South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Roads face ‘major problem’

Is Florida moving fast enough to combat sea level rise?

- By Mario Ariza South Florida Sun Sentinel

After years of ignoring or denying climate change, Florida has begun assessing the threat that sea rise poses to a sprawling transporta­tion network essential to the state’s economy.

But the risks, like the water, are rising fast.

One 2018 Department of Transporta­tion study already has found that a 2-foot rise, expected by mid-century, would imperil a little more than 5% — 250-plus miles — of the state’s most high-traffic highways. That may not sound like a lot, but protecting those highways alone could easily cost several billion dollars. A Cat 5 hurricane could be far worse, with a fifth of the system vulnerable to flooding. The impact to seaports, airports and railroads — likely to also be significan­t and expensive — is only now under analysis.

While simply acknowledg­ing the risk represents a sea change in government leadership in Florida, there are already questions if the state has started too late and whether it can move fast enough to keep up with the rising water.

“My concern, on a scale of one to ten, is about eight,” says Leonard Berry, a professor emeritus of geoscience­s at Florida Atlantic University and the lead author

of a 2012 study that first analyzed the vulnerabil­ity of Florida’s roads to the rising seas and found the single most at-risk stretch in an unexpected place: Dania Beach.

But it is only now, nine years later, that FDOT is starting to design roads with climate change in mind. And the shift in practice, interviews and public records reveal, has as much to do with a different administra­tion in Tallahasse­e as it does with pressure on the state from coastal municipali­ties with flooded roads.

That lost time, Berry says, means money.

“We are postponing investment­s now that will cost us five to 10 times more in the future.”

While state transporta­tion and environmen­tal agencies say they are confident that Florida has the resources and expertise to address the threats without disrupting daily travel or business in the years to come, they can’t yet answer some key questions, starting with how much it will cost to adapt roads — let alone protect obviously highrisk commerce centers like seaports.

With the focus on major roads, the state has not yet calculated the broader impact to state and local roads, but a South Florida Sun Sentinel and Miami Herald analysis, conducted using data from the state’s own sea level rise planning tool, found that the potential toll is significan­tly higher.

By 2040, some 445 miles of roads in the state would likely be flooded. By 2060, that number more than triples to almost 1,600 miles of roads.

State Sen. Shervin Jones, a Broward County Democrat who sits on the Florida Senate’s transporta­tion committee, calls the climate threat a “ticking time bomb.”

“We can’t keep pushing it off to the next session” Jones said of the threat the changing climate poses to the state’s roads. “One session will be the last session where we push it off and we’re going to have a major problem.”

Republican Florida House member Vance Aloupis shares Jones’ concern, but he also credits Gov. Ron DeSantis for the progress the state has made in addressing its transporta­tion vulnerabil­ities .

“We’re not at the place where our living rooms are getting flooded like on Miami Beach, but it’s only a matter of time,” Aloupis said of his Coral Gables district.

Where we are going, we don’t need roads

At a Jan. 12, 2021, meeting of the Florida Senate Transporta­tion Committee, FDOT secretary Kevin Thibault began his presentati­on to legislator­s by quoting Doc Brown from the 1985 film “Back to the Future.”

“Roads? Where we are going, we don’t need roads,” said Thibault, the head of an agency with a $10 billion annual budget. No one laughed.

Included in the presentati­on was a breakdown by Will Watts, the agency’s chief engineer, of the work FDOT has been doing in the last few years to prepare Florida for the climactic changes set to rock the state in the coming decades.

The primary focus, he said, was on evaluating the impact of climate change on its most important highways, a network that Florida transporta­tion planners poetically term the “strategic intermodal system.” Like a cardiologi­st examining a middle-aged patient for circulator­y issues, FDOT has set about trying to figure out just how vulnerable chunks of its strategic intermodal system really are and what should be operated on first.

To do so, Watts said, they helped fund a sea level prediction tool built by researcher­s at the University of Florida. They also ordered up a risk assessment — an analysis of how vulnerable a road or bridge might be — of the entire strategic intermodal system.

“Phase one, which looks at highways, is complete,” Watts told the senators. Phase two, which looks at ports and airports, was still ongoing. FDOT, he said, was still working on its “action plan” for how to adapt. The department plans to release that plan in the next few months.

The study Watts referenced was commission­ed in 2018 and completed by Cambridge Systematic­s. It found that “the regional transporta­tion network is significan­tly vulnerable to storm surge and sea level rise.”

