By GRACE KELLY/ecoRI
News staff
While this modeled hurricane is a worst-case
scenario, it’s likely a major hurricane will hit Rhode Island in the next 80
years. (Isaac Ginis/University of Rhode Island)
When fall is just around the corner, and the summer heat is lingering like a bad hangover, it will come.
Hundreds of miles
across, Hurricane Rhody, a Category 3 storm, will make its way from the Bahamas
at a clip of about 60 mph. In this time of climate disruption, New England is
overdue for a 100-year storm, and Hurricane Rhody doesn’t want to be late.
The storm slams into Long Island, N.Y., then continues its upward push into Connecticut and Rhode Island. Six hours later, after 18 feet of storm surge wreaks havoc on coastal and bayside towns, and 127-mph winds rip the Ocean State to shreds, it slows down.
The storm slams into Long Island, N.Y., then continues its upward push into Connecticut and Rhode Island. Six hours later, after 18 feet of storm surge wreaks havoc on coastal and bayside towns, and 127-mph winds rip the Ocean State to shreds, it slows down.
But Hurricane Rhody
isn’t finished. It’s waited a long time, come a long way, and wants to put on a
show. So it starts to move south, creeping downward before changing course and
hitting Rhode Island with a well-placed uppercut.
It has weakened to a
Category 2 hurricane, but it doesn’t need extreme wind and bluster to have a
grand finale; it just needs water. It dumps a foot or more of rain and, coupled
with storm surge, sea-level rise, a moister climate, and narrow rivers,
waterways begin to swell.
Hurricane Carol in 1954, as did the hurricane of 1938, left downtown Providence flooded. (Brown University) |
And since Hurricane Rhody knocked out the electric grid for the entire state, including many backup generators, the Army Corps of Engineers watches helplessly as the hurricane barrier in Providence, which was closed to protect the capital from storm surge, begins to trap the rain as it falls into the Providence River.
Two days later,
Providence is flooded. The statue of a soldier at Kennedy Plaza peers out above
10 feet of water, as if surveying the damage.
It’s only a matter of
time
The above scenario is a worst-case outcome, and while everything might not happen exactly as such, it’s likely that a major hurricane will hit Rhode Island in the next 80 years. The quote that is standard across the local disaster preparedness landscape is that “it’s not a matter of if, but when.”
The above scenario is a worst-case outcome, and while everything might not happen exactly as such, it’s likely that a major hurricane will hit Rhode Island in the next 80 years. The quote that is standard across the local disaster preparedness landscape is that “it’s not a matter of if, but when.”
“I think we’re way overdue,” said Isaac Ginis, a professor at the University of Rhode Island’s Graduate School of Oceanography who developed the model for this worst-case scenario hurricane. “The last big one was in 1954, so it’s not something that you should just think about happening in the future. It could happen anytime.”
Ginis took components of
past hurricanes, such as Hurricane Esther in 1961, to create a model of
Hurricane Rhody. Esther made her way up toward New England and just
narrowly missed a direct hit to Rhode Island.
“You see the track of
that storm, and though it never made landfall in Rhode Island, it made a loop
very close to it, straight over the border of the state,” Ginis said. “But what
we did was we slightly shifted the track of Esther to the west, and made the
same trail, and in that case, that storm would come to Rhode Island twice.”
In this double-punch
scenario, Rhody’s first hit would be as a Category 3 hurricane. It would have
severe impacts on coastal communities, like the 1938 hurricane — nicknamed the
“Long Island Express” — that obliterated Westerly and left 20 feet of water in
downtown Providence.
Eyewitness accounts of that storm report a sunny, quiet day before the hurricane hit, and since weather prediction technology was virtually nonexistent, few saw it coming.
Eyewitness accounts of that storm report a sunny, quiet day before the hurricane hit, and since weather prediction technology was virtually nonexistent, few saw it coming.
A few hours later, the
Long Island Express had left the area, leaving some 700 people dead, another
700 injured, and total damages of $306 million, which today would be in the
billions.
Westerly plans for major
hit
Eight decades later, Westerly, which is at the forefront of the region’s hurricane strike zone, is taking its history, and the potential for a massive storm, seriously.
