The nearly $300 million
climate-resiliency
initiative
established by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg using Sandy relief
funds will not address climate pollution, according to a city official.
The New York City Special Initiative for Rebuilding and Resiliency
(SIRR), formed in November 2012, will release a report this month
indicating how $294 million in federal funding from the Superstorm Sandy
relief act should be spent to increase the city’s “climate resiliency.”
The report “will present policy
recommendations,
infrastructure priorities, and community plans, and identify sources of
long-term funding” in addition to the emergency federal funds — but it
apparently will not include an accounting of the carbon footprint of
that infrastructure development.
In an email, SIRR spokesperson Daynan Crull
told Hill Heat that because the initiative’s job is to “protect New York
City against future climate threats,” it “does not directly address
energy generation vis-Ã -vis fossil fuels”:
SIRR’s directive is rebuild and protect New York City against future
climate threats, so it does not directly address energy generation
vis-Ã vis fossil fuels. However, New York City has been a global
leader in environmental urban policy, pioneering PlaNYC - one of the
most comprehensive sustainable and environmentally conscious policy
programs ever established for a major city. It is upon this foundation
that SIRR is built. Indeed PlaNYC
established the New York City Panel on Climate Change, which is
supporting SIRR’s work with the best climate
science available.
Crull’s statement makes no sense - if
SIRR’s plan is to “protect New York City
against future climate threats,” it must necessarily “address energy
generation visà -vis fossil fuels.” One cannot wall off energy use
and infrastructure planning into separate boxes. This announcement is
especially troubling because it is not clear that New York City is
increasing any of its investments in renewable energy or carbon
pollution reduction in response to Sandy. Instead, the city is moving
forward with new fossil-fuel
infrastructure,
including a fracked-gas pipeline planned to cut through the
Rockaways.
At a May 16 televised
forum on the recovery from
Superstorm Sandy, a former top military infrastructure official called
on Americans to “stop ignoring” climate change and “realize it’s the new
reality.” At the Sandy town
hall
organized by public television stations NJTV
and WNET, John
Boulé,
the former commander of the New York District, Army Corps of Engineers,
warned New Yorkers to stop ignoring climate change and start preparing
for higher sea level rise and more frequent and more powerful storms:
First of all, we’ve got to realize it’s the new reality. Climate
change is real. It’s more than sea level rise that’s going to happen
over the course of the next 100 years. It’s greater storm intensities,
it’s greater storm frequencies. We’ve got to stop ignoring it and
start planning and building to reduce the risk to the public. That’s
where we are.
Watch it:
Like Boulé, other panelists, including PSE&G
president Ralph LaRossa, recognized the “new reality” of rising seas
and extreme
weather.
Although these words are welcome, the most important element of facing
the reality of climate change is understanding that it’s caused by human
activities — something no-one at the forum did. In fact, Richard
Ravitch, the real-estate scion and former Democratic lieutenant governor
of New York, blamed “forces of nature” on sea level rise.
At no point during the two-hour forum did any panelist or reporter
discuss the manmade causes of climate change or recommend opposing the
threat to civilization posed by the fossil-fuel industry. The words
“fossil fuels,” “carbon”, “greenhouse,” “pollution,” and “oil” were
never mentioned. Also not mentioned was David Koch, the carbon pollution
billionaire and richest man in New York, who was on the board of
WNET from 2006 until the day of the forum. At
the WNET board meeting on the morning of May
16, Koch’s resignation was
accepted.
In the wake of Superstorm
Sandy, New York City’s flagship public television station,
WNET, has dropped the richest man in New York,
carbon pollution billionaire David Koch, from its board of trustees.
Days before the monthly board meeting on May 16, Koch’s name was
removed from the WNET
website. Koch had been a board member
since
2006.
Koch has been funding WNETsince
1986.
The severance of Koch’s longstanding relationship with
WNET
— which not only serves the New York City area but also produces
national programs such as Charlie Rose, Nature, and Great Performances —
comes at a time of increasing tension between Koch’s anti-regulatory,
climate-polluting industrial empire and the educational
mission
of public television.
