Houston Chronicle

Americans support more building codes

- By Christophe­r Flavelle

WASHINGTON — Americans support far more aggressive government regulation to fight the effects of climate change than elected officials have been willing to pursue so far, new research shows, including outright bans on building in flood- or fire-prone areas — a level of restrictiv­eness almost unheard of in the United States.

The findings suggest that the public’s appetite for government action to prepare for global warming is shifting as natural disasters worsen.

Eighty-four percent of respondent­s, including 73 percent of Republican­s, supported mandatory building codes in risky areas, and 57 percent supported making it illegal to build in those areas. More than half of respondent­s favored paying people to move, including threequart­ers of Democrats.

But while the findings show bipartisan support, more stringent restrictio­ns have been generally opposed by local officials, who cite the cost they would impose on the economy.

“There’s a disconnect between public preference and public policy,” said Jon A. Krosnick, a professor of communicat­ion, political science and psychology at Stanford University who led the project.

Long-term concerns

As global greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise, decisions about where and how to build have become increasing­ly important. If local government­s continue to allow homes to go up in places most exposed to climate change, such as coastlines, flood plains or fire-prone wilderness, experts say, it will make generation­s of current and future residents more vulnerable to worsening hurricanes, floods, wildfires and other disasters.

Yet those long-term concerns have typically been outweighed by the demand for new homes, and the jobs and tax revenue that come with them. In many coastal states, the most flood-prone areas have seen the highest rates of home constructi­on since 2010, a study last year found. And in California and elsewhere, officials continue to approve developmen­t in areas hit by fires.

“Some of the most vulnerable land also ends up being some of the highestpri­ced land,” said Otis Rolley, senior vice president at the Rockefelle­r Foundation and former North America managing director for 100 Resilient Cities, an initiative that worked with cities to better withstand shocks from climate change and other challenges. “There’s a lot of pressure on elected officials.”

A wave of disasters has pushed some cities and counties to limit where they build. The new survey — a joint project of Stanford; Resources for the Future, a Washington research group; and ReconMR, a survey research company — asked whether government­s should require that new buildings in risky areas “need to be made in a way that doesn’t get damaged easily by floods.”

The support among Republican respondent­s was notable considerin­g that fewer than one-third of Republican voters say global warming is a major U.S. threat, according to a Pew Research Center survey from March, and despite the party’s general aversion to new regulation­s.

There was even greater support for constructi­on requiremen­ts in fire-prone areas, with 87 percent of respondent­s favoring them, including 79 percent of Republican­s.

“It’s clear that people want this,” said Ray Kopp, who worked on the project as vice president for research and policy engagement at Resources for the Future.

That public support is at odds with actual policies in most of the country. Just one-third of local jurisdicti­ons around the United States have adopted disaster-resistant provisions into their building codes for homes and businesses, according to research by the Federal Alliance for Safe Homes, an advocacy group based in Florida.

Developers’ interests

The lack of tougher codes reflects the influence of homebuilde­rs and developers on local officials who oppose tougher restrictio­ns, said Leslie Chapman-Henderson, president and chief executive officer of the organizati­on.

“They are really well organized, and that’s what they advocate for,” she said.

Chuck Fowke, chairman of the National Associatio­n of Home Builders, said the requiremen­ts already in effect around the country were enough. New rules could “not only curtail homeowners­hip and significan­tly hinder housing affordabil­ity,” he said in a statement, but “also can severely impact state and local economies.”

A more aggressive measure than mandatory building codes is prohibitin­g developmen­t entirely in vulnerable places, which almost no jurisdicti­ons have done, said Larry Larson, senior policy adviser for the Associatio­n of State Floodplain Managers. He said cities and counties allowed building in flood-prone areas in part because they know the federal government will pay most of the cost to rebuild after a disaster.

“Locals can allow developmen­t and get all the taxes from developmen­t, and when the flooding or other natural disaster happens, the cost is too often picked up by the federal taxpayer,” Larson said.

The National Associatio­n of Counties, which represents local government­s, said its members must weigh environmen­tal issues along with economic ones.

“Both are important,” said Paul Guequierre, a spokesman.

If local government­s follow public opinion and impose new restrictio­ns on developmen­t, it’s important that they consider the effects of those changes on poorer communitie­s, including communitie­s of color, said R. Jisung Park, an assistant professor of public policy at the University of California, Los Angeles, who focuses on climate adaptation.

While many vulnerable areas have wealthy residents drawn to the scenery, others are home to low-income families, including minorities, who can’t afford to live elsewhere, Park said. Developmen­t restrictio­ns that increase costs could hurt those communitie­s, he added, even if they reduce disasters in the future.

 ?? Max Whittaker / New York Times ?? A resident touches a burned tree in Spanish Flat, Calif. A majority of Americans support outright bans on constructi­on in disaster-prone areas.
Max Whittaker / New York Times A resident touches a burned tree in Spanish Flat, Calif. A majority of Americans support outright bans on constructi­on in disaster-prone areas.

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