Letter to the Editor: Climate act needs to be passed by Legislature

Published 6:18 pm Friday, November 4, 2022

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

As a certified floodplain manager with 19 years of experience in civil and water resources engineering, I work directly with Minnesota communities trying to understand and mitigate the threat of major flooding from heavy rain and other severe weather events.

According to the National Atmospheric and Oceanic Administration, since the year 2000, there have been 35 different weather events in Minnesota that each caused more than one billion dollars in damages. Total damages have been between $20 and $50 billion. Flooding and severe storms have caused 80% of Minnesota’s recent natural disasters. These events hurt businesses, damage private property, strain public infrastructure, and threaten public safety and national security.

Many states and communities have created Chief Resilience Officer positions to lead efforts to increase resilience to natural disasters and implemented resilience planning initiatives. A coordinated resilience strategy helps communities design stronger flood infrastructure, develop smart growth strategies, put limited resources to work, and guide emergency response efforts.

Email newsletter signup

While cities and states have taken the lead on resilience planning, the federal apparatus around extreme weather preparedness is disjointed and redundant. Thankfully, Republicans and Democrats in Congress have come together to introduce The National Climate Adaptation and Resilience Strategy Act (H.R.6461/S.3531), otherwise known as NCARS.

NCARS would establish a federal Chief Resilience Officer to guide the creation and implementation of a national resilience strategy that streamlines federal support, leads with science, leverages nature areas, and addresses historical inequities to help communities mitigate the threat of disasters more efficiently. NCARS would equip local leaders with the resources, data, and tools necessary to successfully plan for future risk of flooding and other disasters.

Congress should find a way to pass this legislation. Communities across Minnesota and the country will be better off if they do.

Joe Waln

St. Paul, MN