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Climate change and hurricanes

Columnists

Julianne Malveaux | 9/20/2019, 6 a.m.
Hurricane Dorian has drowned the Bahamas and devastated the coasts of North and South Carolina. There are trillions of dollars ...
Julianne Malveaux

Hurricane Dorian has drowned the Bahamas and devastated the coasts of North and South Carolina. There are trillions of dollars worth of damages to communities that will take years to rebuild.

The fury of this hurricane, some say, is unprecedented, with winds measured at 130 mph at their fiercest. Dozens of lives have been lost — at least 50 in the Bahamas, as of this writing, and others here in the United States.

The relief efforts and the questions continue: What role does climate change play in the destruction this hurricane caused? Are extreme and unexpected weather patterns our new reality? What does it mean for our quality of life and our economy?

One doesn’t have to be a climate scientist to believe that climate change is affecting our weather. There is a large body of scientific research to prove it.

The ferocity of Hurricane Dorian and the massive destruction it has left in its wake is at least partly due to climatic destabilization. This is why 195 nations signed the Paris Accord, the 2016 agreement to contain greenhouse gas emissions. Many applauded former President Barack Obama’s support of the accord. We have been dismayed that the current president indicated his intent to withdraw from the agreement and already has supported public policy to undermine it.

The willingness of U.S. leaders to ignore the scourge of climate change is challenging. It is also challenging to watch Democratic presidential candidates flail around the issue, as they did in the recent CNN debates. To be sure, there was great rhetoric and good ideas, but no robust approach to better managing our environment.

Hurricane Dorian reminds us of the urgency of dealing with climate change policy. It also reminds us of the underinvest- ment our nation has made in our infrastructure.

Better infrastructure would mitigate some of the destruction of this hurricane, and our 45th president promised to address infrastructure. He has not. It’s a bipartisan challenge because whether you are a Democrat or Republican, you ride on our nation’s highways and drive across vulnerable bridges.

The American Society of Civil Engineers rates our infrastructure a D+, hardly a passing grade. It points to deficiencies on everything from our bridges and roads to our water supply. And daily headlines suggest the D+ grade may be generous.

Flint, Mich., has yet again made national news headlines after its water supply has been polluted again. It is easy to focus on Flint, but too many other municipalities also have water challenges, and the public health effects in Flint reverberate all over the country.

We have long known of the adverse effects of lead paint on children. Yet too many of our schools still are riddled with lead paint. And the beat goes on. The worst thing is that little has improved between 2013 and 2017 when the last report was released. The president knows it, but doesn’t care to use his political capital to spark a bipartisan agreement. Instead, he prefers to keep up the combative mess around immigration and jingoism.

Congress is just back from its six-week break. Perhaps they will approach our challenges with renewed enthusiasm. From my perspective, the three top things they must deal with are gun control, infrastructure and climate change. These need to be bipartisan issues, issues that the majority of the population will be positively impacted by.

But the rudderless, leaderless Oval Office prefers to engage in a rhetorical sideshow that diverts from the flailing economy — even with low unemployment rates — the white supremacist gun crisis and infrastructure ineffectuality.

Hurricane Dorian reminds us that legislative malfeasance is unacceptable. To ignore climate change, infrastructure and gun control is to ignore the issues that are critical to the lives of our nation’s citizens.

I’m not surprised that 45 ignores these issues, but what about the Congress, including those who represent areas that Hurricane Dorian devastated?

The writer is an economist and author.