Hangover, do you think there is any way you can give this a rest for a while? Or at least, leave the hurricane thread and start your own thread? It was getting annoying and now it's getting very annoying.
We will be leaving to our home in Florida around the 10th of October. If it does go up the east coast, we can kiss everything goodbye unless it weakens a whole lot. I don't know which is worst. Sitting up here in NY or being down there going nuts worrying about where to go to get away from this monster.
Drink that vodka now, jujube, and keep your fingers crossed that it stays south.
After the 2004 Hurricanes my homeowners insurance went from about $600 a year to $1600 a year. And that was without me filing a claim and being on high ground 75 miles inland. And it never went down again.
My boss at the time was living on Vero Beach and commuting. His went up to $10,000 a year. But he was a real player. He got hit by two hurricanes and probably made about $30-$50,000 off of them. He really knew how to play the system. On both mandatory evacuations he rented a motor home and went on vacation. Once to Chicago, and once out to Nevada. All paid for by insurance. Plus he got two free chainsaws and two free generators from FEMA. He had a contractor buddy who repaired his house for about 1/2 of what he got from his insurance. After the Hurricane season was over he bought a bunch of new clothes and a new truck.
Ya gotta remember this was right before the 2004 election. And Bush and his brother Jeb, who was governor of Florida at the time made sure Florida got taken care of big time.
Why in the world does Florida (and Houston, and wherever else) allow people to build on land that has been flooded over and over? This makes no sense to me. Don't they have to get building permits, etc.? I saw one guy on one of the video news things (I think he was in Houston) who was saying how this was the fourth time he had been wiped out by floods and he was going to rebuild. I just don't understand that. He didn't look or sound like a wealthy guy playing the system, but who knows; the wealthy guys aren't running around in their $2,000 suits in that kind of weather. I do believe I'd move somewhere else, no matter what my ties to the area were.
Anyway, my point is, does owning the piece of land in the middle of the flood plain give one the legal right to keep building on it?
One thing I heard during the Texas floods was that some of the Houston residential areas have been built below the large reservoirs...which even the Army Corp of Engineers had designated as a Flood Plain many years ago. That should have told both the suburb developers, AND the people buying these houses that there was a high degree if risk involved. Obviously, any zoning restrictions were either ignored, or bypassed, to allow some of these areas to be built...if such restrictions even existed to begin with.
I will be quite surprised if home insurance doesn't rise substantially in the next year or two....all over the nation...to help offset the huge costs associated with these storms.
One thing I heard during the Texas floods was that some of the Houston residential areas have been built below the large reservoirs...which even the Army Corp of Engineers had designated as a Flood Plain many years ago. That should have told both the suburb developers, AND the people buying these houses that there was a high degree if risk involved. Obviously, any zoning restrictions were either ignored, or bypassed, to allow some of these areas to be built...if such restrictions even existed to begin with.
I will be quite surprised if home insurance doesn't rise substantially in the next year or two....all over the nation...to help offset the huge costs associated with these storms.
Houston has no zoning regulations....the city is free from that 'government restriction'![]()