FEMA's Flood Maps (FIRM) - Understanding and Utilizing This Resource
Jonathan Terry, P.L.S.
Course Outline
FEMA’s Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) provide data that engineers, surveyors, architects, planners and others use to satisfy the need for flood zone statements and certifications on plans, reports and other documents. These certifications are taken as professional/expert, final, definite, exact, declarative statements of indisputable fact. Yet, the source data (FIRMs) are often inaccurate as to scale, notoriously lacking in detail and just plain old.
Clients frequently request that we state or certify to the “flood zone” or “flood elevation” for a particular property or building located on a parcel of land. Too often professionals consult FEMA’s resources, not quite knowing their limitations, and then provide statements and certifications that lack prudent qualification or sufficient explanation. Many who’ve used FIRMs for years get nervous when consulting this resource and making such certifications or notes on sealed plans. Such feelings are probably an intuitive caution worth exploring.
This course clarifies the FIRMs’ many terms and abbreviations that can be confusing. It promotes a better understanding of both appropriate uses and limitations of Flood Maps and explains the relationship of FIRMs to Flood Insurance Studies (FISs); it explores how “floodways” and Flood Insurance Studies relate to FIRMs. The course includes an in-depth review of FEMA's flood map tutorial in its entirety, plus other resources, illustrations and sample disclaimer statements and notes.
This course is appropriate for new FIRM users and serves as a refresher for experienced users. The course format will encourage the sharing of comments, experiences, and knowledge from participants.
Learning Objective
Users
of Flood Insurance Rate Maps will gain a better appreciation for the applications,
limitations and benefits of using FIRMs for their purposes and better equip
themselves to employ this useful resource with knowledge and confidence.
At the conclusion of this coursework, you'll:
Intended Audience
This course benefits land surveyors, planners, engineers, architects, insurance and real estate professionals, community officials, assessors, persons serving on regulatory boards, private citizens, buyers of any property, investors in real estate and lenders.
Benefit to Attendees
Whether this course is the student's introduction to FEMA FIRMs or a study meant to broaden a current user's understanding, the FEMA FIRM tutorial is a well-crafted, thoughtful and delightfully presented educational experience that's sure to please while expanding professional capability and knowledge.
Through experiencing
this tutorial and completing the quiz, you'll gain a fuller understanding of
Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) - their use, proper application and limitations.
Course
Instructor
Your instructor for this course is a Licensed Land Surveyor who's obtained professional registration in eight states and served as assistant construction superintendent, teacher, writer, civil technician, site planner, land surveying department head, plus created and managed the construction layout division of a large construction management firm, founded and operated a successful construction layout business and a separate land surveying business, and served as the employee of civil, surveying, and architectural firms, developers and state government. His career began in 1963.
The idea of assembling
this continuing education course came through experiencing the FEMA-FIRM tutorial
first-hand with a sincere desire to learn - and deriving both pleasure and significant
benefit from the exercise. I realized that others might enjoy it as much as
I did - and fulfill continuing education requirements in the process.
Course
Introduction
An old but never
outdated saying goes, "You get out of something what you put into it."
The centerpiece of this course is the FEMA-FIRM tutorial. It provides an opportunity
to learn and solidify understanding through well thought out and professionally
prepared graphics and a sensitive use of technology - combined to produce a
pleasant learning experience that's both efficient and effective.
The quiz questions are a vital part of your learning experience. They're designed
to reinforce the learning gained through the tutorial and to focus attention
on important points. The quiz is not separate from the course content or the
learning experience, but an integral part of it. This course was developed with
the hope you'll benefit from it as much as your instructor has through its creation.
It may be helpful
to realize that the tutorial is, among other things, a vocabulary lesson. A
wise person has said, "Classification is the key to learning."
FEMA loves abbreviations! They introduce terms or names and reduce them to abbreviations
in a flash: FEMA, FIRM, BFE, NFIP, FIS, SFHA, and on and on. May I suggest you
take the time to memorize the terms and abbreviations as they are introduced?
