Santa Cruz Sentinel

Forums for climate change study coming

Meetings happening later this month

- By PK Hattis pkhattis@santacruzs­entinel.com

SANTA CRUZ >> As climate change impacts become more frequent and visible, local leaders are seeking to better understand vulnerabil­ities in Santa Cruz County's transporta­tion network and how best to proactivel­y address them.

The county's Regional Transporta­tion Commission recently approved a public and stakeholde­r outreach plan for the Climate Adaptation Vulnerabil­ity Assessment and Priorities Report. The report seeks to first identify transporta­tion infrastruc­ture assets such as roads, bridges and trails across the county that may be impacted by climate hazards and then develop an order in which those assets should undergo a more detailed analysis for climate adaptation.

The effort is a collaborat­ion between the transporta­tion commission, Santa Cruz County Department of Community Developmen­t and Infrastruc­ture, and the county's Office of Response, Recovery and Resilience.

Key to drafting the plan is a lengthy public engagement process, which will kick off later this month and holds a special emphasis on environmen­tal justice and hearing from vulnerable population­s on the front lines of the climate crisis.

Included within the list of transporta­tion infrastruc­ture that will get a long look is the entirety of the 32-mile Santa Cruz Branch Rail Line, which the transporta­tion commission has owned since 2012. To ensure that these projects eventually get done, local staff will also be working to identify state and federal funding sources that will be necessary to move the climate adaptation projects forward.

According to a recent staff report from the transporta­tion commission, the project will update and expand upon a previous vulnerabil­ity assessment developed in 2013 by using the most

 ?? SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE ?? An excavator removes debris at the Bates Creek washout on North Main Street in Soquel in March. The Santa Cruz County Regional Transporta­tion Commission and its partners are kicking off the public engagement portion of a forthcomin­g study seeking to identify vulnerabil­ities in local transporta­tion infrastruc­ture in the age of climate change.
SHMUEL THALER — SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL FILE An excavator removes debris at the Bates Creek washout on North Main Street in Soquel in March. The Santa Cruz County Regional Transporta­tion Commission and its partners are kicking off the public engagement portion of a forthcomin­g study seeking to identify vulnerabil­ities in local transporta­tion infrastruc­ture in the age of climate change.

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