Natural Disasters in Ina, IL

Hazard risk, disaster history, and FEMA data

Natural Hazard Risk

Source: FEMA National Risk Index

Risk Score

77.2

Relatively Low

Expected Annual Loss

76.1

Score (0-100)

Social Vulnerability

52.8

Score (0-100)

Community Resilience

79.1

Score (0-100)

Scores range from 0 (lowest risk) to 100 (highest risk) relative to all U.S. communities. Data from FEMA National Risk Index.

Disaster History & Federal Spending

Source: FEMA

Total Declarations

5

Public Assistance

$107K

Individual Assistance

$348K

Most Common Type

Biological

2 declarations

Public Assistance by Category

Total: $107K
DisasterTypeDatePA $IA $
Covid-19 PandemicBiologicalMar 2020$104K$237K
Covid-19 BiologicalMar 2020
Severe Storms and FloodingSevere StormJun 2011$111K
Severe Storms, Flooding, and TornadoesSevere Storm(s)Jul 2009$3K
Hurricane Katrina EvacuationHurricaneSep 2005
Severe Storms, Tornadoes and FloodingTornadoMay 2002

PA = FEMA Public Assistance (infrastructure recovery). IA = Individual Assistance (homeowner/renter aid).

Flood Insurance (NFIP)

Source: FEMA NFIP

Total Claims

13

Total Claims Paid

$261,523

Avg Claim Payout

$20,117

County-level NFIP data from FEMA National Flood Insurance Program.

Hazard Mitigation

Source: FEMA Hazard Mitigation Assistance

Mitigation Projects

1

Federal Funding

$24,996

Top Mitigation Project Types

Project TypeProjectsFederal $
91.3: Local Multihazard Mitigation Plan - UPDATE1$24,996

Federally funded projects to reduce future disaster risk. Only includes completed or obligated projects.

Ina has a relatively low overall natural hazard risk rating according to FEMA's National Risk Index. The top hazard risks are earthquake, strong wind, winter weather. The area has had 5 federal disaster declarations. The most common disaster type is biological (2 declarations). 13 flood insurance claims have been filed in the area. FEMA has obligated $107,013 in public assistance recovery funding. $348,152 has been distributed in individual assistance to disaster-affected residents. 1 hazard mitigation projects have been funded to reduce future risk.