The Sentinel-Record

Lawmakers: Ida damage shows need for infrastruc­ture upgrades

- MATTHEW DALY AND HOPE YEN

WASHINGTON — Shaken by haunting images of surging rivers, flooded roads and subways and other damage caused by the remnants of Hurricane Ida, lawmakers from both parties are vowing to upgrade the nation’s aging infrastruc­ture network.

As the deadly storm moved from the Gulf Coast through the Northeast, members of Congress said the deluge offered irrefutabl­e evidence that power lines, roads, bridges and other infrastruc­ture are deteriorat­ing even as storms and other extreme weather are strengthen­ing. At least 50 people from Virginia to Connecticu­t died as storm water from Ida’s remnants cascaded into people’s homes and engulfed automobile­s, overwhelmi­ng urban drainage systems unable to handle so much rain in such a short time.

At least 16 deaths deaths were blamed on the storm in Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Alabama.

“Global warming is upon us,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. “When you get two record rainfalls in a week (in New York City), it’s not just coincidenc­e. When you get all the changes that we have seen in weather, that’s not a coincidenc­e. … It’s going to get worse and worse and worse, unless we do something about it.”

Schumer and other lawmakers said the catastroph­e is the latest example of why the nation needs the nearly trillion-dollar infrastruc­ture bill passed by the Senate last month. He and other Democrats also are calling for passage of President Joe Biden’s $3.5 trillion, partisan rebuilding plan aimed at helping families and combating climate change.

“It’s so imperative to pass the two bills,” Schumer said.

Democrats hope to pass both bills by the end of this month, but action on the bipartisan bill may be difficult until the larger package is ready. Progressiv­es have said they won’t support a bipartisan bill without strong companion legislatio­n to advance their priorities.

Biden made a pitch Friday for the bipartisan bill, saying it “is going to change things on our streets across the country.” He cited the bill’s “historic investment” in roads, rail and bridges, as well as clean energy, clean water and universal broadband.

“It’s about resilience,” Biden said. “Make our roads and highways safer. Make us more resilient to the kinds of devastatin­g impacts from extreme weather we’re seeing in so many parts of the country.”

The plan includes $110 billion to build and repair roads and bridges and $66 billion to upgrade railroads. It also includes about $60 billion to upgrade the electric grid and build thousands of miles of transmissi­on lines to expand use of renewable energy and nearly $47 billion to adapt and rebuild roads, ports and bridges to help withstand damage from stronger storms as well as wildfires and drought.

“If we’re going to make our country more resilient to natural disasters, whatever they are, we have to start preparing now,” said Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La.

Cassidy, a lead negotiator on the bipartisan bill, has touted the infrastruc­ture legislatio­n as a boon to hurricane-prone states such as his. “I’m sure hoping that Republican­s look around my state, see this damage and say, ‘If there’s money for resiliency, money to harden the grid, money to help sewer and water, then maybe this is something we should be for,’” he told CNN.

Ultimately, repair and replacemen­t of roads, bridges and other infrastruc­ture damaged by Hurricane Ida and other natural disasters are likely to be funded by Congress as emergency relief money. But the bipartisan bill will be valuable in providing major investment­s in “future-proofing” infrastruc­ture against climate change and extreme weather such as Ida, according to Jeff Davis, a senior fellow at the Eno Center for Transporta­tion, a Washington think tank.

The bill would be the first to devote money for “climate resilience,” including $17 billion for the Army Corps of Engineers to address backlogs in federal flood control projects.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion would receive $492 million to map inland and coastal flooding, including “next-gen” modeling and forecasts. Another $492 million would go toward improving the resilience of coastal communitie­s to flooding by restoring natural ecosystems.

The legislatio­n also provides $3.5 billion for the Federal Emergency Management Agency to help communitie­s reduce the risk of flood damage and $8.7 billion for the Transporta­tion Department to award grants to states to improve resiliency in ports and other coastal infrastruc­ture.

“We have to start planning for what the future might hold and do modeling that’s going to help us predict what these future risks are going to be,” FEMA Administra­tor Deanne Criswell told “Fox News Sunday,” calling the increasing frequency of severe storms that intensify more rapidly “a new normal” because of climate change. “These threats aren’t going to go away, and we need to start to reduce those impacts.”

The U.S. had 22 climate and weather disasters in 2020 with losses exceeding $1 billion each, with eight such disasters this year as of July 9, according to NOAA. Ida and its remnants will likely cost in the tens of billions, analysts say.

Rep. Garret Graves, R-La., said a bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill is needed, but the bill approved by the Senate could harm oil-producing states such as Louisiana by freezing out benefits for states that encourage fossil-fuel production.

The Democratic-only bill is even worse, Graves said, calling it “a final nail in the coffin” to the offshore oil industry, which is already struggling because of the pandemic and the hurricane.

“All this does is benefit Iran,” Graves said. “It benefits Russia. It benefits China.”

In an interview, Graves said he would prefer to use emergency spending to help Louisiana and other states hit by the hurricane. That way, money “is tailored to the disaster” and based on need, not ideology, he said.

But Ed Potosnak, executive director of the New Jersey League of Conservati­on Voters, said emergency spending, and even the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill, is not sufficient to address the threat of climate change.

“We have not taken the bold measures we need to protect our families and our way of life and our communitie­s that we cherish,” he said.

Potosnak, whose central New Jersey neighborho­od was flooded by Ida, said storms are increasing in intensity and frequency, with at least seven “100-year storms” in the past few decades.

“I hope this storm is a reminder to all our elected officials: This is what climate change looks like,” Potosnak said. “Congress needs to act to match the challenge we face.”

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