Eight decades later, Westerly, which is at the forefront of the region’s hurricane strike zone, is taking its history, and the potential for a massive storm, seriously.
On a warm August
evening, some 150 people donning pastel polos and clutching wine-filled
biodegradable cups gather in the Chaplin B. Barnes Reading Room at the Lanphear
Livery in Watch Hill. They’re here for a talk on storm surge and sea-level
rise, as part of a series of lectures hosted by The Watch Hill Conservancy.
They listen to Bryan Oakley, assistant professor of
environmental geoscience at Eastern Connecticut State University, and Teresa Crean, a community planner and coastal
management specialist with URI’s Coastal Resources Center, speak about how
rising seas — the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has projected sea-level rise
to increase in Rhode Island by up to 9 feet, 10 inches by 2100 — combined with
a Category 1 hurricane would bring unprecedented destruction.
Some attendees murmur,
“Wow, I remember Hurricane Carol, and I can’t imagine what would happen today.”
Others grunt and comment, “I’ll be dead by then.” But the overall vibe is one
of concern.
“I think a lot of people
are noticing that, within the past few years, certain areas are flooding
regularly and impacting the way they go to a certain destination,” said Janice
Sassi, manager of the Napatree Point Conservation Area.
“People are concerned. So, this past winter, the [The Watch Hill] Conservancy spearheaded a project that is getting the community thinking about the changing climate and what that means for us.”
“People are concerned. So, this past winter, the [The Watch Hill] Conservancy spearheaded a project that is getting the community thinking about the changing climate and what that means for us.”
This planning for a resilient future
project addresses coastal erosion, flooding, sea-level rise, and
what would happen if a massive hurricane hit and what the community can do to
prepare itself.
Part of this community
initiative was the Lanphear LIVE! lecture
series that brought in speakers such as Crean and Oakley and hosted workshops
that taught residents how to use the Coastal Resources Management Council’s STORMTOOLS program to see if their properties
are in danger from sea-level rise and/or a 100-year storm.
The Watch Hill
Conservancy and Westerly residents are taking a grassroots approach to learning
about the danger of a hurricane coupled with sea-level rise.
“We’re all seeing the
effects of these things,” Sassi said. “I think that a lot of people feel
helpless, but knowledge is power, and I think it helps if you know you’re not
in this alone.”
While Westerly is
educating itself about the climate crisis and preparing itself for sea-level
rise and hurricane-fueled storm surge, there is another important issue to
worry about if and when Hurricane Rhody hits: rain.
In 2017, Hurricane Harvey hit Houston
and overstayed its welcome for three days, during which it dumped 32 inches of
rain. Levees broke, dams were breached, and cars floated down streets. The same
thing could happen here when Hurricane Rhody makes its second landfall and
deposits 15-20 inches of rain.
“In New England, our
rivers are relatively short and shallow, so they can fill up very quickly,”
URI’s Ginis said. “It’s not like a wide river that can take a lot of rain, even
an insignificant amount of rain can cause flooding.”
Ginis noted that recent
research has shown that the climate crisis could be causing hurricanes to slow
down, becoming less like the racehorse that was the 1938 hurricane and more
like a slow Harvey that just won’t go away.
Just recently, the
very-wet Hurricane Dorian moved at a snail’s pace of 2 mph during its
devastating hit on the Bahamas.
Plus, as
hydrologist-in-charge David Vallee of the National Weather Service’s Northeast
River Forecast Center noted, with a warming atmosphere comes more moisture.
“We’re in a very-moist,
wet regime,” he said. “And when there’s more moisture in the air, that means
more rain.”
Vallee also noted that
New England storms tend to come in pairs: Carol in ’54 and Edna in ’55; Cindy
in ’59 and Donna in ’60; Irene in 2011 and Sandy in 2012. He said one could
come as a “milder” tropical storm and deposit a good amount of rain.
“Rivers become swollen,
the ground saturated, and if the Scituate reservoir starts its overflow
release, as it was designed to do, come that second storm and more rain,” he said,
shaking his head. “We could be at full capacity.”
Rhode Island could see a
repeat of the March 2010 floods that wreaked havoc statewide.
