MO Missouri Porch

Ozarks (Rural)

Flooding on the Current and what flood maps show

Van Buren and riverside property sit along the Current, so flood-zone status and emergency planning are practical concerns for buyers and residents, not abstractions.

Van Buren and much of the county’s homes sit close to the Current River. So flooding is a real planning concern, not a rare event. Property near the river can fall inside a mapped floodplain. A floodplain is land that is likely to flood. Being in one can affect building, insurance, and what a lender may require. The Current has caused serious floods before. If you are buying or own land here, do a few simple things. Check the FEMA Flood Map Service Center for your exact address. Ask whether flood insurance is required or a good idea. And learn the county’s emergency-management plan for high water. FEMA publishes the flood maps. Missouri SEMA coordinates county emergency management and preparedness. The National Weather Service issues river-flood watches and warnings. None of these replace checking your specific parcel, since flood-zone lines follow the land, not the town line.

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Where this fits: this note belongs to Carter County. See every local note for the county on its page.

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