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Alabama study reveals hurricane resilience programs are paying off for homeowners and insurers

Alabama study reveals hurricane resilience programs are paying off for homeowners and insurers
ENJOY THE SUMMER AT THE POOL. THAT鈥橲 A JOB RIGHT THERE. IT鈥橲 BEEN HARD TO BE AT THE POOL, THOUGH LATELY. I FEEL LIKE, YEAH, THIS PATTERN WE鈥橰E STUCK IN, WE鈥橵E HAD THAT RAIN, THAT THUNDER, EVERY SINGLE DAY. TODAY IS GOING TO BE A MAINLY DRY DAY, SO A MUCH NEEDED BREAK FROM THAT WEATHER PATTERN. ON OUR FIRST WARNING LIVE RADAR EARLY. THERE鈥橲 BEEN A PERSISTENT BAND OF SHOWERS TRACKING TOWARDS THE EAST THIS MORNING. NOT MUCH THUNDER OR LIGHTNING SHOWING UP WITH THIS, BUT SOME MODERATE RAINFALL FROM SUMMIT TO HOLLY POND. HANCEVILLE STRETCHING DOWN TOWARDS DORA AND PARRISH. THIS IS CROSSING OVER I-65 VERY CLOSE TO HAYDEN, AND THIS WILL KEEP PUSHING INTO BLOUNT COUNTY IN THE NEXT FEW MINUTES OR SO. EVENTUALLY THAT鈥橲 GOING TO KIND OF WEAKEN, AND THEN THE REST OF THE DAY LOOKS TO BE MAINLY DRY. WE GET A MIX OF SUN AND CLOUDS WITH JUST A FEW ISOLATED STORMS IN THE FORECAST. HIGHS TODAY END UP IN THE LOW 80S, SO WE鈥橰E A BIT WARMER BECAUSE WE GET TO SEE MORE OF THE SUNSHINE AND YOU CAN SEE REALLY LOW RAIN CHANCE INTO THE AFTERNOON. SO A GOOD DAY TO BE OUTDOORS. OUR NEXT WAVE OF RAIN AND THUNDER THOUGH MOVES IN LATE TONIGHT. SO REALLY WHILE MOST OF YOU ARE ALREADY IN BED FOR THE EVENING AND WE WILL KEEP SOME RAIN AND THUNDER INTO THE EARLY MORNING HOURS TOMORROW AS WELL. STORM PREDICTION CENTER MAINTAINS A VERY LOW AND MARGINAL RISK ACROSS THE SOUTHERN TWO THIRDS OF THE STATE. MAIN THREAT WITH STORMS THIS EVENING WOULD BE GUSTY WINDS, SO WE鈥橪L WATCH THAT. BUT OVERALL THREAT OF A SEVERE STORM VERY, VERY LOW FOR TOMORROW. WE DO SEE WAVES OF RAIN AND THUNDER AT TIMES. SO STARTING LATE TONIGHT, LASTING INTO TOMORROW, HERE鈥橲 OUR FIRST WARNING. FUTURE TRACK. AT 6 A.M. YOU CAN SEE SHOWERS AND STORMS ONGOING ACROSS CENTRAL AND NORTH ALABAMA. SO PLAN FOR POTENTIALLY A SLOWER THAN NORMAL COMMUTE TOMORROW AS WE DO HAVE THAT RAIN AROUND. STICKS WITH US THROUGH 9 A.M. THIS RAIN COULD BE HEAVY AT TIMES. BEST COVERAGE LOOKS TO COME DURING THE MORNING, LASTING INTO THE EARLY AFTERNOON, AND THEN STORMS BECOME MUCH MORE ISOLATED THROUGH THE SECOND HALF OF THE DAY. BUT WHERE THEY DO DEVELOP, THERE鈥橲 A LOW CHANCE AGAIN TOMORROW THAT WE COULD SEE A STRONG STORM OR TWO WITH GUSTY WINDS OR HAIL. WE鈥橪L ALSO LIKELY SEE SOME FREQUENT LIGHTNING AND HEAVY DOWNPOURS WITH THOSE KIND OF THAT DAILY MARGINAL RISK THAT WE鈥橵E BEEN STUCK WITH OVER THE LAST WEEK OR SO. BUT THERE ARE IMPROVEMENTS IN OUR SEVEN DAY IF YOU鈥橰E TRYING TO MAKE THOSE WEEKEND PLANS. LOOKS LIKE WE鈥橰E GOING TO BE MAINLY DRY THIS WEEKEND, ESPECIALLY ON SATURDAY. A REALLY BEAUTIFUL DAY CAN FEEL GREAT DURING TH
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Updated: 7:57 AM CDT May 28, 2025
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Alabama study reveals hurricane resilience programs are paying off for homeowners and insurers
AP logo
Updated: 7:57 AM CDT May 28, 2025
Editorial Standards 鈸�
Video above: Wednesday weather forecastA new Alabama study of hurricane-affected homes sends a clear message to insurers and homeowners nationwide: climate-resilient construction methods can protect homes, and save a lot of money.The first-of-its-kind analysis, released this week, reviews thousands of insurance claims linked to Hurricane Sally, which struck Alabama鈥檚 coast in 2020 with wind speeds up to 105 miles per hour. Homes retrofitted or built to Fortified standards, a voluntary construction code created by the nonprofit Insurance Institute for Building and Home Safety (IBHS) for wind and rain mitigation saw significantly fewer and less costly claims.If every impacted house in Mobile and Baldwin counties had met Fortified standards, insurance companies could have spent 75% less in payouts, saving up to $112 million, and policyholders could have paid up to 65% less in deductibles, saving almost $35 million, according to the study.The results show 鈥渕itigation works and that we can build things that are resilient to climate change,鈥� said Dr. Lars Powell, director of the Center for Risk and Insurance Research at the University of Alabama鈥檚 Culverhouse School of Business, which led the study with the Alabama Department of Insurance.Across the United States, insurance markets are buckling under the pressure of more frequent and expensive climate events, and federal support is shrinking for resilience projects that could reduce that damage. Officials and researchers involved with the study say it proves Alabama鈥檚 proactive approach to the challenge 鈥� mandatory, sizable insurance discounts for those who use Fortified and a grant program to help them afford it 鈥� could be a national model for increasing insurability and safety.IBHS created Fortified to strengthen buildings against storm damage based on decades of research at its facility, where it uses a giant wind tunnel to pummel model houses with rain, hail, and wind up to 130 miles per hour.