Western Queens Flooding Helpful Info

A collection of helpful information from various sources about flooding in Western Queens. If you think we missed something good, please email us.

NYC and Flood Facts / Stats

We compiled some useful stats from our research, such as:

Q: What does 1 inch of rain drop on your roof? 500+ gallons on 18’×50’

Q: Is renter flood damage covered by landlord? Not on personal possessions

Q: How many buildings at risk in Sunnyside? 792

Q: How much have home insurance rates gone up in last 3 years? 24%

Q: Isn’t the city expanding sewers? Yes but could take years

Q: Can I get help paying for flood solutions? Yes

792 Buildings At Risk in Sunnyside

An interesting view from First Street Data (who provides climate risk data to Zillow now, so if you look up a house for sale, it will show flood risk as part of listing). This map says: “The neighborhood of Sunnyside has a moderate risk of flooding over the next 30 years. There are 792 properties in Sunnyside that have risk of flooding over the next 30 years. This represents 25.1% of all properties in Sunnyside.” Note: Commercial buildings are in “Major” risk category (see blue bars at bottom).

Report Showing Basement Apartments In Flood Risk Areas

A story from the Sunnyside Post on the Regional Plan Association (RPA 2022) found that there are approximately 31,000 low-density residential buildings in central Queens neighborhoods that have below grade basements, which property owners frequently convert into unlicensed apartments. Many are at high-risk of flooding during extreme rainfall. Note: The RPA recently updated their estimates and now project 82,000 homes are likely to be lost in NYC by 2040 (..that’s 15 years from now).

Money for Mitigation

  • Homeowners: State funded “Resilient Retrofit” program passed by Governor Hochul. Basic Gist: $20M in funding made available to Eligible homeowners earning up to 120 percent of their Area Median Income can apply for up to $50,000, half of which is available as a grant and half as a three percent low-interest loan. Can be used to cover the cost installing flood vents, a sump pump, or backwater valve/backflow preventer; moving utilities above the flood line; adding insulation; electrifying heating systems; or installing energy efficient appliances or lighting. If you don’t qualify for this and your income is a bit higher, there is also a sister program for higher AMI called “HomeFix”. In NYC, program administrator is Center for NYC Neighborhoods.

  • Small Businesses: Up to $5000 for Small Businesses.  Basic gist: If your business location is in an area at risk of flooding, you may be eligible for an on-site, one-on-one risk assessment. Experts will review your location, business operations, and insurance needs to provide you with personalized recommendations to help reduce the risk to your business and/or property in the case of disruptive events. Can receive a grant of up to $5,000. NYC PREP Program (open until June 16)

  • $125M Federal Funds for Flooding Resilience in Queens and BK: Supported by Rep. Nydia Velazquez, S. 4367 is the approval for Water Resources Development Act (WRDA) of 2024. Basic gist: WRDA is a water infrastructure bill that authorizes projects under Army Corps of Engineers and their “HATS” study analyzing flooding sources. Once the bill becomes law, Congress would still need to allocate funding during appropriations for the Corps to move forward. Also includes $25 million in water and wastewater improvements for Newtown Creek watershed area neighborhoods.

NYC Climate Resilience Plans and Risks on Map

A Western Queens map view of flooding risk from BOTH stormwater (light blue) and coastal surge (purple). This comes from NYC Climate Resilience Plan Mapper to show how city is focussing on grey and green infrastructure projects in higher risk areas. Note: it is an interactive map so you can play with it to see layers (flooding, heat, etc), different plans/projects, zoom in or out.

Flood Risk Map WITH Groundwater and 311 Reports

We like this map from Field Form in that it combines historic waterbody paths, stormwater flooding projections, coastal flooding projections, sewer and basement backup history and other publicly available data to aggregate and determine relative flooding exposure levels for every individual property.

NYC Green Infrastructure Flooding Portal

NYC DEP knows that sewer upgrades are needed but also cannot handle all the water that is coming our way. Another key part of the plan is to leverage nature and green projects that hold or slow down water BEFORE it overwhelms the old sewers. This map shows various efforts across the city. From tree beds to rain gardens, to bio-swales, even parks designed to act like sponges. See the various types and locations. PS: they cant just be installed, they need to be maintained.

Other Flooding Policy Action

😅 Want to see something added here? Please let us know.