Thursday, March 28, 2024

The state needs to increase flooding resiliency, so the governor asked VIMS for help

An Executive Order from Gov. Ralph Northam calls on the Virginia Institute of Marine Science to leverage its long-term monitoring programs and expertise in flood forecasting to further increase the state’s resilience to sea-level rise and natural hazards.

Executive Order 24 — signed by the governor during last week’s 6th Annual Conference of the Virginia Coastal Policy Center at William & Mary Law School — calls for a sweeping series of actions to limit the impact of flooding and extreme weather events within the state.

John Wells, VIMS dean and director, says “we’re heartened to see the governor’s call for VIMS to use its cutting-edge modeling capabilities and decades of Bay data to help increase Virginia’s resiliency to sea-level rise and coastal flooding. We have a lot to bring to the table and are eager to contribute.”

Carl Hershner, director of the Center for Coastal Resources Management at VIMS, says “I was particularly encouraged that the Order calls for actions that use natural and nature-based solutions whenever and wherever possible.” CCRM was at the forefront of a multi-decade effort that ultimately led Virginia’s General Assembly to enshrine one such solution — “living shorelines” — as the preferred technique for stabilizing the commonwealth’s tidal shorelines.

Coastal flooding is of growing concern across Tidewater Virginia. (Southside Daily/J.D. Loftis/VIMS
Coastal flooding is of growing concern across Tidewater Virginia. (Southside Daily/J.D. Loftis/VIMS

In announcing his decision, Northam said, “As extreme weather events become more frequent and more intense, the safety and economic well-being of every Virginian is put at greater risk. The actions the Commonwealth will undertake as a result of this Executive Order will ensure we address this growing challenge head on, setting Virginia on a path towards resilience to near and long-term natural catastrophes and enhancing our public health and economic vitality with a whole-of-government approach.”

The Order — on a fast track that requires most of its directives to be completed within 180 days — calls on guidance from VIMS in four separate areas. Leading the statewide effort is the Commonwealth’s newly designated “Chief Resilience Officer,” Secretary of Natural Resources Matt Strickler, a 2007 graduate of VIMS and the Thomas Jefferson Program in Public Policy at W&M.

As evidence of the pervasive threat that sea-level rise poses to Virginia and the nation, the Executive Order directs Strickler to consult not only with VIMS and the Commonwealth Center for Recurrent Flooding Resiliency, but with offices throughout state government including the Secretaries of Administration, Commerce and Trade, Finance, and Transportation. The consultation also extends to local government; federal partners such as the Departments of Defense, Transportation, Agriculture, Interior, and Housing and Urban Development; and non-governmental groups including civic organizations, businesses, and nonprofits.

VIMS directives

The Executive Order’s first VIMS-related directive is for agreement on a unified projection of sea-level rise for use in the design, siting, and construction of state-owned buildings beginning on or after Jan. 1, 2020.

Mark Luckenbach, associate dean of Research and Advisory Services at VIMS, says “This will ensure that all new state-financed construction follows a consistent, science-based sea-level standard that minimizes its vulnerability to coastal flooding.” VIMS is well positioned to assist in this directive, having already created “Sea Level Report Cards” that forecast water levels for Norfolk and 31 other coastal localities to the year 2050; an interactive data graph that compares VIMS’ 2050 sea-level projection for Norfolk with forecasts provided by NOAA and the Army Corps of Engineers; and the first major study of recurrent coastal flooding in Tidewater Virginia.

The 9-foot freeboard of the seawater facility at VIMS' Eastern Shore Lab in Wachapreague kept it dry as designed during minor coastal flooding from Hurricane Sandy.
The 9-foot freeboard of the seawater facility at VIMS’ Eastern Shore Lab in Wachapreague kept it dry as designed during minor coastal flooding from Hurricane Sandy.

A second directive is to establish a “freeboard” standard for state-owned buildings, again with an implementation date for projects slated to begin in 2020 or later. Freeboard is the height of a building’s lowest floor above a given flood level. VIMS, with access to highly accurate, LIDAR-based elevation maps and operation of its own Tidewatch network and high-resolution flood models, is uniquely positioned to help determine the most effective freeboard standard for coastal Virginia localities.

A third directive — closely related to the first two — is to work collaboratively with local governments to ensure that the statewide sea-level projection and freeboard standards are useful for local decision-making. VIMS is again ahead of the curve here, with its Comprehensive Coastal Resource Management Portals, which provide guidance on shoreline management tailored to each of the 45 cities and counties that make up Tidewater Virginia. The institute also brings decades of advisory service experience with these cities and counties, as well as with regional planning district commissions, wetlands boards, and other local stakeholders.

VIMS' street-level flood model simulates storm-surge inundation in Alexandria, Virginia during Hurricane Isabel. (Southside Daily/D. Loftis/VIMS)
VIMS’ street-level flood model simulates storm-surge inundation in Alexandria, Virginia during Hurricane Isabel. (Southside Daily/D. Loftis/VIMS)

The capstone of Northam’s Executive Order is a “Virginia Coastal Resilience Master Plan,” which will identify the most effective tools, techniques, and programs for reducing the impacts of tidal and storm-surge flooding. This comprehensive plan, with input from VIMS and scores of other partners, will first identify all ongoing, planned, and proposed federal, state, and local projects to reduce flooding and flood risk; then “provide recommendations for additional hazard-mitigation, flood-control, and adaptation projects to fill in gaps and improve the preparedness and resilience of the entire coastal area of Virginia for flooding and sea-level rise.” The AdaptVA website, a collaboration between VIMS and the Virginia Coastal Policy Center, provides a step forward on both goals.

Hershner, with nearly 40 years of providing advisory service on coastal issues in Virginia, says the Executive Order hits all the right notes. “It’s encouraging to have such a clear acknowledgement of the threat that rising seas pose to Virginia’s people, economy, and environment,” he says. “And I’m really glad to see an emphasis on the fact that efforts to increase Virginia’s resiliency to sea-level rise should be based on the best available science.”

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