鈥淲e are having record breaking year after record breaking year of disasters and insured losses, and we have been searching for meaningful ways to reduce the severity and the frequency of those losses,鈥� said Fred Malik, managing director of the Fortified program.The three levels of designations 鈥� Fortified Roof, Silver and Gold 鈥� employ methods like improving roof fasteners, using impact-rated doors and windows, and more securely anchoring walls to their foundation. The program requires third-party verification of work.About 80,000 homes across 32 states now have Fortified designations, with over 53,000 in Alabama.The state began looking for ways to improve storm outcomes after Hurricane Ivan in 2004 jolted the state鈥檚 insurance market. 鈥淚van was absolutely devastating,鈥� said Alabama Insurance Commissioner Mark Fowler. 鈥淥ur market was going crazy, insurers were leaving.鈥滻t became the only state to implement mandatory minimum insurance discounts for Fortified homes, currently as much as half off the wind portion of homeowners鈥� premiums. It also launched the Strengthen Alabama Homes incentive program, offering grants of up to $10,000 for homeowners retrofitting their houses to Fortified standards.The state has doled out $86 million for 8,700 Fortified retrofits since 2015. Fowler credits the initiative with also catalyzing demand for new Fortified construction and incentivizing contractors and inspectors to learn the standards.鈥淚t worked like gangbusters,鈥� he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e seen the market substantially stabilized.鈥滺urricane Sally offered researchers their first chance to assess the program鈥檚 benefits in a real storm. 鈥淚t really was a prototypical storm that anybody who lives on the hurricane coast is liable to see in any given year,鈥� said Malik.They collected insurance data on more than 40,000 houses in the affected area 鈥� a total insured value of $17 billion.Fortified construction reduced claim frequency by 55% to 74%, depending on the designation level, and loss severity by 14% to 40%. Despite representing almost one-quarter of the policies studied, Fortified homes accounted for only 9% of claims.They even fared better than houses built to similar codes but without the official designation, likely due to the program鈥檚 more stringent verification requirements.鈥淚t really does start to bring home that there is value for everybody involved,鈥� said Malik. 鈥淭here鈥檚 value for the insurers, there鈥檚 value for the homeowner.鈥滷ortified doesn鈥檛 address all types of hurricane losses. Nearly half the claims in the study were from fallen trees, which require separate mitigation strategies.The enhanced standards do add cost: between 0.5% to 3% more for new construction, and 6% to 16% for retrofits. But the longterm benefits have spurred even disaster recovery nonprofits like Habitat for Humanity, Team Rubicon and SBP to use Fortified, often with the philanthropic support of insurers like Travelers and Allstate.鈥淗elping disaster-impacted homeowners build back smarter with storm-resilient construction and IBHS Fortified standards helps break the cycle of disaster and loss,鈥� said Thomas Corley, chief operating officer at the New Orleans-based nonprofit SBP, which has built 671 homes to Fortified standards in nine states.The potential insurance discounts also help recovering families by lowering their monthly expenses and boosting confidence that they can keep affording their homes. 鈥淔or low-income families, this could mean the difference between upward mobility or years of financial instability after a disaster,鈥� said Corley.Alabama is expanding its grant program to three new counties this year. Fowler said he hopes the results encourage more insurance companies to offer wind protection on coastal homes, and that adoption will spread to less hurricane-prone areas still susceptible to severe weather.The approach has caught the attention of other states seeking resilience solutions. Fowler spoke before a California legislative committee last month in support of the California Safe Homes Act, a proposed bill that would fund grants for fire-safe roofing and defensible space to protect from wildfires.鈥淣atural disasters like windstorms, earthquakes, or wildfires will come no matter what we do,鈥� he told the committee. 鈥淭hat means you must find ways to build stronger before the event so you will have less damage after the event. It鈥檚 actually a pretty simple concept.鈥滱ssociated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits receives support through the AP鈥檚 collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. For all of AP鈥檚 philanthropy coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/philanthropy.

