You know the boiling frog story. A frog is put in a pot of water that is slowly brought to a boil. By the time the frog senses danger, it’s too late. Froggie’s a goner.
Well, wake up, folks. South Florida is Ground Zero for sea-level rise and unless we address the insidious rise of water around us, much of our region, our culture and our legacy is going to disappear.
We’re already seeing things we’ve never seen before: sunny-day flooding, sea water bubbling up from stormwater drains, flood control gates that can’t open because water on the coastal side is higher than the inland side, saltwater intrusion in more drinking water wells, the Intracoastal Waterway spilling over seawalls, drainage canals lapping at sidewalks, gravity-driven stormwater systems hampered by the rising water table, and people unable to leave their homes during autumn’s king tides.
And don’t forget the octopus that surfaced in a Miami Beach parking garage through a storm drain last year.
Far more dramatic change is coming in the next few decades. By 2060, South Florida’s building codes anticipate a two-foot rise in sea level, maybe more.
Against this backdrop, what we’re not seeing is state and federal leadership to address the water headed our way.
That’s why the editorial boards of the region’s three major newspapers — the South Florida Sun Sentinel, Miami Herald and Palm Beach Post, with reporting help from WLRN Public Media — are speaking with one voice again today.
We want to encourage you to make your voice heard on the need to address sea-level rise — the epic challenge of our region.
Local officials who arepaying attention don’t want to cause undue panic, but they need your calls, letters and emails to get sea-level rise on the agenda in Tallahassee and Washington.
It’s not just about the future — though don’t we want our kids to enjoy our corner of paradise?
It’s about solving problems of today. For in parts of South Florida, businesses literally cannot open their doors when tides are particularly high.
Sea-level rise is an economic imperative.
“For our region right now, investing in improved flood management strategies, flood barriers, storm surge barriers, stormwater management systems, elevating roads, bringing infrastructure out of the flood zone — that is the best thing we can do as a region to preserve our economic competitiveness,” said Jennifer Jurado, Broward County’s chief resiliency officer, during a joint meeting of the editorial boards. “It’s not just about avoiding future flood losses. It’s about the daily cost of what it requires to operate here under constant flood exposures.”
We also encourage the Monroe, Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach legislative delegations to convene a summit on sea-level rise. Let them start by addressing this simple question: What level of sea rise is Florida planning for?
From this, let them develop a shared legislative agenda, as they’ve done with Tri-Rail, or how the region is recruiting Amazon’s HQ2. Keep it short and sweet for now. Avoid the kitchen sink.
Most especially, we encourage corporate leaders to speak up about the peril facing South Florida. Government exists to keep us safe, after all. And as we saw yet again during last year’s push for a new reservoir south of Lake Okeechobee, success came only after the CEOs of Orvis, Maverick Boats, the charter boat fishermen and tourist businesses stepped up.
Like the national debt, sea-level rise is a big, complicated and enormously expensive challenge. And like Congress, the Florida Legislature is not forward-thinking. It’s reactionary. It will generally “kick the can down the road” until problems get so big, they cost 10 times more to fix.
But this piper is going to demand payment. Far better if we start making down payments now.
Specifically, we need to address flood standards for highways and roads. We need upgrades in drainage, sewage and drinking-water systems. We need standards for seawalls. We need to think differently about coastal development, about areas that repeatedly flood and about whether our region of 6 million people can truly add 3 million more people over the next 40 years, when we’ll have lost 41 percent of coastal wellfield capacity.
At the same time, let us embrace the opportunity before us. South Florida could become a world leader on resiliency — one whose engineering, architectural and public works projects steal the show from the Netherlands’ floating cities. Let us become famous for breakthrough marine research at our colleges and universities. Let us embrace the future — but planfor the future — knowing our region is going to look far different than it does today.
“It was a pretty miserable place to live 100 years ago, but people applied themselves and adapted to the land,” said Jim Murley, Miami-Dade’s chief resiliency officer. “It won’t be the same place, but it will be a place I think we can adapt to and have the kind of economy we’re talking about. But we have to stay on track, and use our universities and innovative capacity, because we’re going to need all those things to deal with the rising sea.”
What we can no longer afford to do is ignore the monster on the riverbank while we ride the rapids of daily life.
For if like that frog, we ignore the water bubbling up around us, South Florida will be a goner.
“The Invading Sea” is a collaboration of the editorial boards of the South Florida Sun Sentinel,Miami Heraldand Palm Beach Post, with reporting and community engagement assistance from WLRN Public Media. For more information, visit InvadingSea.com
Contact information for key leaders:
U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson
(202) 224-5274
716 Senate Hart Office Building
Washington, DC 20510
To email: https://www.billnelson.senate.gov/contact-bill
U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio
(202) 224-3041
284 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510
To email: https://www.rubio.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/contact
Florida Gov. Rick Scott
(850) 488-7146
Office of the Governor
The Capitol
400 South Monroe St.
Tallahassee, FL 32399-0001
Bill Galvano, incoming president, Florida Senate
(850) 487-5021
420 Senate Office Building
404 South Monroe Street
Tallahassee, FL 32399-1100
Jose Oliva, incoming speaker, Florida House
(850) 717-5110
422 The Capitol
402 South Monroe Street
Tallahassee, FL 32399-1300