Warwick knows there will
be flooding
Crean, of URI’s Coastal Resources Center who works with communities facing
potential climate impacts, is particularly concerned, in the face of a
Hurricane Rhody scenario, about Warwick, what with its history of flooding.
“Just to the east of the
airport, but just north of Warwick Neck, is a whole system of wetlands and
streams and tributaries into [Narragansett] bay,”
Crean said. “If storm surge and rain hit, that creates a swath of flooding that cuts Warwick Neck off. There’s an emergency facility just north of Warwick Neck that would be physically cut off, so it’s important for the Warwick EMA [Emergency Management Agency] to know, first of all, to evacuate Warwick Neck. And if we want to be able to put out fires or whatever, they have to stage equipment in accessible locations because the area could be impassable.”
Crean said. “If storm surge and rain hit, that creates a swath of flooding that cuts Warwick Neck off. There’s an emergency facility just north of Warwick Neck that would be physically cut off, so it’s important for the Warwick EMA [Emergency Management Agency] to know, first of all, to evacuate Warwick Neck. And if we want to be able to put out fires or whatever, they have to stage equipment in accessible locations because the area could be impassable.”
Part of Warwick’s
problem also lies with its considerable collection of impervious surfaces,
according to Peter August, a URI professor and former
director of the university’s Coastal Institute.
“It's all the roads and parking lots, and when the rain falls, it can’t soak into the ground. It has to run off someplace,” he said. “Plus, they put the mall in the exact spot you would never want to put a mall; it's an oxbow, a bow-shaped bend in a river that floods easily, and so that's gonna be tough.”
The Warwick Mall was flooded by several feet of water during the late-March floods of nine years ago. A mall security guard had to be rescued by boat. Most stores had to be gutted and all inventory was declared a loss. The mall was allowed to reopen without having to do anything to address any future climate impacts.
To prepare for future
flooding, the city of Warwick is revamping its hazard mitigation plan,
as is required every five years. The purpose of the plan is to “reduce overall
risk to the population and structures from future hazard events, while also
reducing reliance on Federal funding in future disasters.”
The plan, which needs to
be approved by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, paints a picture of
what would happen if a hurricane, like Carol, hit today. Some of the numbers
are overwhelming: 28,486 tons of debris, nearly $12 million in damage to
commercial and industrial property, and $120,548,000 in residential property
damage.
“Oakland beach would be
almost completely washed out, and Warwick Neck would become inaccessible until
the waters recede,” Vallee said.
Five percent of
Warwick’s population is older than 65, and the city’s hazard mitigation plan
notes that “residents in group homes, nursing homes, assisted living, or
subsidized housing may not have the resources to shelter in place or evacuate.”
Warwick’s EMA director
and chief of police, Col. Rick Rathbun, believes any hurricane would have an
adverse impact on the entire city, both coastal and inland.
“Because of the size of
the city and our proximity to the bay, I think a hurricane will impact the
entire city, whether you’re living along the coast in Oakland Beach and Warwick
Neck, or if you’re in the western part of the city near the West Warwick line,”
he said.
“I think the biggest challenge is having people take the threat seriously early on. But I think it’s human nature to wait and hope, and we see things like Hurricane Dorian and how it stayed offshore of our coast, and that brings a false sense of security. These storms are unpredictable and they can move rapidly.”
“I think the biggest challenge is having people take the threat seriously early on. But I think it’s human nature to wait and hope, and we see things like Hurricane Dorian and how it stayed offshore of our coast, and that brings a false sense of security. These storms are unpredictable and they can move rapidly.”
One sentence in the
hazard mitigation plan sums up Rathbun’s concern: “A powerful storm can
significantly cripple Warwick.”
Climate impacts have
already arrived
So Hurricane Rhody arrives. It punishes Westerly. Slams Narragansett Bay.
Overwhelms Warwick’s bay-connected rivers and tributaries with 3-4 feet of
storm surge. Houses are swept off their foundations, debris smashes into
buildings, trees fall, and power lines snap.
Superstorm Sandy, in 2012, pummeled Misquamicut State Beach in Westerly. Hurricane Rhody likely will be less forgiving. (istock) |
Then, Hurricane Rhody
loops back around and dumps some 15 inches of rain for good measure.
