Floodplain Management
Floodplain Management
A floodplain is a land area subject to overflow from a river or lake, and to a variety of human management schemes. The management strategies encompass a spectrum from leaving the area in its natural state to comprehensive changes in both the water flow and the societal uses of the land.
Floods
A flood commonly is defined as any level of flow that exceeds the natural carrying capacity of a river and that inundates the adjoining low-lying land (i.e., the floodplain) which ordinarily is dry, although some floodplains have large areas of wetlands . Of all the natural hazards, floods are among the most widespread and most ruinous to life and property, particularly as more people live near water.
Floods strike in many forms, including sea surges driven by winds, or tsunamis churned by seismic activity. By far the most frequent, however, and standing in a class by themselves, are the inland, fresh-water floods that are caused by rain, by melting snow and ice, or by the bursting of human-made
structures such as reservoirs or levees. Such floods can be described in terms of:
- The height and frequency of the overflow;
- The speed of change in water level;
- Flow velocity; and
- Content of sediment and debris.
A small mountain stream may go over its banks a few feet in a few hours on the average of once in 50 years, carrying rocks and forest debris. In contrast, a large stream in an alluvial delta may rise over adjoining lands as much as 10 feet during several weeks, carrying a large volume of sediment, with this event also occurring on the average of once in 50 years.
Floods commonly are described in three ways:
- The rate at which they rise and fall (e.g., a flash flood may rise in as little as an hour);
- The maximum height of inundation (e.g., 2 feet); and
- The average frequency of occurrence of a flood of given magnitude(e.g., a 25-year flood, 100-year flood , or 500-year flood).
Benefits and Costs
The effects of flooding on a floodplain may include the following:
- Any benefits or costs for natural ecosystems , such as soil moisture and sediment deposition;
- Any benefits or costs for societal systems, such as an increase in crop production or benefit to grassland; and
- A long list of societal costs including human life, illness, emergency response, property and crop loss, and interruption of business and social activities.
Because there are no universally accepted monetary criteria for measuring such benefits and costs, it is not practical to compute fundamentally consistent numerical estimates of the effects of flooding in all situations. Criteria vary from place to place, and over time.
Management Strategies
In the United States, there are at least eight major types of societal strategies for managing floodplains. Each involves a decision, either planned or unplanned, by a landowner, government entity, or combination of land management agencies regarding the benefits and costs that will be promoted by a given system of land-use management and the land's vulnerability to flooding. Each strategy implicitly involves recognition of the extent to which the various stakeholders involved are vulnerable to flood benefits and losses.
A management practice pursued by many communities around the world is to incorporate a combination of some of the above flood-related measures in plans for guiding urban development. A major part of some of those plans is the designation of areas to receive specified degrees of structural flood protection (e.g., floodwalls) along with prohibition of new urban development in hazardous areas where structural protection measures are not planned.
Ecosystem Conservation.
Maintaining the natural ecosystem for beneficial purposes of wildlife conservation , human recreation, and enhancement of water quality may result in no explicit effort to change the flood regime or to alter vulnerability to benefits and costs from flooding. This strategy is present in some public parks and wildlife preserves and in reserves of land that might, unless retained in their natural state, cause higher flood flows or higher sediment loads downstream.
Agricultural Uses.
Some agricultural uses of floodplains may result in net human gains, taking into account the yields of suitable crops and pasture that benefit from average flood flows, and also allowing for occasional losses from large or unseasonal flows. There are many instances of cultivation of floodplains in which the risk to life and property is minimized and the gains in agricultural production are maximized.
Urban Open Spaces.
Numerous urban areas contain small floodplains that are occupied for purposes that are not highly vulnerable to flood loss. For example, city parks, golf courses, playing fields for schools, nature preserves, and lawns for suburban residences may be used when there is no flooding, but avoided at flood time.
Occupied Urban Areas.
