The Realities of Sea-Level Rise in Miami's Low-Income Communities
MIAMIThe water rose quickly. At noon on a brilliantly sunny day here, several blocks from the beach, a lake of salt water suddenly appeared in the street, filtered up from the porous limestone that resides underneath the whole county of Miami-Dade. On the corner of 79th Street and 10th Avenue in the Shorecrest neighborhood, people wandered outside their apartment buildings to stare at the rising water, sloshing through in rain boots to take out their trash.
Its been like this for a few days now, rising and then receding and then rising again, says Jessica Benitez, a resident who moved to Miami from her native Venezuela about a month and a half ago. She says she didnt know these apartments would flood before she moved into them, and she still doesnt know how to predict when the water is going to rise. She got home from the store a few days ago to find her street completely flooded, and she tied plastic bags around her feet to get to her door. [The city] has never told us anything. The water just sits there. Its like there are no drains, and I dont understand why, she says.
Shes not the only one who feels that way. This is just one neighborhood of many in Miami-Dade dealing with the effects of Floridas King Tide last week, the highest tide of the year. Coastal neighborhoods are hardest hit, but the flooding also reaches farther inland, to less affluent communities. Its here where the consequences of climate change and sea-level rise could in fact be most grave, says Nicole Hernandez Hammer, a climate researcher with the Union of Concerned Scientists. Middle- and low-income households tend to be less resilient to shocks such as flooding, and they also run the highest risk of being forgotten in the rush to save the millions of dollars in real-estate investments on the waterfront.
Its getting worse. When you visit places that werent flooding 30 years ago, theyre flooding now, says Hammer. Today, the Miami area experiences about six of these sunny-day flooding events per year. But the Union of Concerned Scientists projects that by 2045, theyll be happening 380 times per year. Thats two times per day in some areas, she says.
http://www.citylab.com/weather/2016/10/sea-level-rise-is-affecting-miami-low-income-communities/505109/
It is interesting that these places did not flood when they were building them. But there is no real sea level rise, or it is only a few fractions on and inch....