Join us.

We’re working to create a just society and preserve a healthy environment for future generations. Donate today to help.

Donate

Maryland Should Prevent Flood Loss on Public and Private Land

When it comes to addressing climate-related flooding, Maryland has made progress.

In 2014, it created a "Coast Smart Council" at the state's Department of Natural Resources. Councilmembers, representing government, academia, business, advocacy, and other sectors, work together to develop science-backed resources and rules that govern development of state-funded projects in coastal and flood-prone areas.

Meanwhile, state agencies and local jurisdictions work under the council's auspices and with the benefit of resources. such as local government studies and plans to address climate-related flooding. They also have a new interactive mapping tool — the Climate Ready Action Boundary — to help local governments and the public explore flood-prone boundaries in Maryland. Those who use the tool can make informed decisions about development in areas vulnerable to flooding or sea level rise. Any state development built within the flood-prone boundary must be designed with flood-resilient features.

But these actions don't come close to addressing the impact of flooding in Maryland — in part because they only apply to public projects. Indeed, nearly all (an estimated 96 percent) of the state's coastal land is private and, as such, exempt from "coast smart" regulations.

Without proactive rules in place to prevent the harms of new development, the state will continue to dole out taxpayer dollars related to emergency response and recovery. And business owners and homeowners will continue to bear the brunt of the damage.

Fortunately, Maryland lawmakers are taking steps to remedy this problem.

Del. Mary Lehman (D) and Sen. Sarah Elfreth (D) have introduced legislation (House Bill 512 and Senate Bill 528) that would increase the state's resilience to modern-day storm-related flooding and sea level rise by ensuring fiscally wise investments when developers want to build or rebuild in vulnerable coastal areas. Specifically, it would apply "coast smart" siting and design criteria to certain private construction and reconstruction projects as of July of next year.

The Maryland House Environment and Transportation Committee held a hearing on the matter on Feb. 3, and the Maryland Senate Education, Health, and Environmental Affairs committee held a hearing on February 10. While the bill's prospects are currently unclear, legislators at both hearings seemed receptive to the need for it.

Long-standing precedent

The precedent for these proposed reforms reaches back to the 1980s, when Maryland established the Chesapeake Bay Critical Area Commission. Also housed in Maryland's Department of Natural Resources, this commission designates and regulates — in cooperation with local governments — development in coastal and other sensitive natural resource areas that are integral to the health of the bay and Maryland's waterways.

Local governments are tackling flood risks and private development as well.

Most jurisdictions already have a number of the coast-smart siting and design criteria in place for private development or have similar criteria that could be easily updated. Every county on the Eastern Shore and other vulnerable areas like Baltimore City and Baltimore, Anne Arundel, and Howard counties have floodplain management rules for private construction projects that are similar or related to coast-smart criteria.

Baltimore City, for example, requires developers to build at least two feet above both the 500-year flood zone in the tidal floodplain and the 100-year flood zone in the nontidal floodplain. This standard requires buildings' lowest floors to be at or above these design flood elevations. Other coastal counties require the lowest floor of a structure to be one foot above the 100-year floodplain, while still others prohibit all development in federally designated flood plains.

But Maryland needs to do more to protect the public from flooding, which, due to climate change, is increasingly harming local waterways, drinking water, and the Chesapeake Bay. Since 2000, the average number of days with high-tide flooding in coastal cities in towns around Maryland has increased by more than 75 percent, and low-income communities and communities of color are most at risk.

Meanwhile, hurricanes are becoming more intense, sea levels are rising, and the amount of precipitation is increasing — all of which threaten to exacerbate the problem.

Maryland has a duty to protect the health and safety of its people on public and private property. To protect Marylanders and prevent millions, if not billions, in future costs and damages, we must control pollution and prevent harm from flooding now.

House Bill 512 and Senate Bill 528 are not only timely and cost-effective but also prudent in the absence of federal action. We have the federal and state resources and scientific evidence we need to protect Maryland from flooding, and Maryland has an interest in tailoring its reforms to address the particular impacts and needs of our region.

These bills, if passed, will usher in future climate-smart development in Maryland, reduce future damage to property and infrastructure, and address our modern-day problems of coastal flooding and sea level rise.

CPR is following these bills as they move through the Maryland state legislature this session, which concludes on April 12. For updates, check back here, subscribe to our blog digests, and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn.

Showing 2,821 results

David Flores, Katlyn Schmitt | February 16, 2021

Maryland Should Prevent Flood Loss on Public and Private Land

When it comes to addressing climate-related flooding, Maryland has made progress. However, its actions to this point don't come close to addressing the impact of flooding — in part because nearly all of the state's coastal land is private and exempt from "coast smart" regulations. Without proactive rules in place to prevent the harms of new development, the state will continue to dole out taxpayer dollars related to emergency response and recovery, and business owners and homeowners will continue to bear the brunt of the damage. Thankfully, there are solutions.

David Flores, Katlyn Schmitt | February 15, 2021

It’s Time to Update Maryland’s Outdated Water Pollution Laws

As a coastal state, Maryland is especially vulnerable to climate and ocean change — but important environmental protections are woefully out of date, endangering Marylanders' health, safety, economic welfare, and natural resources. Maryland could take a step to rectify that this year. State lawmakers are advancing important legislation that would bring outdated water pollution rules up to speed and protect Marylanders and the environment.

Allison Stevens | February 12, 2021

‘All Labor Has Dignity’: It’s Long Past Time to Realize King’s Dream of Humane Working Conditions for All

A half century ago, hundreds of Black sanitation workers marched through Memphis carrying signs bearing four small words: "I am a man." Their short slogan carried a powerful message: Low-paid Black workers are human, and they deserve to be treated as such. Their lives, to quote today's activists for racial justice, matter.

Katie Tracy | February 9, 2021

It’s Time to Give Workers Power to Enforce OSH Act

When the Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) Act was enacted 50 years ago, it was hailed as critical legislation that would make workplaces safer and healthier for all. Thanks to this law, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has made great strides toward protecting worker health and safety. Unfortunately, the law didn't go far enough then -- and it doesn't go nearly far enough now.

Darya Minovi | February 8, 2021

Baltimore Sun Op-ed: Legislation Needed to Protect Maryland Well Owners

If you’re one of roughly 2 million Marylanders whose drinking water comes from a private well, you or your property owner is responsible for maintaining the well and ensuring its water is safe -- no exceptions. That’s because federal clean water laws don’t cover private wells or small water systems, and state-level protections vary dramatically. In Maryland, those protections are few and far between.

Allison Stevens | February 5, 2021

Paid Sick Leave Is a Civil Rights Issue, Too

All workers need the ability to earn paid sick days so they can take leave from their jobs to care for themselves or their loved ones when they are sick or injured. The coronavirus pandemic has made the need for this basic right -- guaranteed to workers in other wealthy nations but not here in the United States -- clearer than ever. Paid sick leave is more than a workers' rights issue. It's also a civil rights issue.

Maggie Dewane | February 4, 2021

On Rosa Parks’ Birthday, A Look at Transit Equity

To combat the climate crisis and air pollution that so often impacts BIPOC communities, the US must overhaul its infrastructure and energy systems.

Katlyn Schmitt | February 4, 2021

Old Dominion Weighs Bills to Curb Climate Change, Protect Health and Environment

Virginia's General Assembly is more than halfway through its legislative session -- and state lawmakers are considering several important bills that would address environmental justice, pipelines, climate change, and public health. If passed, these bills will establish lasting environmental, health, and climate change protections for Virginia and its communities.

Katie Tracy | February 3, 2021

CPR Joins Call for Biden Administration to Make Workplace Safety a Top Priority

Since taking office, President Joe Biden has signaled a new openness to the concerns of our nation’s workers -- and we at CPR are joining our allies today in calling on his administration to go much further to make workplace safety a top priority.