More common in urban areas than open spaces are partial or complete residential, commercial, or industrial sections which are vulnerable to flooding and yet not subject to flood control, and in which there is no organized community effort to reduce the risk of loss. The occupants simply bear the loss without any planned response. As an extreme, they may consequently lose all their belongings and resources in a disastrous flood.
Property Owners.
Property occupants acting individually and without joining in any community response can adopt one or more management strategies to cope with flood risk. They can set aside reserve funds to offset the
possible loss when it occurs. They can attempt to flood-proof their property by a variety of measures, including:
- Elevating machinery and vulnerable equipment above prospective flood elevation;
- Changing the location of family papers and other vulnerable objects;
- Arranging vulnerable property so that it may be moved on short notice out of water's reach; and
- Sandbagging around their home if floodwaters threaten.
In building new structures, property owners can locate floors above the prospective flood level, or design furnaces and other critical features so that they are protected from high waters. This flood-proofing depends on preventive action and on receipt of early warning of imminent flooding.
Community Action.
Community groups may promote and maintain, in cooperation with state and national agencies, systems for the issuance and dissemination of flood warning, and for the provision of emergency services to facilitate evacuation, rescue, and rehabilitation services.
Construction.
All of the above actions assume there will be a flood, with little human intervention to prevent the flood event itself. But the most attractive set of measures to many communities involves engineering construction to reduce the frequency and magnitude of flooding. This has been a favored strategy for public expenditure where the anticipated construction costs are less than the expected loss reduction.
Construction measures may include:
- Channel enlargement and channel straightening;
- The construction of levees and floodwalls; and
- Flow detention in reservoirs that are either single-purpose or multi-purpose.
Insurance.
Until the mid-twentieth century, insurance against flood losses was rarely available in the United States from private insurance companies, even though it could be purchased in some other countries. This situation changed drastically in the United States in 1968, when the U.S. Congress enacted legislation providing for a federally financed National Flood Insurance Program. Under this program, each community with identified flood problems would be provided with maps of its hazardous areas. The community would then be given the opportunity for its property owners to purchase insurance against flood losses and encouraged to adopt various mitigation measures. Properties already built in flood hazard zones were given subsidized premium rates. Newly constructed properties were to be insured at actuarial rates.
To qualify for participation a community must, among other requirements, regulate land use in the 100-year flood zone. Many maps also show various zones with probability of flooding as infrequently as once in 500 years, on average.
One of the federal task forces recommending initiation of publicly supported flood insurance in 1966 suggested that the effort be experimental because it might prove to be counterproductive. Nevertheless, the authorized
program was initiated with selection of the 100-year flood as the criterion and without any analysis of the policy consequences until an assessment was begun in 2000.
Public Policy
In the United States, the unfolding of public policy with respect to floodplain management has involved three phases of emphasis, summarized as follows.
| Up to 1927 |
Choice of damage-reduction measures was by individual property owners or by local or federal agencies for scattered structural projects |
| 1928–1968 |
Emphasis upon structural measures—channels, levees, and dams—with major funding by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and cost-sharing with state and local agencies under the Flood Protection Act of 1936 as amended |
| 1968–present |
Continue structural measures supplemented by federally subsidized flood insurance on existing structures and more near-actuarial rates on new structures |
In recent years, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has placed increasing emphasis on encouraging communities to adopt and enforce plans that seek to reduce uneconomic flood losses through a combination of structural measures, land-use plans, emergency warning and response plans, and flood loss insurance. FEMA, an independent agency of the federal government that reports directly to the President, is tasked with responding to, planning for, recovering from, and mitigating against disaster. The beginnings of FEMA can be indirectly traced to the Congressional Act of 1803, the first piece of disaster legislation in the United States, and
directly to then-president Jimmy Carter's executive order in 1979 that centralized federal emergency functions from throughout the government into a new emergency management agency. Today, FEMA is a 2,500-person agency, supplemented by more than 5,000 standby disaster reservists that can be called upon in times of emergency.
see also Army Corps of Engineers, U.S.; Cost-Benefit Analysis; Integrated Water Resources Management; Land-Use Planning; River Basin Planning.
