Miami Mayor: City Flooding "Like a Hurricane" Again Today Thanks to King Tides
6
October, 2017
Thanks
to sea-level rise, Florida's unique topography, and poor city
planning, areas of Miami-Dade County look like a hurricane hit them
today. But there's not even a tropical storm in town. Instead, mere
weeks after a real hurricane did damage major parts of South Florida,
the Miami area is massively flooding again today thanks to a
combination of some moderate storms hitting during King Tides, when
the sea is at its highest point all year.
Photos
of Miami circulating online today are hard to distinguish from the
city during Hurricane Irma. And the high tides aren't just limited to
Miami Beach. On the mainland, City of Miami Mayor Tomas Regalado, who
is currently pushing a $200 million sea-level-rise mitigation and
resiliency plan, has been driving around town all day taking note of
the flooding. He's not pleased.
"Today,
Miami is flooding as if a hurricane went through it," Regalado
tweeted just before noon.
This
is bad. We're only beginning to see the impacts of climate change in
Miami, and flooding is already shutting the city down multiple days
per year. The National Weather Service says a flooding advisory will
remain in effect across most of mainland Miami until 2:15 p.m.,
thanks to poorly designed city drainage systems.
#KingTides are happening now. Please avoid areas if possible. This is NW 6th Street and 7th Avenue in #Miami
At
around 10 a.m., the City of Miami issued a warning to residents,
which basically told them to avoid trying to drive downtown. A map
the city released warned that streets along the major Biscayne
Boulevard corridor from the Upper Eastside south to Downtown could
become too flooded to drive through. The city said the same could be
true for portions of the Venetian Causeway into Miami Beach.
View map for #KingTide areas. Driving through floodwater NOT advisable. It may be deeper than appears & unseen debris can cause flat tires
Naturally,
Miami Beach is pretty much a no-go zone all day today, too. Miami
Herald reporter Joey Flechas has snapped multiple images of flooded
roads and streets across the island — he also noted online that the
flooding is comparable to what happened when Irma hit.
Barring
major changes, this is the new normal in Miami. The dire,
city-sinking-into-Atlantis warnings that countless scientists and
major magazines have predicted is not coming in the future — it's
already here, and city officials are struggling to react. The same
areas of the county that flooded today were also inundated when the
remnants of Tropical Storm Emily hit in August.
Miami
Beach is rushing to complete a $400 million stormwater-pumping
program designed to mitigate the impacts of tidal-flooding events
like this. Since the Emily flooding fiasco, where multiple pumps in
Sunset Harbor neighborhood failed due to power outages, Levine has
repeatedly gone on the defensive, reminding the public that only 15
percent of the pump-upgrades have been installed so far. Moreover,
the city said those pumps aren't even designed to fight against
flooding from major storms and hurricanes, which are likely to knock
power out to the systems — a statement that angered many residents.
But
there isn't that much local city leaders can really do. They're not
in a position to, say, force major polluters to stop spewing carbon
into the air or broker emissions deals with the Indian and Chinese
governments.
Regalado
is now pushing his own upgrade-plan for the city, campaigning to
convince residents to vote for the $400 million "Miami Forever"
proposal in November. Half of that money would go toward
drainage-improvement and stormwater pumping projects in areas like
Downtown and Brickell, which are underwater again today. The plan
would also pay for Miami to raise its seawalls. Regalado tweeted
earlier today that the existing walls were swallowed this morning by
the King Tides.
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