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New study shows hundreds of millions of dollars needed to rebuild in eastern Kentucky

This swinging bridge off KY 476 was damaged by last July's floods. A new study shows between $450,000 and $950,000 is needed to replace or repair flood-damaged homes.
Chris Begley
/
weku-rise.org
This swinging bridge off KY 476 was damaged by last July's floods. A new study shows between $450 million and $950 million is needed to replace or repair flood-damaged homes.

A new study by the Ohio River Valley Institute and Appalachian Citizens’ Law Center has two cost estimates for rebuilding or replacing the 9,000 homes damaged or destroyed last summer. Eric Dixon, a senior researcher with the Ohio River Valley Institute, said the cost depends on the meaning of the word “rebuild.”

“If you were to repair the damaged homes, and replace the destroyed homes, or leave them in, in the locations that they were at, regardless of future flood risk, then it's going to cost about $450 million to rebuild the housing.”

Dixon says the other approach carries a much higher price tag, but would eventually save money.

“If you repair the damaged homes, and replace the destroyed homes, and many of the majorly damaged homes, in new locations, you know, on higher ground that are safer, then it's going to cost a lot more, it's going to cost about 950 million dollars.”

Dixon said repair and replacement funding from FEMA only covers between 8 and 17 percent of the total rebuilding cost and many home-owners didn’t have flood insurance.

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John McGary is a Lexington native and Navy veteran with three decades of radio, television and newspaper experience.
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