It found that a 2-foot rise in sea levels, which experts forecast by 2050, would imperil “a total of

252 centerline miles of the total SIS highway system,” or about 5.5% of the state’s critical highways. Storm surge projection from a Category 5 storm could flood a fifth of those roads.

The findings, for the most part, identified the same risks that the FAU study highlighte­d six years earlier in 2012. But it also pointed to even more problems.

In that analysis, Berry, along with engineers from FDOT, published a peer reviewed paper that year that looked at all the roads in Florida — not just the critical high-traffic highways the state analyzed in

2018. He found that up to

10% of Southeast Florida’s roadways were potentiall­y vulnerable to a 3-foot, 2-inch rise in sea level.

Across the state, 5% of all roadways may be in peril — led by a stretch in coastal Broward County.

“We found that the lowest state roadway in the entire system is Dania Beach Boulevard,” said Fred Bloetscher, a professor of civil engineerin­g at Florida Atlantic University who worked on the 2012 study alongside Berry.

Their paper also pointed out that flooded roads snarled traffic and eventually became structural­ly unsound.

That more recent FDOT study, along with an April 2020 memo Thibault sent to DeSantis confirming that the agency will “continue to identify risks” from sea level rise and storms, point to a major shift in the politics of climate change for longtime Florida transporta­tion watchers like Janet Bowman.

Bowman, a senior policy adviser for the Nature Conservanc­y, just finished her third stint working on the team overhaulin­g the state’s Transporta­tion Plan Update, a process that happens every five years.

“The first time it was very difficult to have any discussion of resilience or climate, and certainly, that’s changed,” she said. “I think this time there really was no resistance to talking about it and developing policy.”

The road ahead

Despite the challenges and still-unknown but likely massive price tags for projects, state leaders say they are confident the state was prepared to adapt thousands of miles of roads before they’re soaked by rising seas.

“It is a critical issue to address and plan for and take seriously,” Noah Valentstei­n, head of Florida’s Department of Environmen­tal Protection and the state’s chief resilience officer, said in an interview with the South Florida Sun Sentinel and Miami Herald.

The most daunting unknown may be cost. The best estimates come from places where road raising — one of the main strategies to keep streets dry — is already underway.

In Monroe County, recent estimates indicate that raising just half of the county’s 300 miles of road at risk before 2060 could cost $1.8 billion. That price tag is lower in places like Miami Beach, where the water drained from higher roads doesn’t have to be cleaned to such a high standard as the Keys. Miami Beach’s first residentia­l road raising project, which elevated about 3 miles of road, cost

$40.9 million. Valenstein pointed to Gov, Ron DeSantis’ recent proposal for a billion-dollar bond to help local government­s adapt to sea level rise as a sign of the state’s financial commitment.

Thibault, who participat­ed in the same interview as Valenstein, said the department of transporta­tion plans to work the cost of resilience into its regular budget process and tackle it on a project-by-project basis.

“There is no set-aside number that we’ve identified as a resiliency number. It’s part and parcel of how we do business. It’s a continuous process,” he said.

Another key problem: How high should they build the road? That depends on how much sea level rise you expect.

Lots of organizati­ons from NOAA to the Army Corps of Engineers, have different estimates of when all the water will show up. A lower estimate would call for a lower road, and less money spent to build it — but it may end up with the road being swamped.

Neither secretary offered a direct answer on how the state will go about choosing which sea level rise estimate is most appropriat­e for each project.

Valenstein pointed to the work the state is doing to develop a tool for choosing the right projection­s for state-funded coastal constructi­on, a process kick started by the lone climate change bill passed in 2020 sponsored by State Sen. Jose Javier Rodriguez.

Perhaps in a nod to that process, Thibault said that if there’s a range of seasonal high water marks for an area, DOT will pick the highest one to better protect the road.

“We tend to side on the conservati­ve in the data we build in our system,” he said.

But when asked about a possible process for abandoning roads that are too expensive to keep dry under future flood conditions, something the Keys are considerin­g, Thibault said the topic “has never come up.”

Local government led the way

In its turn toward resilience, the state’s department of transporta­tion is following the lead of local government­s, particular­ly in South Florida.

Jennifer Jurado, the chief resilience officer for Broward County, credits the state for a “positive evolution” in the way it thinks about the implicatio­ns of sea level rise.

Before the change in attitude, Jurado says, “there was a severe reliance on receptiven­ess of individual­s in order to have informed conversati­ons about how projects need to be evaluated.”

Some of those individual­s appear to have listened.

In a recent training session for planners on how to use the UF tool that shows sea level rise’s impact on roads, a policy planning leader at FDOT shared that her district had learned how to estimate the right amount of future sea rise from Jurado herself.

