Archive for the ‘New Listings’

FEMA redraws Yolo flood maps: Thousands may have to buy insurance

March 01, 2009 By: Don Guthrie Category: Buyers, Davis Community, Davis Real Estate, Homeowners, New Listings 1 Comment →

By Jonathan Edwards | Enterprise staff writer | March 01, 2009 00:05
More than 50,000 Yolo County residents could find themselves shelling out upwards of $1,000 next year on flood insurance.  Potential first-time buyers include the entire population of West Sacramento, Knights Landing, Yolo, Clarksburg and a third of El Macero.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency is updating the county’s flood maps, which determine where there’s a one percent chance of flooding in any given year.  The so-called 100-year flood is the threshold many banks use when requiring homeowners to purchase government-backed flood insurance.  FEMA delivered draft maps in December to local planning departments. A three-month public comment period extends to late May or early June.  Based on public input, FEMA will issue final versions around August. Six months later the maps will take effect.

Yolo County lies in a natural floodplain. Flood zones already run along the Colusa Basin Drain near Dunnigan and Knights Landing, Cache Creek (including north Woodland), and the Sacramento River (including the Yolo Bypass)  The current flood zone stops at the western levee along the Yolo Bypass.
Under the new maps, that flood zone would stretch westward to include thousands of acres currently outside the floodplain.

Nothing has happened to the integrity of the levees, said Will Marshall, an assistant city engineer for the city of Davis. ‘This doesn’t mean the levees aren’t going to hold water back.’  After Hurricane Katrina and the 2005 levee failures in New Orleans, FEMA decided to enforce quality standards established in 1986, Marshall said.  Yolo County’s 215-mile levee system is controlled by a hodgepodge of owners ranging from the state Department of Water Resources to private landowners.  ‘FEMA told the owners, ‘If you don’t certify the levees to the 1986 standards, we’re going to pretend the levees aren’t there … If you can’t demonstrate that it’s a good assumption that they can withstand the one-percent event, we’re going to assume they can’t,’ ‘ Marshall said.  None of the owners certified their levees.

The quality of the levees hasn’t changed, but tens of thousands of people will have to buy flood insurance come spring 2010.  Marshall estimated about 100 homes in El Macero would fall in the new flood zone.  That could cost them as much as $2,721, said Duff Devine, a local agent who deals in flood insurance.
Devine crunched some numbers on a few El Macero homes that would fall in the new flood zone.  Right now they could buy flood insurance for $348 a year as part of a ‘preferred risk’ policy.  That number could skyrocket eight fold to $2,721 if the draft maps still include El Macero when they take effect.

‘It’s huge,’ Devine said. ‘That’s the biggest premium I’ve ever seen in my time doing this.  Devine questioned the numbers - which he stressed were only hypothetical - saying homeowners typically see premiums jump three or four times.  Residents could avoid higher costs by purchasing flood insurance before the maps take effect, said Eric Simmons, the FEMA engineer for Yolo County. The lower cost would be grandfathered in even after they fall in a high hazard zone.  ‘The idea is to reward loyal policy holders,’ Simmons continued.
Buying flood insurance is a good idea even without the flood maps, said Mark Cocke, Woodland’s senior civil engineer.  ‘People make the assumption that they’re protected because they see a levee,’ Cocke said. ‘But every levee is going to have an event that exceeds its design capacity, and when that happens, bad things are going to happen.  ‘Every levee has a failure point,’ he added, ‘and people need to know that.’

This Weeks New Listings

July 20, 2008 By: Don Guthrie Category: New Listings 1 Comment →

AS OF JULY 20th, 2008

Don Guthrie

Listing #

Price

Address

Bed

Bah

Lot

Sq. Ft.

Area

80069700

$679,000

1215 Eureka

3

2

.183

1850

Central

80070045

$799,000

337 D St.

3

1

.135

960

Central

80071846

$310,000

2177 Bella Casa

3

2

.021

1200

North

80070906

$348,000

116 Huerta

2

1

.081

900

North

80072697

$358,000

120 Huerta

2

1

.08

900

North

80070944

$457,000

2946 Quail

3

2

.118

1354

North

80072126

$565,000

246 Baja

4

3

.073

2285

North

80071991

$539,900

4019 Vistosa

4

3

.15

2040

East

80070031

$625,000

1423 Escolar

3-4

3

.120

1919

East

80071822

$449,000

1007 Cabot

4

2

.164

1428

West

80071211

$515,000

3467 Oyster Bay

3

2

.127

1389

West

80071076

$849,000

1429 Yukon

5

3

.165

3175

West

80070709

$294,900

3133 Nantucket

2

2

.032

819

South

80071647

$449,000

3220 Lillard

3-4

2

.172

1808

South

80072517

$497,000

1215 Evans

3

2

.160

1504

South

80067557

$559,000

4042 El Macero

3

2

.173

1641

South

80072570

$1,149,000

5405 Tufts

4-5

4

.22

3507

South