Gilbert F. White
Bibliography
Abramovitz, Janet. "Averting Natural Disasters." In State of the World—2001, ed.Lester R. Brown. Washington, D.C.: Worldwatch Institute, 2002.
Burton, Ian, Robert W. Kates, and Gilbert F. White. The Environment as Hazard, 2nd ed. New York: Guilford Press, 1993.
Chow, Ven-Te, ed. Handbook of Applied Hydrology. New York, McGraw-Hill, 1964.
Heinz Center for Science, Economics, and the Environment. The Hidden Costs of Coastal Hazards. Washington, D.C.: Island Press, 2000.
Parker, Dennis J., ed. Floods. London, U.K.: Routledge, 2000.
Yen, C. L., and Yen, Ben C. "A Study on the Effectiveness of Flood Mitigation Measures." In Rivertech: Proceeding of Rivertech '96: First International Conference on New/Emerging Concepts for Rivers. W. H. C. Maxwell, H. Preul, and G. E. Stout, eds. (1996):560–561.
Internet Resources
Association of State Floodplain Managers. <http://www.floods.org/>.
Federal Emergency Management Agency. <http://www.fema.gov>.
National Weather Service. <http://www.nws.noaa.gov>.
WHAT DO FLOODS COST?
Comprehensive estimates of actual flood losses are subject to great uncertainties. But two recent estimates of recorded flood damage are as follows, broken down into the United States and the rest of the world.
- For the United States: The average annual flood damages from 1929 to 1993 were estimated to decrease very slightly after normalizing for changes in gross national product. Annual flood losses totaled $5.2 billion during the period 1989 to 1998.
- For the World: Floods between 1950 and 2000 were estimated to account for one-third of all economic losses, half of all deaths, and 70 percent of all homelessness caused by extreme natural hazards.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
DAN TECHNOLOGY: Dan Technology user reveals what mamakes the vendor such a hit with customers.
M2 Presswire; 10/14/1999; 700+ words
; M2 PRESSWIRE-14 October 1999-DAN TECHNOLOGY: Dan Technology user reveals what makes the vendor such a hit with...COMMUNICATIONS LTD RDATE:141099 * "....whenever I recommend Dan to friends, I do so in the knowledge that they'll stay my...
|
|
-DAN: The toughest test of all
M2 Presswire; 7/6/1998; 700+ words
; M2 PRESSWIRE-6 July 1998-DAN: The toughest test of all (C)1994-98 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD RDATE:060798 -- Dan also performs consistently well in other...topping PC Magazine's poll year on year, Dan Technology has maintained a remarkably consistent...
|
|
Dans.com Offers Dads a Day Off, Personalized Packaging, and Fresh Chocolates for a Sweet Father's Day Treat.
PR Newswire; 6/12/2000; 700+ words
; ...to gift customization, Dan's Chocolates (www.dans.com), the online chocolatier...June 18, guests to the Dan's website (www.dans.com) can enter to win...It is a win-win." Dan's Chocolate's (www.dans.com) is the first online...
|
|
DAN SCHWOEGLER A FOURTH-GENERATION BOWLING PROPRIETOR, HE HAS A UNIQUE PERSPECTIVE ON THE HISTORY AND FUTURE OF THE INDUSTRY.(DAYBREAK)(KNOW YOUR MADISONIAN)(Column)
Newspaper article from: Wisconsin State Journal (Madison, WI); 4/27/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...president of Schwoegler's Park Towne Lanes, Dan Schwoegler spends countless hours behind...says, 'I need to get an adjustment from Dan.' " Then Schwoegler said with a laugh...parts. Through the generations - including Dan's great grandfather Tony, Tony's sons...
