Nita Hope was shoveling seven inches of snow off her Ocean Springs driveway when she understood she was leaving Mississippi. Not because of the snow—though that was impossible enough, tying Gulfport-Biloxi's all-time record in a place where snow isn't supposed to happen. Because of what the snow revealed: she couldn't afford to stay somewhere that refused to prepare for the climate she was already living in.
Hope has owned the same house since 1990. She's maintained it meticulously—new roof, trimmed trees, everything by the book. Her insurance costs tell the story:
- 2019: $6,200 (combined homeowners, wind, and flood)
- 2025: Nearly $10,000
On a fixed retirement income, that number equals her mortgage payment. Every month, she's paying for her house twice.
"Frankly, when you're retired, budget is tight," she told reporters in May. "I don't know exactly what I'm going to do, but I am going to leave Mississippi. I'm going to go north."
The January blizzard made the decision feel inevitable. Seven inches of impossible snow, roads icy for days, bridges temporarily closed, schools giving students the week off. The infrastructure damage was minor compared to hurricanes, but the event exposed something more fundamental: Mississippi's refusal to adapt to weather that "shouldn't happen" but keeps happening anyway.
Seventeen Years to Fund, Six Months to Kill
The Strengthen Mississippi Homes grant program spent seventeen years trying to exist. Former state representative David Baria introduced funding bills in 2017, 2018, and 2019 to support home hardening. None made it out of committee. "They were routinely opposed by the insurance industry and the leadership of both the Senate and the House," he said.
In 2024, the program finally got $5 million for a pilot. Here's what it offered: up to $10,000 per coastal home for retrofitting to FORTIFIED standards. Homeowners who completed improvements could qualify for premium reductions between 15% and 30%.
On July 1, 2025—six months after the blizzard—the legislature shut it down. They removed the Insurance Department's spending authority during a special session, killing the program before it could complete a single project cycle.
Mississippi became the only coastal state without a home-hardening program managed by an insurance regulator.
Alabama has completed more than 55,000 home hardening projects. Louisiana expanded its program from 300 certified roofs to more than 5,400 within a year, with participants seeing an average 22% rate decrease.
For Nita Hope, the comparison stings. That 22% rate decrease would have meant staying was possible.
The Nonrenewal Letters
Ocean Springs isn't alone in its insurance crisis. Coastal Mississippi's rates dwarf the national average:
| City | Annual Premium (for $300k dwelling) | vs. National Average |
|---|---|---|
| Gautier | $7,816 | 3x higher |
| Ocean Springs | $6,295 | 2.4x higher |
| Gulfport | $5,792 | 2.2x higher |
| National Average | $2,601 | — |
Worse than the rates are the letters. Mississippi ranked sixth nationally for nonrenewals in 2023, with one out of every 67 policies not renewed. Homeowners open their mailboxes to find their coverage dropped, forcing them into state-run programs or the surplus lines market at even higher rates.
Mark Strickland with SouthGroup Insurance Services explained the supply problem: "There's fewer companies writing—our population is increasing—and so it's supply and demand." Fallout from hurricanes Laura and Ida in 2020 and 2021 led many companies to stop writing wind insurance on the Gulf Coast entirely.
Between the January blizzard and the July program death, coastal homeowners learned they'd face a 16% windpool insurance rate increase beginning January 2026. Insurance Commissioner Mike Chaney explained that the state has directed over $400 million since 2005 toward subsidizing Gulf Coast rates—a strategy he called unsustainable.
"Where do you think people that need to live on the coast are going to go if the insurance keeps going up? Out of state."
Julie Shiyou-Woodard, president of Smart Home America and a Pass Christian native, has watched this trajectory for years.
"Mississippi has had the opportunity to do this for years. Sadly, it's going to show. The choices we made in Mississippi after Katrina, you will see that when we get hit with a direct category 3 again. It will be clear."
Forty Acres Across the State Line
Just across the state line in Bayou La Batre, Alabama, the Lightning Point Shoreline Restoration Project shows what's possible when states invest in resilience. Completed in 2022, the project created nearly 40 acres of habitat using natural and hardened infrastructure. It survived multiple named storms within two years. More than 50 bird and wildlife species have colonized the site.
Mississippi has coastal restoration plans in development, a proposed living shorelines program scheduled to begin in 2026. Plans without implementation. Programs without funding. Adaptation deferred until the next disaster.
Mississippi developed its first climate action plan in March 2024, making it one of the last states to do so. The state had two decades after Katrina to develop adaptation strategies and chose not to. Now a replacement proposal for the killed mitigation program sits before a legislature that has spent seventeen years blocking similar efforts.
The Arithmetic of Leaving
Nita Hope's house is well-maintained. Her neighborhood is stable. She's lived there for thirty-five years.
But the math is impossible. She can't pay for her house twice every month while watching her state kill the one program that might have helped.
The seven inches of snow melted within days. The program that spent seventeen years trying to exist died in a special session. The policy gaps remain. Coastal Mississippians keep opening their mailboxes to find nonrenewal letters, doing the same math Nita Hope did.
She's going north, to somewhere that takes climate adaptation seriously enough to make staying affordable. Not because of one impossible snowstorm, but because Mississippi keeps choosing not to prepare for the next one.
Things to follow up on...
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Alabama's restoration investments: The state's draft 2026 Funded Priorities List includes over $400 million in Gulf Coast restoration activities, including $38 million for Dauphin Island dune restoration.
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Mississippi's living shorelines program: A proposed assistance program aims to recruit waterfront property owners for conservation efforts in Jackson, Harrison, and Hancock Counties starting January 2026.
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FEMA's BRIC program cancellation: The Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities program cancelled its Fiscal Year 2024 funding opportunity, with no applications being reviewed and unawarded funds returned to the Treasury.
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Mississippi's climate planning timeline: The state received $3 million from the EPA's Climate Pollution Reduction Grants Program to develop its first climate action plan in March 2024.

