A federal judge has thrown out a lawsuit three southwestern Illinois counties filed to block the U.S. government from declaring the region’s levees functionally useless.
U.S. District Judge J. Phil Gilbert called the lawsuit moot Monday, after the Federal Emergency Management Agency said in court it had no plans to pull the accreditation of the region’s levees as part of a levee-mapping effort.
The counties sued in November 2010 over the mapping change that Madison, St. Clair and Monroe counties said could have saddled thousands of property owners with higher, unaffordable insurance rates.
The maps would have shown the area as a high-risk flood zone if FEMA rescinded accreditation of the 64 miles of earthen Mississippi River levees.
Topics Lawsuits Legislation Flood Illinois FEMA
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Palm Beach Billionaires Feud Over Who’s Really Protecting the Everglades
NYC Mayor Eyes City-Run Insurance Program for Affordable Housing
Four Georgia Troopers Fired in Vehicle Pursuit-Insurance Scheme
Viewpoint: Why Brokers Have Little to Fear and Everything to Gain From AI 

