves as Phelps County’s floodplain coordinator.
Formed in 1969, MRPC is a voluntary council of governments serving Crawford, Dent, Gasconade, Maries, Osage, Phelps, Pulaski and Washington counties and their respective cities. A professional staff of 23, directed by the MRPC board, offers technical assistance and services, such as grant preparation and administration, housing assistance, transportation planning, environmental planning, ordinance codification, business loans and other services to member communities.
To keep up with the latest MRPC news and events, visit the MRPC website atwww.meramecregion.orgor on Facebook at www.facebook.com/meramecregion.