Flooding has emerged as a widespread threat to human development, health, and safety as a result of land use change, aging infrastructure, population growth, and more extreme precipitation (Galloway et al., 2018; NASEM, 2019). Floods damage property and infrastructure, disrupt business activity, degrade ecosystems with the mobilization and transport of toxics, and adversely impact populations (especially low-income populations) with job losses, displacement, stress, and health impacts (Galloway et al., 2018; Hino & Nance, 2021). Over the past several decades, flood damages have escalated from increasing exposure and vulnerability (Gall et al., 2011;White et al., 2001) and more intense precipitation associated with global warming (Davenport et al., 2021) and urbanization (Zhang et al., 2018). Indeed, research now makes clear that urbanization magnifies the flooding threat through multiple pathways including increased precipitation from altered storm dynamics, increased runoff from changes in infiltration and runoff, and increased exposure and vulnerability (Galloway et al., 2018;Zhang et al., 2018).Recent years have been marked by a string of disastrous floods. The U.S. was hit particularly hard in 2017 with flooding from several hurricanes including Harvey, Irma, and Maria, and extreme weather across the Midwest