New York Daily News

Mystery solved! Adams confirms identity of extreme weather czar

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

Mayor Adams’ office has confirmed that City Hall chief of staff Camille Joseph Varlack is the administra­tion’s extreme weather coordinato­r — ending months of mystery over who’s running the top storm response post.

The mayor’s team relayed Varlack’s new assignment in a communicat­ion to city Comptrolle­r Brad Lander’s office last month, according to a new audit from Lander’s office released Monday.

Lander’s audit — which scrutinize­s the Adams administra­tion’s response to September’s Tropical Storm Ophelia — doesn’t make clear when Varlack started acting in the coordinato­r role, which was created by former Mayor Bill de Blasio in 2021 in the wake of deadly flash floods in the city caused by remnants of Hurricane Ida.

The comptrolle­r’s audit says the mayor hadn’t “appointed” anyone to the extreme weather coordinato­r job when Ophelia caused severe flash floods across the five boroughs on Sept. 29, 2023.

Adams spokeswoma­n Liz Garcia said Monday that Varlack didn’t take on the coordinato­r post until February. Garcia said “a previous staffer who worked directly under” Varlack used to hold the coordinato­r position before her, though she declined to name that second staffer.

Controvers­y over the extreme weather czar post first mounted in the aftermath of Ophelia, when the Daily News reported that the post had been sitting vacant since the de Blasio administra­tion’s coordinato­r, Emma Wolfe, left upon Adams’ inaugurati­on.

At the time, Adams’ spokesmen said the mayor had opted against a de Blasio-era recommenda­tion of making the coordinato­r role a new full-time position at City Hall and instead decided to task a senior administra­tion official with taking on the duties of the post alongside other assignment­s. However, Adams’ office declined at the time to identify the official, and Garcia wouldn’t elaborate further Monday.

According to Lander’s new audit, Varlack is now the extreme weather czar responsibl­e for coordinati­ng all city agencies involved in extreme weather response during storms and for conducting after-action reviews to “correct weaknesses in the city’s emergency management.”

“However, to date there has been no public announceme­nt of her appointmen­t, and it is unclear what, if any, communicat­ion has been provided to city agencies,” the audit says.

Beyond the Varlack revelation, Lander’s audit found there were multiple issues with the city’s emergency preparedne­ss during Ophelia.

The audit reported that 32 of the city Environmen­tal Protection Department’s 51 catch basin cleaning trucks were out of service when Ophelia hit, leaving only 19 trucks to cover all five boroughs.

The audit notes that “catch basin cleaning is one of the city’s best tools to prevent localized flooding before heavy rains” and that fewer than half of about 1,000 catch basins that are especially susceptibl­e to flooding were inspected before Ophelia barreled in.

In the immediate aftermath of Ophelia, Adams and his administra­tion faced criticism for not warning New Yorkers sooner about the severity of the storm — and Lander’s audit says just 2.7% of New Yorkers older than 16 received NotifyNYC emergency alerts on their cell phones as Ophelia was soaking the city.

The audit says the low figure is a result of poor enrollment in the service, which is the city’s primary vehicle for warning New Yorkers about emergencie­s in real time.

Another issue highlighte­d by Lander’s team is the administra­tion’s method for keeping track of basement apartments, which are particular­ly vulnerable to flooding during storms. The audit found that a list of basement apartments in the city that the administra­tion maintains to be able to send out quick alerts has only 2,378 subscriber­s, or fewer than 1% of the total number of New Yorkers estimated to live in basement units.

In response to the Lander audit’s broader findings, Garcia, the Adams spokeswoma­n, touted that ahead of Ophelia, the city “inspected over 900 catch basins, distribute­d thousands of flood barriers, rain barrels and other protective tools, and got the word out to millions of New Yorkers two days ahead of the event.”

“We will continue to build on these shortand long-term flood preparedne­ss efforts,” Garcia added.

 ?? ?? Yes, City Hall chief of staff Camille Joseph Varlack (r.) is doing double duty as extreme weather coordinato­r, but post was empty when storm led to flash floods (seen above in Brooklyn) in 2023.
Yes, City Hall chief of staff Camille Joseph Varlack (r.) is doing double duty as extreme weather coordinato­r, but post was empty when storm led to flash floods (seen above in Brooklyn) in 2023.

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