This will greatly aid in gaining the most from the material.
The tutorial also allows you to "look up" meanings through links and/or a glossary. More than most courses, this tutorial requires that you bite the bullet and fiercely determine that you WILL learn all these terms with their meanings. The greatest benefit will come from this approach.
I once read a book
on bee keeping. Throughout the book, the author used the word, "brood."
I kept reading, expecting to learn that word's meaning through the author's
usage. At the end of the book, I still didn't know what brood meant. That author
knew his material so well, he forgot to teach. There is a difference between
teaching and rambling. So many educators ramble. The FEMA FIRM tutorial does
not ramble; it teaches. But, as such, it requires that the student expend effort
to memorize the new terms as they're introduced. And, do use the links and glossary
frequently to discover or reinforce the meaning of any unfamiliar terms.
It's a great tutorial! I think you'll enjoy the time you spend with it and profit
from it, as I have.
Course Content
Please click on the underlined hypertext [the link] below to view, download or print the document for your study. Because of its large file size, we recommend that you first save the file to your computer by right-clicking the mouse and choosing "Save Target As ...", and then open the file in Adobe Acrobat Reader (a free program–see note below). To receive the most from this course, be certain to study Glossary entries provided on pages 119 through 124. This glossary provides an integral part of the tutorial, and several quiz questions are based on glossary entries. Begin your session by clicking this link:
FEMA-FIRM Tutorial: Screen- Captures of FEMA’s Well-Thought-Out and Carefully Presented Tutorial on Flood Insurance Rate Maps (PDF, 124 pages, 10MB)
Note: If you save the PDF file and your computer cannot open it, download the free program Adobe Reader at: http://get.adobe.com/reader/?promoid=JZEF
Because this course is offered as a "live" course, you are required to attend the webinar at the scheduled time and date. Please check the Webinar Schedule under course description on our website for scheduled meeting date and time. We will send you an invitation to the webinar through email approximately 24 hours before the webinar (confirmation of the receipt of the invitation is required). The certificate of completion will not be issued unless you attend the webinar and pass a quiz. Thank you for your cooperation.
Course Summary
Through this course, you've learned how to get around in the Flood Map world and been introduced to the Flood Insurance Study Report (FIS) with its additional data, often useful to make an appropriate determination of whether or not a property is in a floodway, and you've learned how to estimate a Base Flood Elevation (BFE). In short, you've gained confidence in your use of a valuable resource.
Your course instructor has a suggestion for your consideration: If you are required to certify whether or not a property, portion of property or structure is in a Flood Insurance Risk Zone or a Floodway or otherwise assume the position of "knowing" exactly where a property is in relation to features or information shown on Flood Maps, I suggest you state as a part of that certification that your determination was made by scaling on a flood map in conformance with methods propagated and endorsed by FEMA at (link to their tutorial).
Those who make their living through measuring will readily see that the portion of the building and property shown in FEMA's tutorial to be in the Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA) but NOT in the Floodway is mighty close to being in the Floodway or entirely out of both the Floodway AND the SFHA. The measurement methods illustrated in the tutorial (scaling from roads depicted on the Flood Map and from assessor's maps) leave a lot to be desired in the realm of accuracy.
I hope you've enjoyed the tutorial as much as I have and that the quiz has helped your retention of the information presented.
One final word:
The certificate offered at the end of the tutorial is, of course, not the PDHonline
certificate and does not provide continuing professional development credits.
But, it is very pretty!
Ralated
Links
Flood Insurance Library http://www.fema.gov/nfip/library.shtm
General Publications about the National Flood Insurance Program http://www.fema.gov/nfip/libfacts.shtm
FEMA's flood hazard site for engineers and surveyors http://www.fema.gov/fhm/en_main.shtm
FEMA software http://www.fema.gov/fhm/frm_soft.shtm
FEMA Map Store http://www.store.msc.fema.gov
(Then, click on Map Search.)
Quiz