Natural Disasters in Kirkersville, OH
Hazard risk, disaster history, and FEMA data
Natural Hazard Risk
Source: FEMA National Risk IndexRisk Score
78.9
Relatively Low
Expected Annual Loss
82.9
Score (0-100)
Social Vulnerability
19.1
Score (0-100)
Community Resilience
83.9
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: FEMATotal Declarations
20
Public Assistance
$4.0M
Individual Assistance
$576K
Most Common Type
Severe Storm
10 declarations
Public Assistance by Category
Showing 20 of 22 disasters
PA = FEMA Public Assistance (infrastructure recovery). IA = Individual Assistance (homeowner/renter aid).
Flood Insurance (NFIP)
Source: FEMA NFIPTotal Claims
388
Total Claims Paid
$4,391,766
Avg Claim Payout
$11,319
County-level NFIP data from FEMA National Flood Insurance Program.
Hazard Mitigation
Source: FEMA Hazard Mitigation AssistanceMitigation Projects
8
Federal Funding
$688,066
Properties Protected
13
Avg Benefit-Cost Ratio
2.60
BCR
Top Mitigation Project Types
| Project Type | Projects | Federal $ |
|---|---|---|
| 200.1: Acquisition of Private Real Property (Structures and Land) - Riverine | 4 | $398,990 |
| 602.1: Other Equipment Purchase and Installation | 1 | $16,250 |
| 206.1: Safe Room (Tornado and Severe Wind Shelter) - Private Structures | 1 | $241,296 |
| Unknown | 1 | $19,730 |
| 95.1: FMA or CRS Plan | 1 | $11,800 |
Federally funded projects to reduce future disaster risk. Only includes completed or obligated projects.
Kirkersville has a relatively low overall natural hazard risk rating according to FEMA's National Risk Index. The top hazard risks are hail, landslide, winter weather. The area has had 20 federal disaster declarations. The most common disaster type is severe storm (10 declarations). 388 flood insurance claims have been filed in the area. FEMA has obligated $4,035,395 in public assistance recovery funding. $576,369 has been distributed in individual assistance to disaster-affected residents. 8 hazard mitigation projects have been funded to reduce future risk.