Important advance for coastal resilience
The General Assembly today approved legislation from Rep. Tina Spears and Sen. Victoria Gu to mandate the creation and maintenance of a statewide coastal resiliency plan, the Act on Coasts. The plan will assess community vulnerabilities, recommend mitigation strategies along ocean and riverine coasts, and recommend financing strategies to implement these resiliency strategies.
The legislation (2024-H
7022Aaa, 2024-S 2298A) now
heads to the governor’s desk for his consideration.
“Rising sea levels aren’t just coming – they are already here,” said Representative Spears (D-Dist. 36 Charlestown, New Shoreham, South Kingstown, Westerly). “The question is what we plan to do in response. This bill will ensure that the state climate resiliency plan accounts for mitigation and resiliency efforts along all our coasts and waterways.”
The 2021 Act on Climate already mandates a
statewide climate change resiliency plan. This legislation adds a dedicated
coastal resiliency plan to that mandate and ensures that it be reviewed and
updated at least every two years, as coastal conditions in Rhode Island change
and mitigation strategies evolve.
“In the past year we’ve seen repeated and
severe flooding and erosion along our coasts and rivers statewide. We have to
do more to adapt so that we don’t lose the places we love in South County,”
said Senator Gu (D-Dist. 38, Westerly, Charlestown, South Kingstown). “While
work is already underway across the state to mitigate these adverse effects, we
need to integrate all the federal, municipal, and state efforts into a
comprehensive and actionable plan.”
The plan mandated by the bill will incorporate
the investments that have already been made or committed by federal, state and
local governments to avoid both redundant work and areas falling through the
cracks of resiliency planning.
This legislation highlights the need for both
short-term and long-term strategic thinking, addressing mitigation efforts that
are already underway and assessing specific vulnerabilities that are
anticipated by 2050, ensuring that acute issues are addressed without losing
sight of the forward planning needed to adapt to climate change.
This legislation comes during a period of
regional momentum in climate mitigation planning, highlighted by
Massachusetts’s recently released comprehensive climate resiliency plan, ResilientMass, which
is slated to develop district-based climate mitigation strategies along
Massachusetts’s coasts, starting this year.
“The impacts of climate change are already
being felt across the state, and those impacts will only become more pronounced
in the coming years,” said Jed Thorp, Rhode Island director with Clean Water
Action. “This legislation will ensure that Rhode Island has a thoughtful and
robust process to help the state adapt to those changes and make our
communities more resilient.”