Arid Regions Policy Committee

Agenda

January 4, 2011

9:00 – 10:00 AM Pacific Time

The call in number is 218-936-4700 access code is 27376.

1.  Introductions and Welcome

2.  Solicitation of a volunteer to take summary notes and post them on the Arid Regions page.

3.  Status of Solicitation of Liaisons between Arid Regions Associations and Arid Region Committees:

a.  Diane Calhoun, Chapter Director for Regions 4 & 6, and Brad Anderson Chapter Director for Regions 7 & 8, have offered to participate on future Arid Regions monthly conference calls.

4.  Status of Alluvial Fan Discussion Paper

5.  Initial review of the draft Erosion Zone White Paper (attached)

6.  Solicitation of an Arid Regions focused presentation for ASFPM conference session in Louisville.

7.  Identify Action Items

8.  Next meeting date

Riverine Erosion Hazards & Floodplain Management: A White Paper

ASFPM Arid Regions Committee

Lead Author: Jon Fuller/ JE Fuller/Hydrology & Geomorphology, Inc.

Introduction

Riverine erosion is a significant, but unstudied, flood risk for many NFIP communities. In 1999, FEMA reported that “approximately one-third of the nation’s streams experience severe erosion problems” resulting in $450 million dollars of erosion-related damages, over half of which occurs in the arid southwest and in the northwest.[1] Riverine erosion may be even more hazardous than flood inundation for the following reasons:

·  Riverine erosion can damage homes elevated well above the regulatory water surface elevation – homes outside the regulatory floodplain can be destroyed when the river banks migrate laterally.

·  Property damaged by flood inundation can sometimes be considered a total loss, but property damaged by riverine erosion is not only destroyed, the land itself may be completely washed away leaving no chance to rebuild, let alone recover any property contents.

·  Riverine erosion can occur progressively during floods smaller than the 100-year flood, resulting in significant cumulative river migration which destroys homes and property.

Despite these very real, extreme hazards, riverine erosion hazard zones are currently not shown on the FIRM, flood insurance does not cover riverine erosion damage, and risk of erosion is not considered in the determination of flood insurance rates. Furthermore, despite NFIP directives that communities should be managing erosion hazard areas, clear guidance from FEMA is lacking on how such flood risks are to be managed. The goals of this white paper is to encourage ASFPM member communities and FEMA to improve tools for delineating and managing riverine erosion hazard areas.

Background

  1. National Flood Insurance Act, 1968 – Creates NFIP
  2. Upton-Jones Amendment, 1988 – Authorized FEMA to provide insurance for structures subject to imminent collapse due to erosion. Designed for coastal areas, but didn’t exclude riverine.
  3. Riverine Erosion Hazard Analysis (REHA) Feasibility Study
  4. Done in response to National Flood Insurance Reform Act (1994), Section 577 (technical feasibility of mapping REHA)
  5. Conclusion: Mapping Riverine Erosion Hazards is Feasible
  6. NFIP – 44 CFR
  7. Part 60.10
  8. Part 60.24

Problem Statement

·  Insurance Available for Erosion Damage?

·  Property Lost, Not Just Damaged

·  Damage Occurs Outside Regulatory Floodplain

·  Damage Occurs at Flows Less Than 1% Peak

·  Case Histories

o  St. George, Utah 2005 Flood

o  City of Tucson, 1983 Flood

o  Salt Lake City, 1980’s Floods

Current Practice

·  Actions by Local Communities

o  City of Austin, Texas

o  King County, Washington

o  Maricopa County, Arizona

o  Pima County, Arizona

o  Salt Lake County

o  Washington County, Utah (St George, Santa Clara)

o  State of Vermont

o  State of New Hampshire

o  State of Arizona

o  AMAFCA, New Mexico

·  Local Riverine Erosion Management Strategies

o  Development Setbacks

o  Erosion Hazard Zones

o  Meander Corridors

Opportunities

·  Clarification of existing NFIP regulations

·  Consistency with coastal erosion NFIP policies

·  Coordination with existing State & Local programs

·  RiskMAP framework

o  Multi-hazard delineations

o  More comprehensive depiction of flood risk

Recommendations

·  Clarify NFIP regulations with respect to management of erosion hazard zones.

·  Specifically include riverine erosion as a flood hazard to be managed by NFIP communities

·  Add direction for riverine erosion hazard delineation in FEMA Guidelines & Specifications

o  Consistent standard required everywhere

o  FEMA must be big brother, require delineations

o  Methodology: not one size fits all

·  Develop management recommendations for NFIP communities

o  FIRM Zones

o  Zone ER – Riverine Erosion Zone

o  LOMR rules for ER

·  Make insurance available for riverine erosion

·  Methodology

o  Numerical Methods to Quantify Hazard

o  Engineering Guidelines for Analysis of Structural Measures

o  Review Checklist

·  Training – Identification, Analysis, Review

o  Agency

o  Consultants

[1] 1998 dollars. FEMA, 1999, Riverine Erosion Hazard Area Mapping Feasibility Study.