The Prague Post - A decade post-Sandy, New York vulnerable as ever

EUR -
AED 4.247997
AFN 75.714061
ALL 92.247096
AMD 442.693822
ANG 2.07048
AOA 1060.698259
ARS 1664.896921
AUD 1.764076
AWG 2.08496
AZN 1.963313
BAM 1.951615
BBD 2.330902
BDT 141.426723
BGN 1.955982
BHD 0.436049
BIF 3423.845464
BMD 1.156705
BND 1.50448
BOB 7.996713
BRL 6.225617
BSD 1.157318
BTN 102.561293
BWP 15.508475
BYN 3.944858
BYR 22671.409155
BZD 2.327568
CAD 1.61768
CDF 2953.646761
CHF 0.927563
CLF 0.027794
CLP 1090.367672
CNY 8.224921
CNH 8.225268
COP 4465.110899
CRC 581.253553
CUC 1.156705
CUP 30.652671
CVE 110.638957
CZK 24.33498
DJF 205.569627
DKK 7.466568
DOP 74.149457
DZD 150.322958
EGP 54.619125
ERN 17.350568
ETB 177.843408
FJD 2.625371
FKP 0.87351
GBP 0.8795
GEL 3.14043
GGP 0.87351
GHS 12.55036
GIP 0.87351
GMD 83.865918
GNF 10034.412205
GTQ 8.86902
GYD 242.116616
HKD 8.987357
HNL 30.363357
HRK 7.535812
HTG 151.43526
HUF 388.328909
IDR 19268.500043
ILS 3.766016
IMP 0.87351
INR 102.527226
IQD 1515.282959
IRR 48668.344165
ISK 144.784753
JEP 0.87351
JMD 184.953384
JOD 0.820065
JPY 178.272454
KES 149.444156
KGS 101.154137
KHR 4651.108653
KMF 492.75648
KPW 1041.052095
KRW 1659.992499
KWD 0.354946
KYD 0.964415
KZT 613.783183
LAK 25094.704982
LBP 103582.892016
LKR 352.065243
LRD 212.249893
LSL 19.79104
LTL 3.415448
LVL 0.699679
LYD 6.292267
MAD 10.709638
MDL 19.644534
MGA 5216.737658
MKD 61.623111
MMK 2428.216431
MNT 4168.392485
MOP 9.259184
MRU 46.366473
MUR 52.665128
MVR 17.705993
MWK 2008.614475
MXN 21.443544
MYR 4.85527
MZN 73.916029
NAD 19.790902
NGN 1672.779514
NIO 42.474447
NOK 11.622916
NPR 164.098268
NZD 2.014393
OMR 0.444736
PAB 1.157498
PEN 3.913146
PGK 4.899511
PHP 68.130054
PKR 324.919341
PLN 4.246951
PYG 8195.42563
QAR 4.21185
RON 5.085333
RSD 117.227435
RUB 92.496757
RWF 1676.643243
SAR 4.337967
SBD 9.528206
SCR 16.407937
SDG 695.756861
SEK 10.915491
SGD 1.504202
SHP 0.867828
SLE 26.800877
SLL 24255.51549
SOS 695.790265
SRD 44.828085
STD 23941.448782
STN 24.753477
SVC 10.126285
SYP 12789.428676
SZL 19.791244
THB 37.453867
TJS 10.652772
TMT 4.048466
TND 3.397824
TOP 2.709115
TRY 48.63451
TTD 7.835164
TWD 35.545448
TZS 2845.330117
UAH 48.570245
UGX 4026.365812
USD 1.156705
UYU 46.17099
UZS 13909.371998
VES 256.174026
VND 30456.030768
VUV 140.721726
WST 3.227427
XAF 654.556191
XAG 0.023645
XAU 0.000287
XCD 3.126052
XCG 2.085691
XDR 0.81021
XOF 652.381289
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.87247
ZAR 19.998785
ZMK 10411.724582
ZMW 25.546775
ZWL 372.458393
  • CMSC

    -0.1800

    24.06

    -0.75%

  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    15.45

    +0.32%

  • CMSD

    -0.2000

    24.36

    -0.82%

  • NGG

    0.5000

    76.05

    +0.66%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    15.96

    0%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    11.97

    +0.58%

  • GSK

    1.0100

    46.94

    +2.15%

  • BTI

    -0.4400

    51.28

    -0.86%

  • AZN

    0.1100

    82.34

    +0.13%

  • BCC

    -1.1500

    69.18

    -1.66%

  • RELX

    -0.3200

    44.37

    -0.72%

  • BCE

    -0.3800

    23.11

    -1.64%

  • RIO

    -0.3800

    72.2

    -0.53%

  • BP

    -0.4300

    34.77

    -1.24%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.87

    +0.29%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    79

    0%

A decade post-Sandy, New York vulnerable as ever
A decade post-Sandy, New York vulnerable as ever / Photo: STAN HONDA - AFP/File

A decade post-Sandy, New York vulnerable as ever

Long before Superstorm Sandy devastated New York City and the surrounding region in 2012, scientist Klaus Jacob issued a prophetic report warning city leaders that such paralyzing flooding was imminent.

