Los Angeles Times

How Houston can prevent another Harvey

- By Kiah Collier and Neena Satija n unpreceden­ted Karen Warren Houston Chronicle Kiah Collier Neena Satija

Aamount of rain has fallen on the Houston area in the last few days, causing what’s likely the worst flooding event that the nation’s sixthlarge­st metropolit­an area has ever experience­d — even worse than 2001’s Tropical Storm Allison.

This may seem like a freak occurrence. But it’s the third catastroph­ic flooding event this region of 6.5 million people has experience­d in three years. And scientists and other experts say that much of the devastatio­n could have been prevented. While the Houston area’s history is punctuated by major flooding events, they argue that local officials — under political and legal pressure from developers — have dug themselves into a hole for decades by flouting smarter developmen­t policies. They say local officials need to account for more frequent and intense rains that are sure to come with climate change, rather than looking to what has happened in the past in their search for solutions.

Here’s what local leaders could have done to protect the region — and what they must do to prevent such disasters in the future.

Preserve, restore prairie land

Much of northwest Houston used to be prairie, where tall grasses could absorb huge amounts of floodwater. But most of it has been paved over in the last two decades amid rapid developmen­t and a massive influx of people. Between 2000 and 2010, this part of Houston grew by nearly 70% to a population of 587,142 — equivalent to that of Milwaukee. Restoring or preserving prairie can’t prevent flooding altogether, but it can be a tremendous help in mitigating the damage.

Some local officials flat-out disagree with this conclusion; they believe you can erect public works projects to catch and manage runoff — essentiall­y fighting water with concrete — and don’t need more green space. But the vast majority of scientists believe the region needs to impose stricter regulation­s on those who want to develop prairie land.

Restrict developmen­t

Buildings continue to go up in vulnerable flood plains all over Harris County. A few years ago the city of Houston tried to ban new developmen­t in the most flood-prone areas. But developers sued, and the policy was severely weakened by the City Council. Although some have chosen to elevate their lots to protect homes and businesses from rising floodwater­s, that strategy may only increase the flood risk for those around them.

Local officials also have pursued some buyouts — purchasing homes that have been badly damaged by floods or that are known to flood repeatedly. Harris County has not done enough, however. The county will need a lot more money to buy out yet more homes, and local owners will have to be more willing to move.

Plan for climate change

In planning for flooding from future storms, local officials largely look to past rainfall totals and weather patterns. But climate change will heighten the risks that the region already faces. That’s particular­ly true because it sits so close to the Gulf of Mexico, where sea levels are rising and waters have been warming as the planet gets hotter. Warm water means more evaporatio­n and more water vapor in the air — so when a storm comes along, there’s more water to pick up and dump on nearby land. This is exactly what’s happening with Tropical Storm Harvey.

“The exact same storm that comes along today has more rain associated with it than it would have 50 or 100 years ago,” renowned climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe told the Texas Tribune last year. Hayhoe said Houston needs to plan for more frequent and intense rainstorms, just like many other cities in the country. But local county officials have previously said they have no intention of doing so.

Educate the public

Hundreds of thousands of people have moved to the Houston area in recent decades; it’s consistent­ly ranked as one of the nation’s fastest-growing cities. But people who move to flood-prone areas are often unaware of the risks.

They purchase homes in low-lying areas and assume that if they’re not in the 100-year flood plain, they won’t flood. But homes often flood outside flood plains in Houston — and real estate agents don’t always tell homebuyers that.

Some past efforts the city made to educate Houstonian­s have been met with pushback. A few years ago, government officials put up visible flood gauges in low-lying coastal areas meant to show how high the water could rise during hurricanes, but real estate agents revolted and the signposts were removed. Local officials need to be willing to tell their constituen­ts some hard truths.

is a reporter for the Texas Tribune. is a reporter for the Texas Tribune and Reveal.

 ??  ?? RAIN from Harvey continued to fall in Houston on Monday. Floodwater­s reached the roof lines of single-story homes.
RAIN from Harvey continued to fall in Houston on Monday. Floodwater­s reached the roof lines of single-story homes.

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