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------------------------------------------- Sally Anne Smith AIA Smith Architectural Studio Carmel CA ------------------------------------------- Here in California, where we have some nasty wild fires that can wipe out several hundred homes, the state has levied a tax on rural homeowners who live in wooded areas, to help finance the State Fire Department for the extra equipment and people needed to protect homes in rural wooded areas. People are not happy with it, but it is the price you pay to live in quiet and solitude outside of surburbia.
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------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 12-10-2012 08:23 From: Robert Smith Subject: Insurance Companies
A flood plain or coastal construction tax might sound like a good idea, but it is not. Politician's have proven themselves to be unable to control their greedlust for money, and they would rob this account. The same as politicians have done to Social Security and the same as NC politicians have done to our NC road maintenance funds.
------------------------------------------- Robert Smith AIA Architect Talley & Smith Architecture, Inc. Shelby NC -------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 12-07-2012 16:21 From: Harry Wright Subject: Insurance Companies
Another suggestion (sure to be unpopular/especially here in over-taxed NJ) would be to levy a tax/fee on properties constructed in floodplains that would go into FEMA coffers for purposes of storm damage remediation and/or protective infrastructure to prevent or lessen damage in these flood prone areas from the brunt of Mother Nature's fury. How to keep the politicians from robbing these funds to pay for other political purposes. ------------------------------------------- Harry Wright AIA Moorestown NJ -------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 12-06-2012 08:12 From: Dennis Hall Subject: Insurance Companies
David, I believe I have failed to make my point. Of course these ideas are unrealistic. We are not going to change the weather, nor are we going to stop the increase in regulations of building and development. My point was that actions have consequences and to provoke thought about how we build.I believe we need to take a lifecycle approach to designing and building.
New Orleans and New York are great cities and I am not suggesting abandoning development of these cities or others. I am suggesting smart development. The destroying of our dune system is not smart. Buildings that are constructed that are energy hogs, building envelopes that leak air and water, and structures that fail to resist design wind loads is just not smart.
As an architect who does a fair amount of building diagnostic work, I see to many buildings where the land is graded so that water flows back against the building, masonry walls without weepholes, windows and doors without flashing, buildings that are not accessible to those with physical disabilities, and building without required egress. I see plenty of litigation against developers, architects, contractors, and a line of insurance carriers. I believe much of this can be avoided if we just could change attitudes about building.
Perhaps this is unrealistic too. But if we don't start thinking and acting we will never change it.
------------------------------------------- Dennis J. Hall, FAIA, FCSI Chairman ' CEO Hall Architects, Inc. Charlotte NC -------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 12-05-2012 14:09 From: David Del Vecchio Subject: Insurance Companies
I would suggest that the idea that homes should not be allowed to be built along the coast is not very realistic.
According to the NOAA: "In the United States, coastal counties constitute only 17 percent of the total land area (not including Alaska), but account for 53 percent of the total population."
I doubt that cities like New Orleans will be abandoned due to zoning regulations just because they are below sea level, or that New York City will cease to exist just because it is located on the ocean (Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island are directly on the Atlantic, the Bronx is at the end of Long Island Sound bounded on the west by the Hudson, and Manhattan is on a bay at the confluence of the Hudson and East Rivers.
Boston, Miami, Mobile, Galveston, Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco all fall into that category. And to assume that cities along the Mississippi will not flood because they are not along the ocean would be folly.
But I guess half the population of the United States can just pack up and leave four centuries of populated cities behind us and move to somewhere high and dry. ------------------------------------------- David Del Vecchio AIA Architect David Del Vecchio, Architect, LLC Cranford NJ -------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 12-04-2012 08:06 From: Dennis Hall Subject: Insurance Companies
Chris you are correct. Lack of regulation is not the problem. As architects we have libraries of regulations, code, industry standards, and guildelines. As I see it, we have a common sense problem.
1. Zoning: Homes should not be built on the edge of oceans or below sea level.. 2. Design: Design professionals should be required to perform to a higher standand in design documentation and CA, with adequate compensation for this work.. 3. Inspection: Builiding Officials should actually "inspect" faciities for compliance with codes and regulations. 3. Maintenance: Owner's should be required to maintain their facilities and facilities should be reinspected on a periodic basis.
We can solve almost any building problem, but we have to first change attitudes about the process of building. That, I don't think we can do. People would rather pay higher insurance rates and hope that they do not have a weather event, than deal with the real problem.This is no differenct than health decisions we all make.
Dennis
------------------------------------------- Dennis J. Hall, FAIA, FCSI Chairman ' CEO Hall Architects, Inc. Charlotte NC -------------------------------------------
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