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The recent wildfires around Los Angeles are just the most recent example of how extreme weather driven by climate change is affecting housing across the country. Millions of homes are at risk of flooding, fire or drought. Increasingly, local municipalities are facing hard decisions about whether to tear homes down or ban new construction altogether. Today on The Sunday Story, we share an episode that originally aired last year in which reporters Rebecca Hersher and Lauren Sommer visit three communities in the US trying to balance the need for housing with the threat of climate-driven disaster.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
I'm Ayesha Rosco, and this is the Sunday Story from Up First, where we go beyond the headlines to bring you one big story. First came the Santa Ana winds, then the massive wildfires. Next, the rain arrived to parts of Southern California, causing mudslides in some of the burned areas. It's hard to comprehend the aftermath. More than two dozen people died, and thousands of people have lost their homes, including Jennifer Barguyarena of Altadena, California. Recently, she spoke to my colleague, Elsa Chang.
Us, like tens of thousands of Angelenos at this moment, are scrambling to find temporary housing, but are we looking for short-term temporary, long-term temporary? How do we settle our family in a way that stops making this an emergency for weeks and months moving ahead?
Bargie Arena needs answers fast, but her questions also go to the heart of even bigger questions. Are there places that are simply too dangerous, too risk-prone for people to live? And who decides where those places are? Today, we bring you a story we first aird last year. In it, my colleagues Lauren Summer and Rebecca Herser of NPR's Climate Desk travel to communities at risk of natural disasters and consider the hard choices they must make. Rebecca, Lauren, welcome to the Sunday Story.
Hey, it's great to be here.
Yeah, thanks.
Climate change is driving more extreme weather on all ends of the spectrum. It just seems like every other day there's some weather record being broken, and you're just hearing about it more and more.
Yeah. There are millions of homes at risk from climate change. But then there's the question of where to build new homes.
Right. On that new home building front in city council meetings and planning board meetings and other frankly boring public forums where these decisions actually get made about where to build homes, we are hearing people on opposite sides of the country expressing really similar concerns and fears and hopes.
Yeah. It It's happening in California with wildfires.
I don't care what you build, it'll burn.
It's happening with droughts and lack of water in Arizona.
We need to get the water.
It's happening with flooding.
So please, you have to think ahead? What is the increase in rainfall that we can anticipate will happen?
In some places, these debates are just beginning. In others, residents have started to figure out some solutions and policies that can these building decisions.
This is one of those things where you can see where people are coming from on all sides of it. There is a massive housing shortage in this country, and it is very difficult for many people to buy a home. But then, on the other hand, you have all of these homes that have been lost and people that have died in these disasters.
Right, yeah. Because building decisions are mostly local decision, it really means that local governments are making some of the most important climate change decisions out there.
But you went to three communities that are in the middle of this. Where are we going to go first in this conversation? What community are we going to hear from?
Yeah, it's a place with some of the most expensive housing in the country. You can see how close these homes are sided together. So This is Van Collinsworth. He lives here in Santee, California, which is east of San Diego, and it's the suburbs. It's at the edge of the whole Metropolitan region. We were walking through rows of homes on the outskirts of town. There's not enough space between them. If one home ignites, it's likely to ignite the next home, and the next one, ignite the next. Pretty soon, you have a cluster burn like you've seen in some of the other larger fires around the state. Yeah. So Collins He's the guy who sees fire danger everywhere. His day job is doing wildfire inspections at homes around San Diego. He actually makes sure they've cleared flammable brush. Yeah, I see things. He also runs a local environmental group called Preserve Wild Santee. For years now, he's been focused on this huge piece of land on the edge of town. Right now, it's open space. It's rolling hills, and they're covered in dry grass. It's where a new development for about 3,000 homes being proposed.
When you say a whole bunch of dry grass, I would think that he may see some fire danger in this area.
Yeah, exactly. This area has burned before. About 20 years ago, the Cedar fire came right through here and destroyed more than 2,000 homes around the area.
That really hit me because we know that a disaster in the past is a good indication that another one could happen in the same place in the future, right? So that's true for wildfires. It's also true for floods. So that's pretty scary.
Yeah, exactly. This new development, which would be called Fennita Ranch, it concerns Collinsworth because it would be difficult to evacuate.
If a wildfire hits, people wouldn't be able to get out in time.
Yeah, and that's how people have died in other wildfires, and there would only be two roads into this development. Essentially, they're betting the farm, so to speak, that those homes are not going to burn. He pointed out wildfires are getting more extreme, and he thinks that change the way people think about where to live. I don't think developers and decision-makers are willing to acknowledge that we are living in a new era of extreme weather and really grapple with what that means for the desire to just build and build and build. He actually joined with some other environmental groups, and they sued to stop the development in 2020. A judge actually agreed saying the developer needed to to analyze how long a wildfire evacuation would take.