But it’s clear that the newfound camaraderi­e between state and local officials was hard won, and that could signal new hurdles ahead when it comes to making tough decisions about height and costs of future roads.

In Miami Beach, the first city in the state to dramatical­ly elevate roads in response to rising seas, leaders agree it was a challenge to get FDOT on the same page at first.

“Over the years we’ve not always seen exactly eye to eye but we’ve agreed on the engineerin­g concepts behind these things,” said Eric Carpenter, deputy city manager of Miami Beach.

When the state did work on a section of Alton Road a few years back, they were not interested in raising the road as high as the city wanted. But partway through the project, engineers discovered that the city’s alarms about how close saltwater was to the bottom of the road were true, and FDOT switched to a newer, more salt-resistant material.

City officials point to that switch, and the state’s decision to significan­tly elevate the next portion of Alton Road they work on, as a sign of Miami Beach’s influence on the agency.

“Our city has definitely blazed trails in examining what elevation criteria would be the most protective for now and the future,” said Amy Knowles, chief resilience officer for Miami Beach.

Like in Miami Beach, a DOT project in Hollywood was also gummed up when the state agency realized partway through that high sea levels posed more of a threat than anticipate­d.

Jorge Camejo, the executive director of the Hollywood Community Redevelopm­ent Agency, said it took the department three years to finish what should have been an 18-month project reconstruc­ting a portion of State Road A1A between Sheridan Street and Hollywood Boulevard — because of tidal flooding.

“It made them realize that this is a serious condition that makes this segment of A1A no longer just another roadway project. It’s a challengin­g situation,” he said. “This isn’t just putting asphalt down anymore; you have to figure out what to do with the water.”

Camejo says plans to address the flooding issue involve putting in stormwater pumps and installing one-way valves that allow water to drain away from the road but stop it from flooding back in when tides rise. They’re also looking into raising roads, but that poses a major challenge.

“We could raise A1A by as much as a foot, which might make a big difference in the flooding, but what does that do to the harmonizat­ion between A1A and existing properties?” he said.

Much in the same way that Miami Beach discovered that water flows downhill after raising roads in the Sunset Harbor neighborho­od in 2016 and accidental­ly flooded adjacent businesses, Camejo worries about the spillover effects from road raising.

No matter which option the state chooses, Camejo said he’s grateful the conversati­on has moved past the “milestone” of acknowledg­ing the risks of rising seas.

“At the highest policy level of state road constructi­on we now have their attention, and that’s the first step to coming up with a solution,” Camejo said.

South Florida Sun Sentinel data reporter Aric Chokey contribute­d to this report.

South Florida Sun Sentinel staff writer Mario Ariza can be reached at mariza@sunsentine­l.com or 954-356-4233. Miami Herald staff writer Alex Harris can be reached at 305-376-5005.

This story was produced in partnershi­p with the Florida Climate Reporting Network, a multi-newsroom initiative founded by the Miami Herald, the South Florida Sun Sentinel, The Palm Beach Post, the Orlando Sentinel, WLRN Public Media and the Tampa Bay Times.

 ?? SUSAN STOCKER/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL 2017 ?? Traffic maneuvers through a flooded A1A just south of Dania Beach Boulevard because of rising waters from a king tide. Florida has begun assessing the threat that sea rise poses to a sprawling transporta­tion network essential to the state’s economy.
SUSAN STOCKER/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL 2017 Traffic maneuvers through a flooded A1A just south of Dania Beach Boulevard because of rising waters from a king tide. Florida has begun assessing the threat that sea rise poses to a sprawling transporta­tion network essential to the state’s economy.
 ?? PEDRO PORTAL/MIAMI HERALD PHOTOS ?? As Florida has just recently started looking into the impact of sea level rise on its thousands of miles of roads, a study from Florida Atlantic University in 2012 found that the lowest-lying state road in Florida was Dania Beach Boulevard.
PEDRO PORTAL/MIAMI HERALD PHOTOS As Florida has just recently started looking into the impact of sea level rise on its thousands of miles of roads, a study from Florida Atlantic University in 2012 found that the lowest-lying state road in Florida was Dania Beach Boulevard.
 ??  ?? The Dania Beach Boulevard bridge, part of the lowest-lying state road in Florida.
The Dania Beach Boulevard bridge, part of the lowest-lying state road in Florida.
 ??  ?? The intersecti­on of Dania Beach Boulevard and U.S. 1.
The intersecti­on of Dania Beach Boulevard and U.S. 1.

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