Text size:

Then Sandy made landfall on October 29 of that year, leaving well over 100 people dead in the United States, including 43 New York City residents. It caused $19 billion in damages across the metropolis, triggering lengthy power outages, temporarily displacing thousands of people and damaging tens of thousands of residential units.

More than two feet of water flooded into Jacob's own home in a quaint Hudson River town in New York state, an irony he suffered because municipal zoning laws barred him from raising the building enough to avoid such inundation.

"A week after Sandy I got a letter in the mail: 'Now you can raise it,'" recounted Jacob, a geophysicist at Columbia University specializing in disaster risk management.

The experience speaks to the much larger challenges of short-sighted thinking as climate change warnings grow ever-more dire.

Ten years after Sandy left one of the world's cultural and economic powerhouses tragically swamped, Jacob says the city is far from prepared for the coming era of intense storms.

New York received billions of federal dollars and invested in rebuilding. A number of resiliency projects remain in the planning stages while a few, including one to reduce Manhattan's coastal flood risk, are underway.

Jacob said subway repairs that fixed thousands of holes would allow the vital transportation system to fare better in the wake of another Sandy-esque storm.

And the US Army Corps of Engineers recently detailed a $52 billion plan to erect a massive system of storm surge gates and seawalls.

But that will require years of bureaucracy to get approvals, and isn't slated to begin construction until 2030.

- Climate and housing -

An October report from New York's comptroller -- an elected official responsible for scrutinizing the budget -- criticized some city agencies for dawdling, with several projects stalled and billions in federal funding unused and still available.

Last fall's Hurricane Ida meanwhile highlighted the city's persistent frailties, including aging sewer infrastructure.

In a mere hour Ida poured more than three inches of rain onto Central Park -- nearly twice what the city's sewage system is capable of handling -- and, according to Jacob, "the subway system became the default sewer system."

Dozens of people in the region died. Several of the deceased lived in New York City basement apartments that flooded.

If Sandy hit tomorrow "we'd be way worse off," said Thaddeus Pawlowski, an urban designer focused on climate resiliency, who formerly worked at the NYC Office of Emergency Management.

"Our housing situation has gotten so much worse. Our neighborhoods are so much more unequal," Pawlowski told AFP.

New York is facing an acute housing crisis, but a fair proportion of the city's new residencies have been in coastal neighborhoods like Williamsburg and Long Island City. Municipal data mapped by local outlet The City shows some 2,000 new units were built square in the floodplain of Coney Island, a district Sandy pummeled.

The state has bought out some homeowners living in vulnerable neighborhoods, including in Staten Island's Ocean Breeze, where hundreds of homes were purchased and demolished.

"That's a good pilot program, but it's bread crumbs -- we need loaves," said Jacob. "Buying out is not enough. We need to have a place where they can move."

Jacob cited need for denser residential buildings, but emphasized new construction must eye climate risk rather than cater to the real estate industry.

"We don't have any long-term vision, such that short-term measures, like building housing, work together with that long-term vision," he told AFP.

"Without that vision being developed, I think we are just fiddling around forever on the edges."

- 'Massive mobilization' -

Climate experts and political leaders agree there's no silver bullet -- mitigating risk and shoring up resiliency demands sweeping planning and investment in conjunction with neighborhood-scale storm management, like shrub-filled bioswale ditches that filter runoff.

"We are not going to be able to say, 'we did one project and now we are safe forever,'" said Rohit Aggarwala, the city's chief climate officer. "That just is not the way it is going to work."

Pawlowski pointed to the Green New Deal -- a proposed congressional plan to reshape America's climate and economic policy -- as a way forward.

"We need a massive mobilization," he said.

Jacob did say that, unlike some of the United States' low-lying coastal cities like New Orleans, New York has "the luxury of high typography" that should inform building strategies.

Perhaps morbidly, he noted the city's cemeteries occupy its highest points: "We could swap the dead and the living."

Above all, Jacob urged against inertia, saying "either we are psychologically overwhelmed, or the water will overwhelm us."

"Which one do you prefer?"

N.Simek--TPP