Alberta scuttles flood-risk plan for home buyers - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 01:39 PM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Edmonton

Alberta scuttles flood-risk plan for home buyers

The Alberta government is backing away from a plan to put warnings on land titles for properties in flood-risk zones.

Province will co-operate with real estate industry to ensure buyers informed

Prospective home buyers will be informed about the risk of flooding "to make sure consumers are protected on what is likely the biggest purchase they will make in their lifetime." (Andy Clark/Reuters)

The Alberta government is backing away from a plan to put warnings on land titles for properties in flood-risk zones.

The government will instead work with the real estate industry to ensure prospective homeowners get the information they need before buying property at risk of flooding.

"We want to help property owners get their homes back to normal as quickly as possible while ensuring the property is protected from future floods," Rick Fraser, associate minister in charge of flood recovery, said Friday in a news release. "These changes will make mitigation easier and more efficient."

Municipal Affairs spokeswoman Kathleen Range said the government modified the rules after hearing from Albertans. Thegoal, she said, isto balance consumer protection with the needs of homeowners, who said they didn't want the notation on land titles.

"There are other ways that we would be able to get that information into [homebuyers'] hands other than doing the note on the land title," Range said .

The province will explore "more proactive ways, such as working with the real estate industry to make sure consumers are protected on what is likely the biggest purchase they will make in their lifetime," she said.

Homebuyers can already check properties on Alberta'sflood-hazard mapping website.

Extensive flooding in June displaced tens of thousands of people in Calgary and surrounding communities and caused billions of dollars in damage.

Homeowners who live on floodways and who will receive disaster aid this time must still have that notation made on their land titles, along with a warning that future funding won't be made available.

For property owners on the fringe of the flood zone and who are receiving aid, the warning will only be removed from their land titles after they meet new mitigation requirements designed to minimize basement damage in future floods.