Check a ZIP

Based on FEMA public data, OHIO, IN is

BARELY FUCKED

Ohio, IN gets a calibrated report score of 6 out of 100. It starts with FEMA's 3/100 overall signal, then checks whether risk is concentrated or broad. Loudest hazards: drought, extreme heat, flooding.

6/100

Calibrated report score

FEMA overall: 3/100 (Very Low)

Top reasons

  • Drought
  • Extreme heat
  • Flooding

Disaster receipts

19 federal disaster declarations

FEMA declaration history for Ohio, IN, 1968-2026. County-level receipt, not a house-level prophecy.

Top chaos flavors

Severe Storm10Flood3Biological2Hurricane1

Most recent

  • 2026 Winter StormSEVERE WINTER STORM
  • 2020 BiologicalCOVID-19 PANDEMIC
  • 2020 BiologicalCOVID-19

Receipt note

County-specific federal disaster declarations only. Statewide declarations are not smeared across every county.

OpenFEMA Disaster Declarations Summaries

What the data says

The FEMA drought score is 23/100 here, which keeps this card below the louder hazards.

Receipt

FEMA National Risk Index (county-level; ZIP matched through Census ZCTA/county relationship)

What to verify

Still check local water restrictions, aquifer dependence, and summer pricing before assuming abundance.

Near your ZIP

PULLING EPA RECEIPTS

Checking the 2024 TRI facility index around ZIP 47040.

FAQ / before you panic

Questions you should probably ask.

Yes. The voice is sarcastic, but the goal is serious: turn public climate, air quality, hazard, and pollution datasets into a readable local risk profile. The joke is the packaging. The data is the point.