What does the developer have to say about that and the fire risk?
Yeah, that's a question I put to them. We're not building wood-shingled homes. We're basically doing the opposite. We're developing what's known as a defensible community. This is Kent Aiden. He's a Senior Vice President at HomeFed Corporation, and that's the developer of Fnita Ranch. He says this community would be built with wildfire in mind. The homes would be built out of fire resistant materials. The more buildings that are built like that, the safer a community is. Then there's a bunch of other stuff Aiden says they're planning to do. There would be a dedicated fire station built. Residents would get inspections twice per year to make sure their flammable vegetation is cleared out. The vegetation would also be cleared on the outskirts of the developments that protects it. It makes a buffer. None of this, to be clear, would be a guarantee that the community wouldn't burn. But Aiden says they've worked with fire experts to reduce the risk.
We've learned through those tough lessons from the other fires, the things we need to do and believe that we can create a great community and help solve the California's housing shortage.
But That doesn't address evacuation, right? Wasn't that one of the biggest concerns?
Yeah, right. That's what the judge said. Aiden says they've developed a phased approach, so everyone just doesn't leave all at once and clog up the streets with traffic.
They will identify certain streets and then use the reverse 911 and other tools to evacuate those streets one at a time on an orderly basis. Yeah. If you haven't heard of reverse 911, which I hadn't before I started reporting about this, It's used in a lot of disasters. It's how authorities can send an alert to your phone based on where you are saying, There's a wildfire, you need to get out.
That's what Aiden and his company worked on after the lawsuit. They changed the project a little, they did more analysis, and then they brought it back to the community and the city council to vote on it again.
So whether they're going to build or not build, that's what we'll find out next.
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We're back with the Sunday story talking about home Building in the age of climate change with NPR's Rebecca Hersher and Lauren Summer. A city near San Diego is weighing a big choice. They need more housing for residents, but the area is at risk of being hit with a wild fire. Lauren, what did they decide?
Yeah. So- Item number 8 is a public hearing for the development of the Ranch. The Santee City Council members, they heard a lot from both sides, and then they had a chance to speak to say how they were going to vote, like Council member Laura Coval.
Frankly, I'm tired of Santee's greatest export being our young talent and our families. Rent in San Diego is the fifth most expensive in the country.
When it came to the vote, Motion carries with four eyes.
Councilman McNeill is- It passed. The need for housing won out in this case.
Yeah. Most of the city council members said they were satisfied with all the fire prep that was proposed.
This is something we've seen across the country, the need for housing winning out. It's really, really hard for city councils to even consider limiting growth under these conditions.
That makes sense. If you're an elected official, you may not win an election saying that you want to stop building, especially when people are like, We need houses, and you also need those taxes.
When you look around, there really aren't easy choices about where to build Because in California, for example, about a quarter of the land is at high risk of burning, and that's a lot of land. That question, how do we build? I mean, California is really an example of where these conversations are just getting started. I mean, they're still not a lot of guidance and support about how to do this for each city.
But there are other states that are more involved in that planning process about where people can live.
Okay, so where are we going to head next?
Okay, next to the desert outside of Phoenix, Arizona. That's where there's one topic that always comes up in government meetings. Is there water for it? There's a long running drought. It's still going more than 20 years now, and it's really affecting Arizona It's water supply. It's being tested like never before. That's why it's on the mind of one person I met there, Craig McFarland. He's the mayor of Casa Grande. It's hard. Yeah. Water is hard. Casa Grande, or a lot of people say Casa Grande, it's like one of the other there. It's about 45 minutes south of Phoenix, and you drive through some serious desert to get there with these big sauaro cactuses everywhere. The town is in Penal County, which is the fastest-growing county in Arizona. Mcfarland, when you talk to him, he's really quick to list all the companies that have moved in. We have Frito Lea, we have Abbott, we have Hexel, we also have Lucid, which is the newest electric car manufacturing plant here. That means there's a lot of jobs opening picking up.
As the industry is really rushing into the community, we have a huge need for housing.
But where to put the housing? That's the issue. He unrolls this big map of the city, and it actually looks like a patchwork quilt. Some of the land is white and some of the land is blue. Those blue parcels, that means there's water. So these are all areas that single family homes can built in.
How does some land have water and some land doesn't?
The blue squares are really about a promise of water. To build a subdivision here, builders have to show the project has a water supply for 100 years. On that map, all the blue squares have that.
It's part of a consumer protection law that says that in Arizona, if you're a consumer, we're going to guarantee you have 100 years worth of water.
