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From ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Last Updated: 4:43
PM , June 11, 2013
Buildings on the Manhattan
skyline are seen from the Staten Island Ferry. In a highly anticipated speech,
Mayor Bloomberg has outlined a nearly $20 billion plan on Tuesday to help guard
New York City from
any future flood disasters.
Giant removable floodwalls would be erected
around lower Manhattan, and levees, gates and other defenses would be built
elsewhere around the city under a nearly $20 billion plan proposed Tuesday by
Mayor Michael Bloomberg to protect New York from storms and the effects of
global warming.
It
is one of the most ambitious projects ever proposed for defending a major U.S. city from the rising
seas and severe weather that climate change is expected to bring. It was
outlined seven months after Superstorm Sandy drove home the danger by swamping
lower Manhattan and smashing homes
and businesses in other shoreline neighborhoods.
"This is urgent work, and it must begin
now," Bloomberg said in a speech at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, acknowledging
that much of the work would extend beyond the end of his term this year.
"Piece by piece, over many years and even decades, we can build a city
that's capable of preparing better, withstanding more and overcoming
anything."
It
remains to be seen how the ideas will fare in a future mayoral administration
and what kind of support — financial and otherwise — they might get from the
federal government and other entities, not to mention from New Yorkers
themselves.
Bloomberg
said the city and federal money already allocated for Sandy relief would provide
$10 billion for the project, and the city believes it could get at least an
additional $5 billion in federal money.
He
acknowledged that some of the ideas could block views of the water and
otherwise prove controversial, but "if we're going to save lives and
protect the lives of communities, we're going to have to live with some new
realities."
In
addition to the floodwalls around lower Manhattan , a 15-to-20-foot
levee would be built to guard part of Staten Island , and gates and levees
would help shield Brooklyn .
The
project also calls for building dunes in Staten Island and the Rockaways,
firming up the shoreline with bulkheads in various neighborhoods, and perhaps
constructing a levee and a new "Seaport City " development at
the South Street Seaport.
In
addition, the mayor suggested giving $1.2 billion in grants to property owners
to flood-proof their buildings and $50 million to nursing homes to improve
theirs; making hospitals even in rarely flooded areas upgrade their pumps and
electrical equipment; and expanding beaches and marshes.
"This
plan is incredibly ambitious," Bloomberg said.
The
sweeping proposals represent a big step up in scale and urgency for a mayor who
has for years emphasized the threat climate change poses to the nation's
biggest city, which has 520 miles of coastline.
The
recommendations draw from updated predictions from the New York City Panel on
Climate Change, a scientists' group convened by the city.
The
average day could be 4 degrees to nearly 7 degrees hotter by mid-century, the
panel estimates. A once-in-a-century storm would probably spur a surge 5 or
more feet higher than did Sandy , which sent a record
14-foot storm tide gushing into lower Manhattan .
And
with local waters a foot to 2½ feet higher than they are today, 8 percent of
the city's coastline could see flooding just from high tides, the group estimates.
Over
the years, the city has required some new developments in flood zones to be
elevated and has restored wetlands as natural barriers, among other steps.
"Sandy , obviously, increased
the urgency of dealing with this and the need to plan and start to take
concrete steps," Deputy Mayor Caswell Holloway said Monday.
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