|
|
Dan Cassidy 1963-2008
Newspaper article from: Sun, The: Bolingbrook (IL); 9/19/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...we submit our thoughts about the passing of our friend Dan Cassidy. Dan has been a great friend and truly a part of our family...were lucky enough to have spent time with him. While Dan was born and raised in Illinois, he was truly a man of...
|
|
Dan-Web. (2002 Expo in Print).(company overview)
Magazine article from: Nonwovens Industry; 5/1/2002; 700+ words
; ...and a successful business. That is why Dan-Web maintains that "speed matters...gives you a higher profit. In recent years Dan-Web has put considerable resources into...especially the speed of production plants. Dan-Web's main aim in this process has been...
|
|
Du Racisme dans les Rapports entre Groupes Nationaux au Canada et en Belgique?
Magazine article from: Canadian Ethnic Studies Journal; 9/22/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...entre les deux principaux groupes nationaux dans ces pays, c'est-a-dire entre francophones...sans lien apparent avec le sujet traite. Dans cet article, nous presentons deux faits divers qui, dans chacun de ces pays, ont pris une ampleur...
|
|
Dan's Pass Not Safe In Vault
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 6/30/1992; ; 700+ words
; ...who's the world's greatest athlete. Dan's gone. Hasta Atlanta, baby. Shouldn...is short. Jump quick. Can you believe Dan O'Brien's strategic blunder of passing...a campaign to insinuate the only reason Dan failed to make the Olympic team was THE...
|
|
Mythe et litterature dans La Part du feu de Maurice Blanchot.(Critical Essay)
Magazine article from: The Romanic Review; 5/1/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...mythe" a partir de Blanchot, qui, dans La Part du feu (1) se refere au "mythe...inaccessible, et le silence qu'on trouve dans l'operation la plus immediate du langage...autre cote, de cette absence, glorifiee, dans, et par l'intermediaire des mots. Le...
|
|
Dan's our hometown man in the Stars final
Newspaper article from: The Nelson Mail; 5/30/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...this week when I turned on the TV and saw Dan Kendrick doing a handstand in Anzac Park...I was surprised to see the irrepressible Dan on Stars in Their Eyes. I did a story about...think I'd trust anyone who didn't like Dan. He is one of those guys that kind of defines...
|
|
Dan River Inc.
Book article from: International Directory of Company Histories
Dan River Inc. 2291 Memorial Drive Danville...Company Incorporated: 1909 as Riverside and Dan River Cotton Mills, Inc. Employees: 7...314129 Other Household Textile Product Mills Dan River Inc. manufactures apparel fabrics and...
|
|
Ma'dan(Marsh Arabs)
Encyclopedia entry from: Junior Worldmark Encyclopedia of World Cultures
Ma'dan(Marsh Arabs) PRONUNCIATION: mah-DAHN...Muslim) 1 • INTRODUCTION The Ma'dan, or Marsh Arabs inhabit the marshy area at...people with their own distinct culture. Ma'dan culture is based on the culture of the Bedu...
|
|
Seals, Dan
Book article from: Contemporary Musicians
Dan Seals Singer, songwriter For the Record… Selected discography Sources Singer and songwriter Dan Seals first came to fame as part of the pop duo England Dan and John Ford Coley. During the 1970s he and Coley released...
|
|
Amos, Dan 1951–
Book article from: International Directory of Business Biographies
Dan Amos1951– Chairman of the board...http://www.aflac.com. ■ Dan Amos's father, Paul, said that he raised...Family Life Assurance Company (AFLAC), but Dan Amos proved to be more than a scion taking...
|
|
Steely Dan
Dictionary entry from: Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Popular Musicians Since 1990
STEELY DAN Formed: 1971, New York City Members: Walter...singles since 1990: "Cousin Dupree" Steely Dan, Walter Becker's and Donald Fagen's thirty...immaculately turned musical arrangements. Steely Dan's output hardly fits a conventional template...
|