From the Rebuild Iowa Office forwarded by Jane Clark
July 30, 2010
IOWA MUST TAKE ACTION NOW TO MINIMIZE FLOOD RISK
Yet another round of increased precipitation and flooding this summer
reminds us more must be done to minimize future flood risk in Iowa.
In 2008, tornadoes and widespread flooding resulted in the largest disaster
in Iowa’s history. More than 40,000 Iowans were directly impacted by the
disasters. Statewide losses were estimated between $8 and $10 billion with
85 of Iowa’s 99 counties receiving a presidential disaster declaration. To
this day, the disaster remains one of the biggest disasters in U.S. history
when calculating damage to public infrastructure and utilities.
The Rebuild Iowa Office (RIO) was established as a temporary state agency to
coordinate the state’s 2008 disaster recovery efforts and identify ways to
leave Iowa safer, stronger and better prepared for future disasters. This
summer’s flooding reminds us that we must remain vigilant to ensure this
charge is met.
Immediately after the disasters, the Rebuild Iowa Advisory Commission
incorporated input from thousands of Iowans to outline 12 overarching
recommendations for long-term recovery, identifying everything from housing
to case management to floodplain management and regional planning. The Iowa
Legislature has taken steps to address every one of these recommendations,
but work still remains, especially in reducing future flood risk.
Comprehensive watershed and floodplain management and mitigation of flood
risk must be a top priority for Iowa’s leaders.
Unfortunately, many of these recommendations have been heard before. After
the 1993 floods in Iowa, the Iowa Flood Disaster Report included the
following among its recommendations:
Iowa could benefit from an expanded, comprehensive, and fully integrated
floodplain management program… The State of Iowa should review the
floodplain management responsibility within the state and revise necessary
laws to create a viable, effective program with adequate resources.
These recommendations were not acted upon in the aftermath of the 1993
floods. Similarly, a White House committee issued its own set of federal
recommendations which saw no serious consideration at the time.
Since those state and federal reports were published, Iowa has received 13
presidential disaster declarations for flooding, and the state is projected
to receive increased precipitation in the coming years. We cannot allow
ourselves to once again forget the lessons we have learned. We must take
action now to find solutions that will mitigate future flood damage to
homes, farms, businesses, communities and our state.
Remember, it’s not a matter of “if” the next disaster will strike, but
“when.”
Lieutenant General Ron Dardis
Rebuild Iowa Office Executive Director
Contact:
Juli Probasco-Sowers, RIO Media Specialist
(515) 242-5234 (o); (515) 249-1714 (c)
[log in to unmask]; www.rio.iowa.gov
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