Texarkana Gazette

After superstorm, lessons haven’t sunk in

- By Frank Eltman and Wayne Parry

Five years after Superstorm Sandy was supposed to have taught the U.S. a lesson about the dangers of living along the coast, disaster planning experts say there is no place in America truly prepared for climate change and the tempests it could bring.

That is true even in New York and New Jersey, where cities and towns got slammed by deadly floodwater­s that rose out of the Atlantic on the evening of Oct. 29, 2012.

While billions have been spent to repair the damage, protecting vulnerable infrastruc­ture, people and property across the nation from the more extreme weather that climate change could bring is going to require investment on a staggering scale, easily costing hundreds of billions, perhaps trillions.

Some coastal protection projects are moving forward, but the most ambitious ideas spurred by Sandy’s onslaught are still in the design stage, with questions about whether they will ever be built.

Some wonder whether the nation has the will to undertake such ventures, even after this past season brought more catastroph­ic storms, including Hurricane Harvey, which swamped Houston, and Hurricane Maria, which laid waste to Puerto Rico’s electrical grid.

“It felt after Sandy as if we might have finally had our wake-up call. We’d start to take these things seriously,” said Eric Klinenberg, director of the Institute for Public Knowledge, a think tank at New York University. “We’d make the kind of investment in climate security that we made in homeland security after Sept. 11. But of course nothing of the sort has happened.”

Some experts worry also that the ascendance of a climateske­ptic to the White House may put the brakes on coastal protection efforts. In August, President Donald Trump rescinded President Barack Obama’s post-Sandy order requiring future sea level rise to be factored into federally funded infrastruc­ture projects.

“Since the new administra­tion is not using the CC word, the climate change word, it’s very hard to instill this forward-looking kind of attitude where you have to take into account sea level rise and how the flood zones expand,” says Klaus Jacob, a Columbia University scientist specializi­ng in climate change adaptation.

BIG IDEAS

After Sandy, which was blamed for at least 182 deaths in the U.S. and Caribbean and more than $71 billion in damage in this country alone, a government-funded competitio­n called Rebuild by Design produced audacious ideas for defending the coast.

One concept, dubbed The Big U, would create 10 miles of floodwalls, berms and gates around lower Manhattan. Other ideas include erecting breakwater­s around Staten Island that would double as oyster beds, and reconfigur­ing the Meadowland­s, the polluted wetlands of urban New Jersey, with berms and marshes.

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t put up $1 billion to get those projects started, but constructi­on hasn’t begun on any of them.

Amy Chester, Rebuild By Design’s executive director, said it will take years to complete all the planning and gain government approvals and community support.

And it’s not clear how much these projects will ultimately cost.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Water from New York Harbor surrounds the southern tip of New York’s Manhattan borough, seen from aboard a Staten Island Ferry. Superstorm Sandy roared ashore five years ago on Oct. 29, 2012, devastatin­g the coastlines of New Jersey, New York and parts...
Associated Press Water from New York Harbor surrounds the southern tip of New York’s Manhattan borough, seen from aboard a Staten Island Ferry. Superstorm Sandy roared ashore five years ago on Oct. 29, 2012, devastatin­g the coastlines of New Jersey, New York and parts...

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