Coupled with rising seas, warming waters spawning more hurricanes, coastal erosion, and overdevelopment, the question is: Are we ready for this?
Coupled with rising seas, warming waters spawning more hurricanes, coastal erosion, and overdevelopment, the question is: Are we ready for this?
National Weather
Service’s Vallee believes that state and local government are doing a lot to
prepare, but he worries about the greater public.
“Rhode Island was the
first state to have all of its municipalities be recognized as StormReady by
the National Weather Service, which requires each town to undertake certain
measures to be prepared,” he said.
This effort entails a
few actions on the part of the community, ranging from establishing a 24-hour
warning point and emergency operations center, to hosting community seminars,
to creating a system to monitor weather conditions locally. And while towns are
preparing for the worst, Vallee worries that people won’t take their local
government’s preparations seriously.
“But the people … the
only ones left who remember a massive hurricane and what it can do, well,
there’s not many left,” he said.
Crean shares Vallee’s
concerns.
“What is the tipping
point for making that meaningful change?” Crean asked. “I would still say it’s
an education process and conversation that we’re all having to try to figure
out where the will is to make change.”
Some change comes in the
form of adaptation. For example, the Misquamicut area along Atlantic Avenue in
Westerly, one of the neighborhoods that was devastated by both the ’38 hurricane
and more recently by Superstorm Sandy in
2012, some businesses have changed their entire model to account for future
storms.
“Sam’s Snack Bar and the
Little Mermaids lost everything during Sandy,” said Lisa Konicki, president of
the Westerly-based Ocean Community Chamber of Commerce.
“There was literally nothing left of Sam’s building, you couldn’t even tell that a building had been there. And Little Mermaids, there were a few pieces of the foundation wood that was sticking out of the sand, but the building, the roof, the walls, all that was gone. So those two businesses, rather than rebuild, opted to get concession trailers. So now their space is all mobile, and if there was a weather prediction similar to Sandy, they would simply unplug and drive away. They don’t want to go through it again.”
“There was literally nothing left of Sam’s building, you couldn’t even tell that a building had been there. And Little Mermaids, there were a few pieces of the foundation wood that was sticking out of the sand, but the building, the roof, the walls, all that was gone. So those two businesses, rather than rebuild, opted to get concession trailers. So now their space is all mobile, and if there was a weather prediction similar to Sandy, they would simply unplug and drive away. They don’t want to go through it again.”
But while adapting your business and home might be the best option now, Crean said there may come a time when managed retreat is the only option.
“The sort of holy grail
of all this is the idea of managed retreat,” she said. “At what point do you
have to tell somebody you can’t live here anymore? That you can’t operate your
business anymore? Wickford [a village in North Kingstown] may have to move or
become a more water dependent village, because there won’t be a parking lot for
visitors to use.”
The climate-related
changes that are possible in Rhode Island are not just a futuristic doomsday
warning; some of them have already happened or are happening.
“There’s a great image
of downtown Wickford and once upon a time there was a store called Ryan’s
Market. Now it’s The Kayak Centre,” Crean said.
Natural defenses matter
Sassi and August walk up one of the larger dunes at Napatree Point in Watch
Hill. The sun beats down on visitors eager to soak up the last rays of summer,
and piping plovers scatter across the sand.
Superstorm Sandy left Napatree Point battered. Hurricane Rhody likely will cause more damage. (Janice Sassi) |
“What’s amazing is that
the during Superstorm Sandy ocean water crossed the dune in eight spots,” said
August, a member of The Watch Hill Conservancy board of directors, pointing to
the paths that twine down the swirling dunes.
“On the bay side of the dune, in those breach sites, you had a classic washover fan, a big V shape path of pure white sand, not a leaf popping through it.”
“On the bay side of the dune, in those breach sites, you had a classic washover fan, a big V shape path of pure white sand, not a leaf popping through it.”
He then gestured to the
clusters of beach plum and waving fronds of beach grass.
“But the most striking
thing to me was that three months later, you would have no way of knowing where
that washover fan was, because the plants just shot up new stems from their
roots and rhizomes, and it was business as usual,” August continued. “And the
dunes just rolled over on themselves. It was pretty spectacular. There’s a
theme of resilience here.”