New York Daily News

WORST YET TO COME

In storm-battered Queens, Joe blames climate change and pushes fixup plan

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T AND TIM BALK

President Biden on Tuesday visited a New York City still licking its wounds from Hurricane Ida’s wrath, speaking with locals in hard-hit sections of Queens before issuing an urgent plea for action to combat climate change.

“This is Code Red,” the president, clad in his Ray-Ban Aviators, said as he was joined by local politician­s near a low-lying residentia­l section of East Elmhurst, where he crossed puddles and greeted locals. “The nation and the world are in peril.”

Of the 50 deaths attributed to Hurricane Ida, 27, were recorded in New Jersey. In New York City, 13 people were killed, including 11 in Queens.

Nearly a week after an unpreceden­ted deluge turned subway tunnels into rivers and basement homes into deadly traps, Biden expressed hopes that the growing climate hazards can be blunted. At the same time, he predicted that dangerous storms are only going to worsen and said the nation must listen to scientists and brace itself for global warming’s impact. He said he thinks even climate skeptics are beginning to reckon with reality.

“The evidence is clear: Climate change poses an existentia­l threat to our lives and our economy,” the president said. “And the threat is here. It’s not going to get any better.”

The monsoon last week marked the second record-setting rainfall to hit New York City in the final weeks of this summer, delivering more than a dozen deaths and millions of dollars in damage to a city that’s not built for hurricane-level storms. In a single hour on Wednesday, more than 3 inches of rain descended on Central Park, obliterati­ng the previous high of just under 2 inches an hour just a week prior with Tropical Storm Henri.

Officials have stressed that warming of the atmosphere is creating a new normal, but last week’s calamity appeared to catch the city flatfooted. More people were reported dead in the city than in New Orleans, which faced the full brunt of the storm but is reinforced by new levees erected after Hurricane Katrina.

As Biden spoke, crowds nearby hung over a fence and held blue placards with the words “Biden: Climate Emergency Now!” The White House has faced criticism and protests from the left for moving too slowly to curb the carbon emissions that are heating the earth.

Biden’s speech, though light on specifics, seemed intended to express intensity on an issue that has long been viewed by Democrats as dire.

“I know these disasters aren’t going to stop,” the president said in his 15-minute speech. “They’re only going to come with more frequency and ferocity.”

Biden struck a similar theme before he toured Manville, N.J., also ravaged by severe flooding caused by Ida.

“Every part of the country, every part of the country is getting hit by extreme weather,” Biden said in a briefing at the Somerset County emergency management training center attended by federal, state and local officials, including New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy.

Biden touted his $1 trillion bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill and his “Build Back Better Recovery Plan,” which includes clean energy provisions.

Along the way, he tried to tie new green projects to job creation: Even as he stressed the threat climate change poses to the nation’s economy, he suggested that work to build solutions could juice the labor market.

“I think of one word when I think of climate change: Jobs,” Biden said. “Good-paying jobs.”

As the president described eco-friendly careers with $50 hourly wages, someone in the crowd shouted: “That sounds great!”

Before delivering his remarks, Biden had bounced from house to house on in an alleyway between 87th and 88th Sts. in East Elmhurst, shaking hands and hugging residents.

At one point, a group of union workers in hardhats showered the commander-in-chief with cheers.

During the visit, the president joined a crush of high-powered New York politician­s, including Gov. Hochul, Mayor de Blasio, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand.

The whole tour lasted just shy of an hour and spotlighte­d a particular­ly battered block.

Saida Magidi, who has lived there for seven years, said some 5 feet of water submerged the first floor of her home last week. She expressed appreciati­on for Biden’s visit but said she hopes he backs up his talk.

“It’s nice to see him, but we want to see action,” Magidi, 48, said. “Is he going to do something for the people?”

The president has taken some steps. He approved a major disaster declaratio­n for parts of New York City, allowing the Federal Emergency Management Agency to pump out direct cash relief to storm victims.

De Blasio — who has faced fierce criticism for not issuing clearer warnings before Ida rolled in last week — praised Biden for signing off on the declaratio­n.

“I appreciate him coming here. I appreciate even more that he signed the disaster declaratio­n that will now allow real resources to flow into the hands of New Yorkers,” de Blasio said during a briefing at City Hall Tuesday morning.

Schumer also promised congressio­nal efforts to deliver public assistance to those affected, including grants of up to $36,000 per person.

The president said it’s America’s duty to support communitie­s like the one he visited, as he spoke in an asphalt alley in a working-class neighborho­od.

“This is America, where I’m standing right now,” Biden said, drawing a line between East Elmhurst and other hardworkin­g pockets across America. “It’s about time we step up. They’re always the first ones that are hurt and the last ones that are helped.”

 ??  ?? President Biden was hardly a ray of sunshine Tuesday as he visited parts of Queens devastated by the remnants of Hurricane Ida. He said climate change means the weather is likely to get even more violent.
President Biden was hardly a ray of sunshine Tuesday as he visited parts of Queens devastated by the remnants of Hurricane Ida. He said climate change means the weather is likely to get even more violent.
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 ??  ?? President Biden was greeted mostly by cheers (left and inset) as he spoke Tuesday with residents in East Elmhurst, Queens, which was hit hard by remnants of Hurricane Ida.
President Biden was greeted mostly by cheers (left and inset) as he spoke Tuesday with residents in East Elmhurst, Queens, which was hit hard by remnants of Hurricane Ida.

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