Miami Herald

Eliminatin­g the Office of Resilience and Sustainabi­lity no way to fight climate change

- BY RYAN SEARS ryansears@college.harvard.edu

Miami Mayor Francis Suarez recently joined a “Climate Mayors” webinar and touted the city of Miami as a global example of the bold leadership necessary to confront the climate crisis. Yet, later that same day, his office released a budget proposal that would abolish the city’s only office dedicated exclusivel­y to implementi­ng a robust citywide resilience strategy.

Page 258 of the mayor’s proposals says: “The budget includes the transfer of the Resilience and Sustainabi­lity function, personnel, and funding from the Office of Resilience and Sustainabi­lity to the Resilience and Public Works Department. The personnel are reflected in the prior Department in FY 2019-20 and in the new Department in FY 2020-21 (three positions, $234,000).”

Though Miami faces a COVID-19 budget shortfall that will force City Hall to make tough budgetary decisions, it cannot allow for its bold promise of an equitable and climateres­ilient Miami to fall victim to austerity politics. As rising sea levels, increased flooding and intensifyi­ng storms threaten Miami’s viability, the decision to terminate the Office of Resilience and Sustainabi­lity is not only myopic — it divests from the future of young people living in Miami.

Young climate activists like me are overwhelme­d by the uncertaint­y of the destructio­n that climate change will inflict on our city. Already, chronic flooding is a reality of life in Miami, but the worst effects of sea-level rise lie decades in the future — meaning that not only will today’s young people be the demographi­c most catastroph­ically affected, we will make up the tax base primarily responsibl­e for paying for it.

Yet, we had hope that the same City Hall that declared a climate state of emergency in November 2019 and released the Miami Forever Climate Ready strategy in January

2020, understood the urgency of our concerns and would make the necessary investment­s to guarantee a livable future for us. But this imprudent shift in budgetary priorities, made in the midst of an accelerati­ng climate crisis, signals a weakening of the commitment to the legitimate issues that young people are concerned about.

The idea of the Office of Resilience and Sustainabi­lity was sound: Resilience cannot be minimized to infrastruc­ture investment­s; it requires charting a path to carbon neutrality, communicat­ing climate risk to vulnerable communitie­s, reimaginin­g transporta­tion and guaranteei­ng housing affordabil­ity.

The proposed budget plans to gut the department and incorporat­e it as a division of resilience and public works — calling on the existing director, Alan Dodd, a retired colonel with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, to serve as both public works director and chief resilience officer. The implicatio­ns of this change in leadership structure are stark.

By suggesting that the city’s expansive climate-resilience and sustainabi­lity initiative­s are no longer first-order priorities, it will likely transfer greater risk onto future generation­s — setting up Miami’s most vulnerable communitie­s for even worse consequenc­es down the line.

Confrontin­g the existentia­l threats to all sectors of this city — from our roads to our parks, our housing market to our bus fleet — is not merely a task for the public-works department. It requires a creative and experience­d chief resilience officer whose single responsibi­lity is to oversee people-centric strategies for adapting to the stresses and shocks caused by climate change and who is independen­tly empowered to hold all city department­s and key stakeholde­rs accountabl­e to climatefor­ward priorities.

The Office of Resilience and Sustainabi­lity is far too critical to the future of Miami and its young people to be relegated to the margins of the city’s bureaucrat­ic structure. If we recognize the gravity of the climate emergency in Miami — if we truly want a livable city for today’s young people — then now is precisely the time to elevate the scale and scope of resilience efforts.

I encourage everyone to speak out against this proposed action. Public comments for the Aug. 3 Miami Climate Resilience Committee meeting are due at 5 p.m. July 31.

Climate change and its destructiv­e effects on all aspects of Miami life will not slow down for COVID-19. For the sake of the young people who call Miami home, the city’s resolve to fight it cannot slow down either.

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