Video above: Wednesday weather forecast

A new Alabama study of hurricane-affected homes sends a clear message to insurers and homeowners nationwide: climate-resilient construction methods can protect homes, and save a lot of money.

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The first-of-its-kind , released this week, reviews thousands of insurance claims linked to , which struck Alabama鈥檚 coast in 2020 with wind speeds up to 105 miles per hour. Homes retrofitted or built to Fortified standards, a voluntary construction code created by the nonprofit Insurance Institute for Building and Home Safety (IBHS) for wind and rain mitigation saw significantly fewer and less costly claims.

If every impacted house in Mobile and Baldwin counties had met Fortified standards, insurance companies could have spent 75% less in payouts, saving up to $112 million, and policyholders could have paid up to 65% less in deductibles, saving almost $35 million, according to the study.

The results show 鈥渕itigation works and that we can build things that are resilient to climate change,鈥� said Dr. Lars Powell, director of the Center for Risk and Insurance Research at the University of Alabama鈥檚 Culverhouse School of Business, which led the study with the Alabama Department of Insurance.

Across the United States, insurance markets are of , and federal support is . Officials and researchers involved with the study say it proves Alabama鈥檚 proactive approach to the challenge 鈥� mandatory, sizable insurance discounts for those who use Fortified and a grant program to help them afford it 鈥� could be a national model for increasing insurability and safety.

IBHS created Fortified to strengthen buildings against storm damage based on decades of research at its facility, where it uses a giant wind tunnel to pummel model houses with rain, hail, and wind up to 130 miles per hour.

