Tag Archives: hazard identification

San Francisco Bay Adopts Climate Change Regulations

The San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission has voted unanimously to pass a development plan for land within 100 feet of the bay's coastline. The plan—which requires that decisions about land use in the area consider factors including the latest climate science and the importance of wetland restoration—gives the agency a tool to deny, »read more

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What’s the Relationship Between Climate Change and Extreme Weather?

Some scientists give us the rundown: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OmJfsjYfVNU (From Climate, »read more

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What Do People Know About Flood Risk and How Do They Want to Learn More?

Most of the general public (69%) doesn’t believe that they are at risk of flooding, though most (68%) local official know many are wrong to feel so safe. The public wants to hear about flood risk from municipal/county officials (47% want the mayor, 32% the floodplain manager)—unfortunately, nearly half (45%) report that they “never” do., »read more

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Check out the New and Improved Coastal Community Resilience Index

We at StormSmart are big fans of the Mississippi-Alabama Sea Grant Consortium's Coastal Community Resilience Index. For those not familiar with it, the Coastal Community Resilience Index (CRI) is a simple tool that provides a snapshot of a community’s resilience, and can help identify opportunities to improve. Designed to take as little as two hours to, »read more

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Will the Next Hurricane Put You Underwater? New Site Shows How Deep

Have a look at the new Miami-Dade County Storm Surge Simulator which lets you click on a map to show where you live and then select the severity of the storm before it shows you just how deep that water will be when that next hurricane hits. You can even select whether you want to see the depth shown on a person, a home, or a villa (I did mention this was, »read more

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FEMA Study Finds National Floodplains Projected to Grow by 40-45%

As reported in the New York Times, at last week's Coastal Zone conference in Chicago, FEMA shared some results from a pending study looking at the projected effects of climate change on the National Flood Insurance Program. The short version? It's not looking pretty, and the challenges won't be confined to coastal areas either. Floodplains are going to, »read more

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Proposed Extension to NFIP Would Add Wind Data, Not Wind Coverage

The US Senate is considering an extension to the NFIP that would add a provision wherein the government would assign a ratio of damage caused by water (covered by the NFIP) vs wind (generally covered by homeowner's insurance). The Coastal Act would use data already gathered by NOAA and FEMA to determine the breakdown. You can read the (S.1091 - Flood, »read more

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Massachusetts Town Amends Zoning Bylaw to Reduce Flood Losses

In an attempt to lessen flood losses, the town of Hull, Massachusetts has amended their zoning bylaw to consider not only current, but future conditions. Notable changes include: 1. A requirement that the town's review process ensures that a proposed project won't cause or worsen flooding on other properties (sounds like a good NAI approach). The reviewers, »read more

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Not Mapped in the Flood Zone, Not at Storm Surge Risk? Not so Fast.

A new report looking at the risk of homes exposed to hurricane-driven storm surge damage in ten major urban areas along the Gulf and Atlantic coasts finds that the majority of homes in those communities that are in designated surge zones are not included in local flood zones. In Virginia Beach, for example, 87 percent of surge-inundation zone properties, »read more

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Horrible and Terrifying (Japanese Tsunami)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k4w27IczOTk Wow. If you live anywhere near the ocean and this doesn't scare you, it probably should., »read more

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