The water mostly comes from these really big aquifers under the ground. What regulators do is they have to add up all the demands over the next 100 years, and they have to see if the supply can keep up with that. They found the demand had grown so much, water is going to run short over the next century. They stopped issuing those water guarantees for new subdivisions. It's those promises that make you go from a white square to a blue square, which is what you need to build something. But McFarland, he actually isn't very discouraged about that.
Cazagun will continue to grow. It's just we have to manage it.
We have to be frugal with the water we have. And because building hasn't actually stopped in town. I went by a new development going up in town, production workers that were putting on the sighting for these single-story homes before it got too hot later that day. It'll be more than 300 units. Even with the water situation, this project didn't have to worry about a water supply.
Why not?
Yeah. I We asked the developer, Greg Hancock, who is the President of Hancock Builders.
This is a great product to rent.
The requirement to have 100 years of water kicks in when a developer takes a big piece of land, subdivides it into smaller lots to build homes, and then sells those homes. But Hancock didn't do that here because these will be rented, not sold.
We don't need an insured water supply because it's one lot.
Although it is 331 units, it's one lot.
It sounds like then if you build rental units instead of selling the homes, you get out of the requirement for the water. So it's like a loophole.
Yeah, exactly. These are called build to rent projects. They've been booming in Arizona lately.
We have finished 3,000. We have 3,000 more in the construction and 5,000 more in pre-development.
I mean, the drought and the water challenges, they really don't faz Hancock. People will not stop moving here.
There's 12,000 12,000 employees at the chip plant in North Phoenix. It is one-sixth built.
People are going to keep coming here.
They want to live here. So the question is, if there's still a lot of building going on, does that defeat the purpose of the rules that are supposed to limit the building with respect to the water supply issues?
Yeah, exactly. That's the question, that this is growth that's unaccounted for and that could strain the water supply even more.
Really, Arizona seems like an example of somewhere where there's a law that requires cities to think long term about the risk of climate change when they're thinking building, but then there are these loopholes and these ways to get around the rules that they have in place.
Yeah, exactly. It's just that cities have to think about that long term future and how it affects their growth. I mean, that's the power behind Arizona's law. As a result, a lot of cities are planning ahead. They're looking seriously at water conservation, at water recycling projects, things that will help boost their supply. It's incomplete, but it really is forcing that conversation.
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Org/tinydeskcontest. We're back with a Sunday story and an episode that first aired last year, talking about home building in the age of climate change with NPR's Rebecca Harker Harsher and Lauren Summer. What I'm hearing from all of this is that it sounds like it is really hard for local and state governments to keep people from living in places that aren't going to safe or that may not have the supplies that they need because of the changing climate. But is there anywhere that is just knocking it out the park? They got it. They got that climate change under control.
I don't know about having climate change under control. I wish I could just be like, Yeah. But there's a place that experts kept telling us as an outlier in a good way. That is the third place that we visited, and it's New Jersey.
People are going to die. People are going to die. They will be me and my neighbors, and I don't want that to happen, okay?
That's Katherine Riss, and I know that doesn't sound like success, but bear with me. She is testifying at a public hearing about a state regulation that would make it a lot harder to build homes in places that are prone to flooding. New Jersey is one of the most flood prone states in the country. And Rys said her apartment building is at risk. She's scared about what will happen as extreme rainstorms get more common in her state, and you can hear the emotion in her voice.
So please, you have to think ahead. What is the increase in rainfall that we can anticipate will happen. We need to plan for that now.
The proposal that the state came up with in the face of these feelings coming from their residents was to basically make it really hard to build new homes in places that are prone to flooding, coastal areas, also inland areas near rivers, and also to require that homes that are renovated in those areas be protected. That was the proposal.
Based on what happened in Arizona and California, I guess my guess would be that this proposal to limit building, that it either failed or there was this big loophole that people were able to drive a truck through and do whatever they wanted.
Yeah, that would fit the pattern. Yeah.
Yeah. You're right, actually, that it faced a ton of opposition, especially from developers. But in the end, there was no loophole, and it was enacted.
I mean, how did they do that? Was it money on the side? Because usually, it's some money involved.
I mean, this is what I wanted to know, right? Because it's what sets New Jersey apart from other parts of the country. And New Jersey is arguably the national leader in reducing flood risk as the climate warms, which is a big deal because a lot of states in the country have a lot of flood risks. So it says something that this state is way out front.
So what is working in New Jersey?
Yeah, I also was intrigued, actually, and surprised. But yeah, I drove up and I spent some time there, and I visited this one town.
Woodbridge, New Jersey.
