Climate Change Task Force Is Right — Develop A Resiliency Plan for Flooding

In this Aug. 29, 2018, file photo, flooding is seen in Gays Mills, Wis., following torrential rains that sent the Kickapoo River over its banks the two previous days. Politics dominated Wisconsin's year in news, with voters deposing Gov. Scott Walker in a midterm kind to Democrats. Walker and leading Republicans didn't go quietly, drawing national attention for maeneuvering to block their successors from undoing some major policy achievements. The western Wisconsin community of Barron struggled to understand the disappearance of a teenage girl, and much of central and southern Wisconsin dealt with costly damage from widespread flooding.
Erik Daily La Crosse Tribune via AP

In recent years, flooding has upended the lives of people throughout Wisconsin. Ruined homes, shuttered businesses, washed-out roads and highways, and losses of farm equipment and livestock are the high price the state is paying for extreme precipitation. And severe storms are projected to increase because of climate change. That’s why Gov. Tony Evers should take a close look at recommendations from the state’s Task Force on Climate Change — comprising legislators, community leaders, scientists and other diverse stakeholders — and enact a comprehensive resiliency planning initiative.

According to scientists from the Wisconsin Initiative on Climate Change Impacts, the years 2010 to 2019 were the wettest ever recorded in the state. During that time, Wisconsin experienced 11 major flood-related disasters, each one straining state resources and costing taxpayer dollars for recovery efforts.

The task force’s call for a state resiliency strategy is an innovative approach that can yield numerous benefits. For example, a plan can help identify areas that are most at risk of flooding now and in the coming decades and give communities that most need to prepare priority in receiving resources. A plan can also ensure that taxpayer dollars are spent on projects that are cost-effective and well-coordinated between state and local officials. And through evidence-based research and modeling, a resilience agenda could promote collaboration among communities that have suffered from the same flood events to reduce the cost and damage of these disasters.

In Eau Claire, for instance, a resilience plan could inform city officials about the flood risk posed by the city’s two rivers — and how to build roads, bridges and other infrastructure to withstand future storms. For fast-growing areas of the state, such as in and around Madison and Milwaukee, the plan would encourage officials to consider how development contributes to stormwater runoff and flooding for people living downstream.

Resiliency planning can also identify mitigation solutions to aid communities of color that are often disproportionally affected by flooding and the consequences of climate change. And it would help cities and towns throughout the state to harness natural systems — wetlands, urban parks, and intact floodplains — that can mitigate flood damage and enhance natural resources.

A growing number of states — including Louisiana, Oklahoma, South Carolina, West Virginia, New Jersey and North Carolina — are recognizing the value of resiliency planning. These states, with varied geographies and political leadership, have launched efforts to develop resilience plans through legislation or by executive order. Gov. Evers and Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes can, and should, do the same.

By making resilience planning a priority, state officials and experts can get to work now to prepare for the evolving effects of climate change and reduce the damage, heartache and challenging recovery that follow floods. Doing so will position Wisconsin for a safer and more prosperous future.

Anna Haines is a professor and extension specialist in the College of Natural Resources at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point and with the University of Wisconsin-Extension. She also serves as a member of Gov. Evers’ Task Force on Climate Change. Yaron Miller is an officer with The Pew Charitable Trusts’ flood-prepared communities project.

This op-ed was originally published on December 29, 2020 by The Cap Times.