鈥淲e are having record breaking year after record breaking year of disasters and insured losses, and we have been searching for meaningful ways to reduce the severity and the frequency of those losses,鈥� said Fred Malik, managing director of the Fortified program.

The three levels of designations 鈥� Fortified Roof, Silver and Gold 鈥� employ methods like improving roof fasteners, using impact-rated doors and windows, and more securely anchoring walls to their foundation. The program requires third-party verification of work.

About 80,000 homes across 32 states now have Fortified designations, with over 53,000 in Alabama.

The state began looking for ways to improve storm outcomes after Hurricane Ivan in 2004 jolted the state鈥檚 insurance market. 鈥淚van was absolutely devastating,鈥� said Alabama Insurance Commissioner Mark Fowler. 鈥淥ur market was going crazy, insurers were leaving.鈥�

It became the only state to implement mandatory minimum insurance discounts for Fortified homes, currently as much as half off the wind portion of homeowners鈥� premiums. It also launched the incentive program, offering grants of up to $10,000 for homeowners retrofitting their houses to Fortified standards.

The state has doled out $86 million for 8,700 Fortified retrofits since 2015. Fowler credits the initiative with also catalyzing demand for new Fortified construction and incentivizing contractors and inspectors to learn the standards.

鈥淚t worked like gangbusters,鈥� he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e seen the market substantially stabilized.鈥�

offered researchers their first chance to assess the program鈥檚 benefits in a real storm. 鈥淚t really was a prototypical storm that anybody who lives on the hurricane coast is liable to see in any given year,鈥� said Malik.

They collected insurance data on more than 40,000 houses in the affected area 鈥� a total insured value of $17 billion.

Fortified construction reduced claim frequency by 55% to 74%, depending on the designation level, and loss severity by 14% to 40%. Despite representing almost one-quarter of the policies studied, Fortified homes accounted for only 9% of claims.

They even fared better than houses built to similar codes but without the official designation, likely due to the program鈥檚 more stringent verification requirements.

鈥淚t really does start to bring home that there is value for everybody involved,鈥� said Malik. 鈥淭here鈥檚 value for the insurers, there鈥檚 value for the homeowner.鈥�

Fortified doesn鈥檛 address all types of hurricane losses. Nearly half the claims in the study were from fallen trees, which require separate mitigation strategies.

The enhanced standards do add cost: between 0.5% to 3% more for new construction, and 6% to 16% for retrofits. But the longterm benefits have spurred even disaster recovery nonprofits like Habitat for Humanity, Team Rubicon and SBP to use Fortified, often with the philanthropic support of insurers like Travelers and Allstate.

鈥淗elping disaster-impacted homeowners build back smarter with storm-resilient construction and IBHS Fortified standards helps break the cycle of disaster and loss,鈥� said Thomas Corley, chief operating officer at the New Orleans-based nonprofit SBP, which has built 671 homes to Fortified standards in nine states.

The potential insurance discounts also help recovering families by lowering their monthly expenses and boosting confidence that they can keep affording their homes. 鈥淔or low-income families, this could mean the difference between upward mobility or years of financial instability after a disaster,鈥� said Corley.

Alabama is expanding its grant program to three new counties this year. Fowler said he hopes the results encourage more insurance companies to offer wind protection on coastal homes, and that adoption will spread to less hurricane-prone areas still susceptible to .

The approach has caught the attention of other states seeking resilience solutions. Fowler spoke before a California legislative committee last month in support of the , a proposed bill that would fund grants for fire-safe roofing and defensible space to protect from wildfires.

鈥淣atural disasters like windstorms, earthquakes, or wildfires will come no matter what we do,鈥� he told the committee. 鈥淭hat means you must find ways to build stronger before the event so you will have less damage after the event. It鈥檚 actually a pretty simple concept.鈥�


Associated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits receives support through the AP鈥檚 collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. For all of AP鈥檚 philanthropy coverage, visit .