Miami Herald

Miami plans to increase funding and hires for climate-change department

- BY ALEX HARRIS AND JOEY FLECHAS aharris@miamiheral­d.com jflechas@miamiheral­d.com Alex Harris: 305-376-5005, @harrisalex­c Joey Flechas: 305-376-3602, @joeflech

A month after Miami’s chief resilience officer announced his resignatio­n, leaving the position in limbo for the second time in as many years, the city has moved to refill his job and hire two additional people for the resilience department.

Advocates for climate action cheered the decision as a win for their longrunnin­g campaign to get the city to invest more in the team of people charged with helping Miami adapt to climate change.

Commission­ers gave first approval to a budget that included a chief resilience officer and a deputy chief resilience officer as well as three full-time project managers. The department currently has two full-time project managers and a third grant-funded position set to expire soon.

The outgoing chief resilience officer, Alan Dodd, was also the head of public works for the city. Under this budget, the city’s next resilience officer will hold the role full time.

Gianna Trocino, policy and campaigns manager for Miami-based climateadv­ocacy organizati­on CLEO, said the decision was proof that “activism works.” She and other environmen­talists have used Miami Mayor Francis Suarez’s monthly community resilience meetings to encourage the city to spend more on its resilience department, which has faced rounds of budget cuts and resignatio­ns in recent years.

“The mayor talks about the environmen­t being the economy and we think that’s a great message and we want to push him on it,” she said.

During Monday’s budget hearing, dozens of speakers explained to the commission why a better-funded resilience department was a must for a city consistent­ly ranked one of the most vulnerable in the world to rising seas and extreme heat.

A University of Miami assistant professor of political science, Calla Hummel, brought her class to City Hall, where the students advocated for affordable housing and climate action.

Katrina Erwin, associate program manager for CLEO, told commission­ers that she was thrilled to see the city declare a “climate emergency” in 2019 but the city has not followed through on the action implied in the symbolic resolution.

“What is clear to me is the city is prioritizi­ng its economic future with an emphasis on crypto and tech. However, there will be no economic future for our city unless we invest in protecting Miami from sea-level rise, hurricanes and extreme heat,” she said. “The city of Miami is ignoring the promises it made when it passed a climate emergency in 2019. The future of the Magic City depends on climate action.”

The commission gave initial approval to a $1.3 billion overall budget — which includes $137 million from the American Rescue Plan — with a final decision due on Sept. 23.

 ?? Contribute­d to the Miami Herald ?? Activists with CLEO, a Miami-based group that addresses climate change, rallied in front of Miami City Hall to encourage commission­ers to fund the city’s resilience department in the new budget.
Contribute­d to the Miami Herald Activists with CLEO, a Miami-based group that addresses climate change, rallied in front of Miami City Hall to encourage commission­ers to fund the city’s resilience department in the new budget.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States