Insurers Are Deserting Homeowners as Climate Shocks Worsen | Without insurance, it’s impossible to get a mortgage; without a mortgage, most Americans can’t buy a home.
Buy for cash, rent until the next natural disaster destroys the building and… then what?
If we're talking about Blackrock/large REITs, the answer is "get bailed out by the government (despite it abandoning the little people to the wolves) because you're in the big club 'too big to fail.'"
This will certainly depend on where you live but my impression is that generally you only need to have it when you have a mortgage specifically because the banks require it as a way to protect themselves. If you pay cash nobody cares.
"Last fall, the Senate Budget Committee demanded the country’s largest insurance companies provide the number of nonrenewals by county and year. The result is a map that tracks the climate crisis in a new way."
Actually passing a law or spending money to change the situation would mean getting the House of Representatives on board, and Republicans have a majority there.
I've been working my way toward Minnesota for a while now, and this confirms my goal.
Lots of fresh water, waaaay lower housing/rental costs than (every?) other blue state, its a blue state so I qualify for SNAP and other kinds of assistance (I don't in red states as they set their income thresholds waaay lower)...
Oh, and the place isn't burning down/flooding.
I probably can't afford Minneapolis/St. Paul, but Rochester looks decent.
I live in the Rochester area. It is nice. However, it is a city run by mayo, and it has its issues, but the Mayo Clinic won’t let them become headlines.
I noticed that quite quickly just from the city's wiki page, that it's dominated by the Mayo Clinic...
But I don't know too much about MN other than very top down, broad metrics kinda stuff.
(Also I'm from Seattle originally and am entirely used to the local media being basically, if not literally, just on the payroll for Boeing, Starbucks, Amazon, MSFT...)
Are there any other comparably sized towns/cities, where one could rent a studio or one bed at or under $750?
So far the other option I've considered is Duluth, but it seems to have a far smaller rental market at $750 or below.
...
Also just in general, more comparative benefits I've noticed for living in Minnesota:
Rental property tax rebate.
Basically, you, as a renter, get a rebate each year based on a portion of an estimate of how much of your rent goes toward paying your landlord's property taxes.
If my understanding is correct, this is actual cash given back to you, not just a tax credit. Though that may only work that way for someone like me, on SSDI... probably I should double check that.
Also, it seems like most of MN uses a 2.5x income to rent ratio requirement, as opposed to basically every blue state which uses a 3x ratio.
Shit like that makes a considerable difference when you're on disability.
Well, some of the locations involved have simply become uninsurable. What do you expect that the insurance companies do? Pay for a brand new home every other year, just because it was burned down or blown away in a storm again? No commercial insurance ever could afford this.
Just like US health insurance, where the private companies don't take people with prior issues or handicaps. If you want them to be insured, you need a nationwide, mandatory insurance to spread the risk among many.
And even with a nationalized insurance coverage, some people might be forced to pay more than others, for unsuitable home locations with home insurances or unhealthy behavior (alcohol, tobacco, or drug use) with health insurance.
That does not help as long as idiots build wooden sheds as "houses" right on the middle of woods that are known to burn down every few years. Common sense is rather rare with some people, and you cannot expect other people to pay for it via their insurance.