One of the first things that happened when I arrived in Woodbridge is that the town's mayor, John McCormick, started bragging to me about how great the highway axis is, which, not to stereotype, but that is pretty Jersey.
Where the two major highways in the state crossed, the park when the turnpike, 19, 2735, 287, 440, all in Woodbridge.
Yeah, it's very Jersey. It's Jersey. It's very Jersey.
But all joking aside, Woodbridge is definitely a crossroads place. It's right outside New York City. It's got train lines and highways. There's a lot of water. The ocean is on one side of the town. Then on the other side, there are rivers and creeks. It's very marshy. In recent years, they've had a huge flooding problem.
It's not just rain events. It could be a minimal rain event with the high tide and you're in trouble.
A decade ago, Hurricane Sandy devastated this town. Hundreds of homes were underwater. This is why I visited, because after Sandy, McCormick did something that was controversial. He actually advocated for hundreds of flooded homes to be permanently removed.
That's something we wanted to do, but we had to do it.
How How did that work?
Basically, the government bought the houses and knocked them down. But it's controversial for all the reasons you can imagine. You're actually purposefully eliminating tax base, and elected officials do not love that.
But McCormick is an elected official, been elected many times over, and he said when he really sat down and thought about it, he realized that it was actually more expensive and dangerous to keep the houses because these houses were going to flood again. The town would have to pay for emergency workers to rescue people. They'd have to pay for extra trash removal to get rid of all destroyed belongings and construction debris. That's all before you consider the mental and physical toll that it would take on the people who are actually living in these homes. To him, it made more sense to try to move people out of harm's way. But a home buyout, it is voluntary, and people were not immediately sold on the idea. Mccormick told me he still remembers this excruciating meeting that he presided over in the high school auditorium right after Sandy.
I mean, standing up there on the auditorium stage, looking at it, 400 people whose lives were just upended is not easy.
People were angry. People think we can do something about everything.
So people expect the mayor to be able to solve their problems. And in this case, we did, but it wasn't an easy process. So how did the government come prevents people to leave?
There were a few things that I found in my reporting that seem to have helped this difficult conversation. The first is that McCormick thinks it really helped that the city government vocally supported these home buyouts in flood zones.
I think that psychologically meant something to them. Say, Wait a minute.
There must be something to this if the mayor is telling me it's okay to go.
The other thing that probably is that New Jersey assigns case managers to families that are considering selling their homes to the government. So you have somebody to call, or somebody who follows up with you throughout the process, because the process can take years. In other states, there's been research that shows that a lot of people who might be interested in this thing don't end up actually taking it all the way to the finish line and selling their house because the process is so convoluted, it's so much paperwork, it gets confusing, and so you give up.
So I mean, what ended up happening in Woodbridge? How many houses did they remove?
They ended up removing about 180, which is not a small number for a single town. Statewide, New Jersey has removed about a thousand homes in the last decade, and they're trying to make sure that the ones that remain are safer.
Obviously, safer is better, but it's still sad when people have to leave their homes that they've lived in all their lives.
Absolutely. I think one lesson that I saw in New Jersey is that doing this well means making room for it to be a personal decision and not pushing people to do things that they don't want to do. I talked to the Chief Resilience Officer for New Jersey about this. His name is nick Angaron, and he said this work, it's really, really hard. You're talking about some of the basic principles of of the country as where and what you can do with your property. He said New Jersey still has a really long way to go, even if they're a national leader, because flooding is only getting more severe as the planet keeps getting hotter.
Yeah, and I think that's the thing that really struck us in all three places is that the intensity, the urgency of these decisions is just getting worse. The population is growing, housing prices are going up, but the disasters are getting worse too. It's really hard to have these conversations in a community. It's hard to plan thoughtfully and to respect everyone's decisions when the choices are so hard. But that's what climate change does. It forces us to really think long term. And locally, this is where it's really playing out in a big way.
Well, it seems like you either think long term or then the long term comes and smacks you in the face. You We're either deal with it or it's going to deal with you, right?
Yeah, totally.
Well, thank you both so much for bringing your reporting to us and going all over the country with us. I really appreciate It's been great.
Thanks so much.
Yeah. Thanks for having us.
This episode of The Sunday Story was produced by Andrew Mambo and edited by Nela Banerjee and Jennie Schmidt. Special thanks to Ryan Kalman. The mix engineer for this episode was James Willets. Our team includes Lianna Simstrom, Justine Yann, and our executive producer, Irene Noguchi. We always love hearing from you, so feel free to reach out to us at theundestory@mpr. Com. I'm Ayesha Rosco. Up First is back in your feed tomorrow with all the news you need to start your week. Until then, enjoy the rest of your weekend.
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