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Reaching Higher Ground in the Face of Climate Change

We've seen a flurry of news coverage in the last several weeks on climate migration, displacement, and relocation. In a new report published today, the Center for Progressive Reform explores these issues and examines tools and resources that communities can use when faced with the challenges of relocating out of harm's way. 

The New York Times Magazine recently profiled one homeowner in Norfolk, Virginia, who purchased a home that had never been flooded, but in the ten years since has flooded twice, causing her flood insurance premiums to skyrocket and the home to lose almost half its value. She ended up leaving her home and the city. 

But climate-based migration and displacement isn't just affecting people on an individual level. Large-scale human movement, driven in part by climate impacts, is already occurring in various places around the globe, as noted in another article in the New York Times Magazine. Desertification, drought, diminishing sources of fresh water, and increased frequency and intensity of storms are contributing to social unrest and migration, from the Amazon Basin to Syria to the Philippines. 

Isle de Jean Charles, Louisiana, is one of 17 known climate relocation communities in the United States. In the new CPR report, Reaching Higher Ground: Avenues to Secure and Manage New Land for Communities Displaced by Climate Change, CPR Member Scholars Maxine Burkett and Robert Verchick join me in examining the challenges that communities like Isle de Jean Charles face in acquiring and governing land for relocation. 

What all of today's climate relocation communities have in common are their small size, proximity to major waterways, generally remote location, and largely indigenous populations. Twelve climate relocation communities are Alaska Native Villages, and four others are located on federally recognized American Indian reservations on the Pacific Coast of Washington's Olympic Peninsula. And Isle de Jean Charles is largely comprised of Biloxi-Chitimacha-Choctaw Indians. But with 13 million Americans threatened with displacement by sea level rise alone, the number of climate relocation communities is sure to grow significantly in coming decades. 

Communities face many challenges with the prospect of climate relocation, including land acquisition, governance, rights to evacuated property, and funding. Our report details some of the legal and policy options available to climate relocation communities to acquire and govern new land for relocation sites. Some of those tools include corporate entities, such as community land trusts and homeowners' associations, while others include legislatively approved land transfers and novel theories of takings and tort litigation. The report includes profiles about how other relocation communities have used some of these tools for land acquisition, governance, and property rights. 

Ultimately, climate relocation communities cannot identify and adopt these solutions alone. These communities, and those who will face these challenges in the not-so-distant future, need the support of the federal government, state governments, and nonprofit organizations. The resources and technical assistance provided by the federal government are inadequate to meet even current need among the comparative handful of climate relocation communities today, much less the demands that are on the horizon with millions of other U.S. residents facing the need to relocate. A uniform and fully funded federal program for climate relocation is necessary, one that includes a set of policies that are designed for the unique land acquisition and governance needs of relocation communities. 

You can find the Reaching Higher Ground report on our website. To read CPR's other work on climate adaptation, visit our Adapting to Climate Change page.

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David Flores | May 3, 2017

Reaching Higher Ground in the Face of Climate Change

We’ve seen a flurry of news coverage in the last several weeks on climate migration, displacement, and relocation. In a new report published today, the Center for Progressive Reform explores these issues and examines tools and resources that communities can use when faced with the challenges of relocating out of harm’s way.  The New York […]

James Goodwin | May 2, 2017

Anything but Moderate: The Senate Regulatory Accountability Act of 2017

Today, Center for Progressive Reform Member Scholars and staff are releasing a comprehensive analysis of the Senate Regulatory Accountability of 2017 (S. 951), which Sens. Rob Portman (R-OH) and Heidi Heitkamp (D-ND) introduced last week. Our analysis explains how S. 951 would drastically overhaul the Administrative Procedure Act, which has successfully guided agency enforcement of […]

Robert L. Glicksman | May 1, 2017

Trump’s Environmental Steamroller Bears Down on National Monuments

Donald Trump's antagonism toward environmental and natural resource protections seems to know no bounds, legal or otherwise. Among his latest targets are our national monuments, which include some of the most beautiful and historically, scientifically, culturally, and ecologically important tracts of federally owned lands. During the reign of destruction the president has unleashed in his […]

Rena Steinzor | April 27, 2017

White Collar Crime and the Trump Administration

Cross-posted by permission from the Columbia Blue Sky Blog. The Obama administration had a mixed record on white collar crime. On one hand, it extracted $4 billion and a guilty plea from BP in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon spill. On the other hand, it allowed HSBC, then the fourth largest bank in the […]

Katie Tracy | April 26, 2017

Workers’ Memorial Day: Honoring Fallen Workers, Fighting for Safer Jobs

Every worker has a right to a safe job. Yet on an average day of the week, 13 U.S. workers die on the job due to unsafe working conditions. An additional 137 lives are lost daily due to occupational diseases – mesothelioma, lung cancer, asbestosis, among others.  On Friday – Workers’ Memorial Day – we […]

James Goodwin | April 25, 2017

New CPR Project – CRA by the Numbers: The Congressional Review Act Assault on Our Safeguards

If Donald Trump has learned anything over the last 100 days, it’s that unlike in golf, you can’t call a Mulligan on the beginning of your presidency, no matter how much it might improve your score.  These last few months have been long on scandals and failure (Russian probes, the spectacular implosion of Trumpcare, etc.) […]

James Goodwin | April 20, 2017

New Report: Trump’s New ‘Regulatory Czar’ and the Continuing Assault on Our Safeguards

As the clock ticked closer to the end of the work day a few Fridays back, the Trump administration quietly made an announcement certain to put smiles on the faces of many corporate interest lobbyists in and around the DC Beltway: Neomi Rao, a little known but very conservative law professor at George Mason University’s […]

Evan Isaacson | April 13, 2017

Baltimore’s Experience May Yield Lessons for Senate as It Debates Integrated Planning Bill

The City of Baltimore is wrapping up an $800 million upgrade of its largest sewage treatment plant. At the same time, the city is starting a $160 million project to retrofit a drinking water reservoir; is in the midst of a $400 million project to realign a major section of its sewer system; and is […]

James Goodwin | April 12, 2017

The Key Ingredient in Trump’s Anti-Reg Two-for-One Executive Order? Fuzzy Math

Steve Bannon’s crusade to deconstruct the administrative state took two big steps forward last week, concluding with Donald Trump nominating George Mason University Law School professor Neomi Rao as his “regulatory czar.” CPR will publish a new report on the role of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) Administrator during the Trump administration […]