The inherent conflict between Koch’s conspiratorial, anti-science
ideology
and the public interest with has come under attention in recent months.
After Superstorm Sandy struck, WNET’s Charlie
Rose and Bill
Moyers ran shows on
the tragic consequences and threat of greenhouse pollution for the New
York region. More recently, reports of Koch Industries’ interest in the
newspaper holdings of the Tribune Company have spurred nationwide
protests.
Koch also was featured in the November 2012
PBS documentary Park
Avenue, which
contrasted the extreme wealth of Koch’s residence at 740 Park Avenue
with the stark poverty less than a mile north in East Harlem. In the
documentary, a former doorman noted that Koch, with a net worth of about
$45 billion, gives only $50 holiday
tips.
Just after Koch left the WNET board, the
station ran a major live town hall on Superstorm
Sandy. Broadcasting from
New Jersey and New York City, the NY/NJ/Long Island affiliates under
WNET management broadcast a two-hour show that
talked repeatedly about the major threat posed by climate
change
in rising sea levels and more frequent storms of increased
intensity—threats which Koch’s Cato
Institute
denies.
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has
announced
an allocation plan for the $1.77 billion in federal Community
Development Block Grants that are part of the Sandy disaster relief bill
HR 152. It is not clear if mitigation of
climate pollution is part of planned investments in housing, business,
and infrastructure resiliency.
Housing Recovery – $720 Million
Single-Family Rehabilitation: $350 million to establish a grant
program for up to 9,300 homeowners whose residences were sustained
damage as a result of Hurricane Sandy and need additional funding to
restore their homes, implement resiliency measures and remediate
mold. Will assist up to 1,000 low-, moderate- and middle-income one-
and two-family homeowners whose primary residences were destroyed or
had major damage, and 8,300 low-, moderate- and middle-income
homeowners whose primary residences were damaged but not destroyed.
Multi-Family Rehabilitation: $250 million to fund programs to
enhance the resiliency of up to 12,790 units of housing for low-,
moderate- and middle-income New Yorkers damaged by Sandy that still
require significant resources to permanently address damage and
resume sustainable operations. The City’s program will provide
grants and low-interest loans, depending on need and scope.
Public Housing: $120 million to address initial resilience measures
for public housing developments, such as permanent emergency
generators at key buildings to provide backup power to critical
building systems.
Business Recovery – $185 Million
Business Resiliency Investments: $100 million to provide grants to
up to 1,300 businesses. $100,000 per company will go to small- and
mid-sized companies, and $1 million per company will go to large
companies in vulnerable areas. Program will require companies to
commit to reinvest in their New York City presence.
Expanded Loans and Grants: $80 million to provide loans and grants
to as many as 1,000 businesses. This program will provide expedited
low-interest loans of up to $150,000 on similar terms to the City’s
existing emergency loan program; provide expedited grants of up to
$60,000 to affected businesses; and invite community development
finance institutions to compete in a business plan competition to
solicit ideas for additional loan and grant programs which would
then be funded on a pilot basis, with the best program(s) then
funded at scale.
Innovations in Resiliency Technologies Competition: $5 million to
allocate, through “Race-to-the-Top”-style competitions, grants to
the most innovative and cost-effective ideas for demonstration
projects featuring resiliency products and technologies that can be
replicated citywide.
Infrastructure Resiliency – $140 Million
Neighborhood Game-Changer Investment Competition: $100 million to
jump-start economic activity in the five Business Recovery Zones by
allocating, through “Race-to-the-Top”-style competitions, grants to
the most innovative and effective investment ideas for spurring
long-term economic growth. Possible ideas could include attraction
of growing companies and/or companies of significant size,
attraction of companies that serve the needs of underserved
populations, or other transformative investments in key corridors.
Critical Utility Infrastructure Resiliency Competition: $40 million
to allocate, through “Race-to-the-Top”-style competitions, grants to
the most innovative and cost-effective resiliency measures
identified by the utilities for their critical networks. Grants will
be allocated to utilities in one or more of the following
categories: i) liquid fuel networks; ii) other energy networks
(power, steam, natural gas); and iii) telecommunications networks
(wires and wireless).