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Flood Insurance as a Component of Land Use Management*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2015

Ronald D. Lacewell
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural Economics, Texas A&M University
John G. McNeely
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural Economics, Texas A&M University

Extract

Floods will continue to cause damage as long as development continues upon flood-prone lands. Inevitably, flooding occurs, damage ensues and there is personal suffering and loss. A burden of rescue and relief operations falls on all taxpayers.

Flood control projects cannot protect against all damage, and not all flood hazard areas are amenable to flood control projects. An alternative to continued construction of engineering works for flood protection is flood plain management. To be effective, this must be brought about through political and legal means. Its purposes are to minimize the consequences of flooding and to achieve, in the long run, an optimum use of the flood plains.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Southern Agricultural Economics Association 1976

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Footnotes

*

Technical Article No. 12226 of the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station.

References

[1] Allee, David J.Policy Toward Flood Plain Management,” Proceedings of Special Lecture Series No. 5 of the Center for Research in Water Resources at the University of Texas at Austin titled “More Conflicts in Water Resources Planning, What Are the Remedies,” November 19-20, 1970, pp. 6276.Google Scholar
[2] U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. “Flood Plain-Handle with Care,” Department of the Army EP 1105-2-4, March 1974.Google Scholar
[3] Eidman, Vernon R. and Lacewell, Ronald D.. “A Model for Estimating Agricultural Flood Damages,” Oklahoma Agricultural Experiment Station, Oklahoma State University, Technical Bulletin T-136, April 1974.Google Scholar
[4] Lovell, Troy Lynn. “Flood Plain Management—Nonstructural Approaches to Planning,” Paper presented at the Urban Planning and Development Technical Group, Texas Section American Society of Civil Engineering, Spring Meeting, Austin, Texas, April 1973.Google Scholar
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[7] U.S. Congress, House, Task Force on Federal Flood Control Policy. “A Unified National Program for Managing Flood Losses,” House Document No. 465, 89th Congress, 2nd Session, August 10, 1966.Google Scholar
[8] U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on Banking and Currency. “Insurance and Other Programs for Financial Assistance to Flood Victims,” Committee Print, 89th Congress, 2nd Session, September 1966.Google Scholar
[9] U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. “National Flood Insurance Program,” Washington, D.C., January 1974.Google Scholar
[10] White, Gilbert F.Flood Hazards in the United States: A Research Assessment,” Institute of Behavioral Science, Program on Technology, Environment and Man, Monograph #NSF-RA-E-74-006, The University of Colorado, 1975.Google Scholar