Penticton Herald

Boston mayor offers plan to save waterfront from rising seas

- By The Associated Press

Boston Mayor Marty Walsh unveiled a plan Wednesday to protect the low-lying, extensivel­y landfilled city from climate change and rising sea levels.

The Democratic mayor’s “Resilient Boston Harbor” plan calls for the creation of 67 acres (27 hectares) of new open space and the restoratio­n of 122 acres (49 hectares) of tidal areas and parklands to serve as natural buffers during major floods.

The plan also proposes elevating flood-prone areas along the city’s 75-kilometres of shoreline, such as Main Street in historic Charlestow­n and downtown’s popular Harborwalk.

Walsh said the potential damage from rising sea levels would far outweigh the cost of the proposed investment­s, which The Boston Globe reports could approach $1 billion over the next decades.

A 2016 city report projected sea levels around Boston could rise 91 centimetre­s by 2070, affecting some 90,000 residents, 12,000 buildings and potentiall­y causing more than $14 billion in economic losses.

Walsh urged the local business community to step up as he unveiled the plan at a Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce meeting.

“Wherever you are in Boston, the ability of your employees to get to work and the ability of your suppliers to make deliveries are at risk,” Walsh said in his prepared remarks.

Local environmen­tal group the Charles River Watershed Associatio­n said Walsh’s proposal was “commendabl­e,” but that other steps need to be considered, such as more stringent requiremen­ts on developers to design their buildings with climate change and rising seas in mind.

The Trustees of Reservatio­ns, another local conservati­on group, applauded the mayor's promise to devote 10 per cent of the city's annual capital budget to climate change projects.

Walsh’s plan deliberate­ly doesn't include much-discussed plans for a massive barrier across Boston Harbor that could cost $12 billion and take 30 years to build.

“Instead of walling off our harbour, we need to work with it,” he said. “Shoreline projects are more feasible and more effective ways to increase our city’s resilience.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada