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The Exodus Has Begun

rising seas

 

rising seas

hide In: The Exodus Has Begun | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River
 Durocher sold the business in 2015, cashing out his real estate investments and moving to DeLand in anticipation that rising sea levels will discourage real estate investors and deplete property values.
Even though our leaders in Tallahassee may be in denial, people living on the coast of Florida and witnessing rising seas, have begun the exodus.  A continuation of Cindy Swriko’s “Rising Seas” series appears today, Dec. 2, 2017 in the Gainesville Sun.  Continue reading at this link for the complete article:

Comments by OSFR historian Jim Tatum.
-A river is like a life: once taken, it cannot be brought back-


Image 10 In: The Exodus Has Begun | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe RiverBy Cindy Swirko cindy.swirko@gvillesun.com

Patterns in the sand: Indigenous Floridians’ inland moves offer insight

Sea level rise forced earlier migrations in state

As coastal Floridians face rising seas, they may repeat the past — 2,000 years past. The current forecasts are for the Atlantic and Gulf to wash over Florida’s shores more rapidly, and with far more people enjoying ocean views from their homes, than during earlier periods of sea level rise.

Still, ancient Floridians had to change their lives because of sea level rise — they moved inland, but not much.

Predictions on the modern displacement forced bysea level risevary from a trickle to a full-on exodus. Other experts say it’s far too early to tell.

“I jokingly say to my friends that some day I’ll own waterfront property,” said Gainesville resident Ruth Steiner, professor and director of the Center for Health and the Built Environment at the University of Florida. “I’m of the mind that it’s too early to say.”

Archeological studies of the Calusa people of Southwest Florida and Timucuans at Cedar Key show they repeatedly moved farther inland and then back out as sea levels changed during the Roman warm period from 350 BC to 500 AD, the Vandal Minimum cold period from 500 to 850 AD, and again during the Medieval warming.

The Calusa, a tribe of fierce warriors who built elaborate settlements in Southwest Florida, were especially adept at going with the flow. Their history is documented at UF’s Randell Research Center in Pineland.

William Marquardt, curator of South Florida Archaeology and Ethnography Program and director of the research center, said some visitors

See RISING, A6

Image 3 In: The Exodus Has Begun | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe RiverJim Durocher moves kayaks at his DeLand home that were left over from a business he owned in Cocoa Beach. Durocher sold the business in 2015, cashing out his real estate investments and moving to DeLand in anticipation that rising sea levels will discourage real estate investors and deplete property values. [DAVID TUCKER/ GATEHOUSE MEDIA SERVICES]

Image 4 In: The Exodus Has Begun | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe RiverUniversity of Florida professors Kathryn Frank, left, and Ruth Steiner are helping coastal counties plan for rising seas. Frank is an associated professor in the College of Design, Construction & Planning, where Steiner is professor and director of the Center for Health and the Built Environment. [BRAD MCCLENNY /STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER]

use the historical rise and ebb of sea levels to downplay the current jump or to deny that current warming is due to human activity.

That would be a mistake, Marquardt said.

“The bottom line is sea level has fluctuated up and down in the past.

“What’s different is that it is accelerating at an unprecedented rate today,” Marquardt said.

“People will have to adapt, and moving away from the water or abandoning properties that are no longer viable is something that Indians had to do and we will have to do as well. This is going to happen.”

It’s coming, but when?

Some Floridians, especially Miami Beach residents, are already dodging flooded streets during high tides while hoping the cost of their homeowners insurance doesn’t rise faster than the water.

Jim Durocher moved inland to DeLand in 2015. Durocher had owned and lived in a set of apartment buildings a block off Cocoa Beach and considered them his retirement  investment.

But, one of his friends was studying sea level rise in nearby Satellite Beach and he feared it wouldn’t be long before real estate investors’ concerns would bail out and sink property values.

“I knew I had to sell before that time came,” Durocher said.

“For years I’d been worrying about it, not that seas will come get it, but that people will realize it’s really happening and stop buying stuff at the beach.”

The Atlantic Ocean has “already risen and I think it’s going to come up a lot more. It’s going to be exponential,” Durocher said.

Coastal property values “have been going up faster than any other properties for the last 50 years with people wanting to be on the water but I think that’s going to change.”

“Eventually property values are going to decrease anywhere near the water,” Durocher said.

“I thought I just can’t wait any longer, I’d better go ahead and sell it.”

Then, his father died, leaving a vacant house in DeLand. So, in 2015, Durocher sold the apartments and he and his wife moved to DeLand, inland and higher.

Dick Shaw counts himself among the early wave of people fleeing Florida’s perilous coast.

He left Madeira Beach on Florida’s Gulf Coast 15 years ago, selling the family’s home of 25 years and moving to Tallahassee in 2001.

In Madeira Beach, they’d lived in a “funky little community about three minutes from the Gulf by boat and five minutes if you walked up the street,” he said.

“If the kids wanted to take the sailboat they could sail down the canal and under the bridge and into the Gulf.”

“It was sort of what people think Florida is like,” he said. “It was a great place to raise kids.”

The canal-front house flooded once in the 1980s, he said.

His wife suffered depression when they returned to the house “and realized the first thing you had to do was tear up the carpet and throw it out in the street.”

“We’d get flooded quite often because the back of our house was like 14 inches above the top of the seawall,” he said.

“The water would come over the seawall if you got a storm with high tides.”

Over time, it seemed to Shaw the storms and higher tides began to arrive more often.

“It doesn’t have to be a hurricane, we’d get high tides when the moon was right,” he said.

“It was a lot of apprehension, a lot of concern, a lot of worrying.”

Their insurance costs tripled.

With one storm, as they watched the wind blow rising water up between the boards of their deck, they sat there and wondered, “What are we doing here? If we wait a little longer, it’s going to start coming in the house more often,” he said.

“At that point, I’m just saying it’s fine if you’re some basketball player who makes $30 million a year and you leave before the storm comes and come back after it’s all cleaned up.

“The average person, you can’t do that.”

Floridians may move, but not leave

How many others like Durocher and Shaw will eventually move, and where they will move to, is anyone’s guess.

Mathew Hauer, a demographer at the University of Georgia, has a very educated guess.

A widely cited study by Hauer published by Nature Climate Change in April estimates that 13.1 million people nationwide could be forced to move from coastal areas by 2100.

Florida is forecast to produce the highest number of migrants because it has a lot of coastline and a lot of people living along the water.

Atlanta, Houston and Phoenix were cited in the study as the top destinations for people on the Atlantic, Pacific and Gulf coasts fleeing sea level rise, Hauer said.

Of the 13.1 million who will be forced to move, about half will be Floridians, Hauer said. Miami-Dade County residents account for onequarter of the total.

A net population loss of 2 million is expected for Florida, he said.

That indicates that state residents who do decide to get away from the coast will move inland rather than to another state.

“Or … relocating into the ‘safe’ parts of coastal areas,” Hauer said.

“If you look at Hillsborough County, it’s a big county. Plant City is not going to be affected by sea level rise, so people could still move into these areas.

“They can relocate into inland parts of the county that won’t be affected.”

 

However, the report indicated high percentages of coastal residents would relocate to counties other than those in the study area. Orange County and others in the greater Orlando area are expected to be among them.

Hauer believes the Orlando area will increasingly be a destination for Florida residents moving inland and for non-Floridians who want to move to the state but not to the Atlantic or Gulf coasts.

With uncertainty, plans develop slowly

Neither Orange County nor Orlando leaders are looking that far ahead, yet.

Orange County spokeswoman Doreen Overstreet said the county is planning right now for a more immediate migration — Puerto Ricans are pouring into the county rather than staying on the island decimated by Hurricane Maria.

Neither the Environmental Protection Division nor the Planning Division has begun to address potential sea level rise migration, Overstreet said.

The county relies on population studies from UF’s Bureau of Economic and Business Research for its planning.

The economic research bureau is projecting considerable growth for Orange County, but its forecasts go only to 2045.

By that year, population in all of Florida’s coastal counties is projected to rise — again indicating that, like the state’s earliest residents, people won’t move very far from the coast as the Atlantic and Gulf inch up.

Levy County’s population, now about 40,553, is expected to reach 46,224 in 2045. Okaloosa County is about 192,925 and will reach about 229,671. Sarasota County has about 399,538 residents, expected to swell to 503,650. And Volusia County now has about 517,411 residents and is forecast by UF’s economic research bureau to grow to 635,384.

Gainesville is another city along Florida’s spine that could be an attractive destination for coastal residents fleeing rising seas, and the city has started considering the ramifications, Mayor Lauren Poe said.

“It hasn’t really reached the commission level in terms of adapting policies, but when we did the development code update, we did ask questions about it — might we see a greater than expected increase due to migration from sea level rise and climate change?” Poe said.

“I think we do believe we are going to see a relocation of people from the coast. We are preparing for that. We would love to have people in our community but we will have to absorb it from a transportation perspective, a utility perspective, a housing perspective.”

UF’s College of Design, Construction and Planning, where Ruth Steiner and Kathryn Frank are professors, has assisted several coastal counties in beginning to plan for rising seas.

Both Steiner and Frank believe it is too early to predict the potential number of coastal residents who will move because of sea level rise, especially to predict those who will move to Florida’s interior. The difficulty in forecasting so far out lies in many variables including the speed of sea level rise, the cost of insurance, the potential to elevate homes, job opportunities, coastal and inland housing costs, the adaptations made in cities along the coasts and much more.

Frank has worked with communities from Palm Coast on the Atlantic to Cedar Key on the Gulf and believes the planning that is beginning to be done now will ultimately have a role in how many people move from the coast and to where they relocate.

“We don’t suggest that everybody should move away from the coast, just to be aware of how things may be different and to be aware of the risks and cost benefits to think through whether it’s really worth it,” Frank said.

“Once the issues are acknowledged, things may be designed differently.

“If you think a little bit more about the concerns now and in the future, you may have other ideas about what to do.”

Dr. Katrhy Frank In: The Exodus Has Begun | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River
Dr. Kathy Frank

Daytona Beach News-Journal Environment Writer Dinah Voyles Pulver contributed to this story.

Image 0 In: The Exodus Has Begun | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe RiverDr. Kathrny Frank, associate professor of Urban and Regional Planning at the University of Florida College of Design, Construction & Planning, on the UF campus in Gainesville on Nov. 28. [ BRAD MCCLENNY/THE GAINESVILLE SUN]

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dr. Ruth Steiner In: The Exodus Has Begun | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River
Dr. Ruth Steiner

 

 

 

 

 

Image 1 In: The Exodus Has Begun | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe RiverDr. Ruth Steiner, professor and director of the Center for Health and the Built Environment and Urban and Regional Planning at University of Florida College of Design, Construction & Planning, on the UF campus in Gainesville on Nov. 28. [BRAD MCCLENNY/THE GAINESVILLE SUN]

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