Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Elected officials are bungling response to Florida’s rising seas

- By Tania Galloni

It’s about time: the head of America’s disaster response department, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, is publicly acknowledg­ing that climate change is linked to intensifyi­ng hurricanes.

“You can look back at the history of hurricanes over the last 75 years or more — more frequent, more costly, more damage. So, the climate has changed,” FEMA Administra­tor Peter Gaynor said during July 24 Congressio­nal testimony.

It is scientific fact, yet some of our leaders in Washington and Florida keep playing politics instead of doing what taxpayers need — preparing our communitie­s for storms and flooding that come from a warmer Earth. We need to hold them accountabl­e.

Consider:

Last summer, Gov. Ron DeSantis made a big show of hiring Julia Nesheiwat as “Chief Resilience Officer” to coordinate Florida’s climate change response. She left the job six months later to be a homeland security adviser in the Trump administra­tion.

During her brief tenure, Nesheiwat traveled Florida talking to people involved in preparing for climate change. She found the state lacked coordinati­on, and she produced a report that wasn’t released until after she was gone. (It wasn’t made public until The Tampa Bay Times asked for it under the state’s open records law. The DeSantis administra­tion took four months to turn it over.)

“Florida needs a statewide strategy,” her report said. “Communitie­s are overwhelme­d and need one place to turn for guidance.”

Among other things, her report talked about the need for affordable housing for “climate refugees” uprooted by storms, fires, and floods — like Floridians in flooded neighborho­ods and the 20,000 Puerto Ricans who fled here after Hurricane Maria. Notably, the report doesn’t mention the causes of climate change, or steps Florida could take to cut greenhouse gasses.

When Nesheiwat left, DeSantis didn’t replace her. Instead, he said the Secretary of the Department of Environmen­tal Protection would do that job on top of his

It is scientific fact, yet some of our leaders in Washington and Florida keep playing politics instead of doing what taxpayers need.

other responsibi­lities. We haven’t heard much about it since.

On the federal level, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ initial proposal to solve Miami’s sea-level rise problem is a $4.6 billion plan that calls for six miles of walls (6 to 13 feet high) along the coast — including inside Biscayne Bay — a questionab­le approach that could wreck neighborho­ods and favor wealthier residents.

Disaster preparedne­ss agency FEMA is conspicuou­sly avoiding mentioning climate change at all. The agency’s latest “National Preparedne­ss Report” — a summary of the nation’s vulnerabil­ities — says nothing about climate change, Climatewir­e reports.

Some federal lawmakers are trying to mandate common sense. Their “FEMA Climate Change Preparedne­ss Act” says, plainly, that it’s detrimenta­l to FEMA’s mission to “deny or ignore the existence of climate change or the implicatio­ns of such on national security and national emergency management.”

“Detrimenta­l” is one word for it. Another word is “irresponsi­ble.” When it comes to places that have much to lose from rising seas, hurricane-prone Florida ranks near the top. We can meet this challenge. It’s unconscion­able — and yes, irresponsi­ble — that so many of our elected officials are choosing to ignore it instead.

Tania Galloni, of Miami, is the Managing Attorney for the Florida office of Earthjusti­ce, a national nonprofit environmen­tal law firm.

“The Invading Sea” is the opinion arm of the Florida Climate Reporting Network, a collaborat­ive of news organizati­ons across the state focusing on the threats posed by the warming climate.

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