SMART CITY MIAMI®Magazine - SUSTAINABLE CITIES EXPERIENCES

Page 58

CLIMATE ACTION

INTEGRATING EQUITY INTO CLIMATE PLANNING BY ALISSA FARINA

The City of Miami is addressing its climate and equity crises simultaneously with innovative resilience, adaptation, carbon mitigation, and stormwater master plans.

M

iami is one of the most vulnerable cities in the world to the impact of the climate crisis. We not only have billions of dollars of assets at risk, we have millions of residents at health and financial risk. In Miami-Dade County, 17% of households are in poverty, and 37% are working but are ALICE (Asset Limited, Income Constrained but Employed), as defined by United Way. Our income inequality is second only to the New York metropolitan area. When we talk about the climate crisis in Miami, we typically talk about extreme heat, floods caused by sea-level rise, and intensifying storms. But climate is a threat multiplier, meaning that existing threats, which can be social, financial, or health-related, are worsened by climate impacts. This also means that in instances of environmental racism, the impacts tend to be more intense as the climate crisis worsens. For example, as flooding becomes more of a nuisance and a threat, it makes sense for developers to move inland. However, this leads to an increased risk of climate gentrification, as the development of this land would displace vulnerable residents. Miami Forever Climate Ready Miami’s adaptation plan was released in January 2020 post-Hurricane Irma. We got a lot of feedback about how we could integrate equity into emergency preparedness

and response and how basic education could bring about equity by helping people understand how climate change is impacting their communities. One of our most ambitious projects, Resilience Hubs, was designed to enhance our park facilities with more community amenities so that they can also serve as post-emergency convening centers. Stormwater Master Plan Our updated Stormwater Management Plan takes into account sea-level rise projections from the Southeast Florida Climate Change Compact. The plan includes data collection and digitization and developing a citywide capital improvements plan that is prioritized by areas of greatest need (as opposed to the greatest ROI). The projects are spread across the city, and they are related to not just flooding but also community engagement. Miami Forever Carbon Neutral The goal of our carbon mitigation plan is to develop a road map for the city to reach carbon neutrality by 2050, with an interim target for 2035. We have addressed our greenhouse gas emissions through the GREEN model: how we Get around, Renewable energy, Electric vehicles, Energy efficiency, and building a New Green Economy for Miami. Defining Climate Justice In South Florida, vulnerability is different from other places: Our most physically vulnerable

Alissa Farina Resilience Program Manager, City of Miami Miami, Florida Alissa Farina is a Resilience Program Manager for the City of Miami’s Division of Resilience & Sustainability. She currently focuses on carbon mitigation, communications, and community engagement and is the project manager for Miami Forever Carbon Neutral, which outlines the city’s path to achieving carbon neutrality by 2050.

58 | Smart City Miami

places are not the most socially vulnerable. We also debate what “people of color” actually means in Miami. So we decided to be explicit about what climate justice meant and how we would integrate that into our planning. The definition was co-developed with Catalyst Miami, a climate justice organization: “Climate justice communities are historically underinvested neighborhoods... populated by individuals that are low-income, predominantly Black, and recent immigrants. These neighborhoods tend to be viewed as less physically vulnerable to climate change... but their residents are relatively more socially vulnerable than other parts of the city. Equity at Action Level Another way we integrated equity was via a tool called ASAP (Action Selection and Prioritization), which was developed by AECOM with the C40 Cities network. We evaluated every action in the plan for cobenefits and feasibility. For equity, we included considerations for employment, cost of living, and climate justice. Some actions scored negatively for climate justice, so we reviewed those actions and where we could add provisions to address those concerns. Climate Justice via Green Economy As mentioned, we had a section in our carbon plan called the New Green Economy, where we think about how the actions we are committing to can generate economic opportunity, create jobs, and build and diversify our economy. Nationally, jobs related to green infrastructure and sustainability are well-paying jobs, but our research shows that Miami lags behind national averages, underscoring the need for workforce development and training to truly deliver on a local green economy that provides living-wage jobs for people of all ethnicities and races.


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Articles inside

Investing in Racial Equity Through Small-Scale Manufacturing

11min
pages 82-88

Circle Scan

4min
page 81

Entrepreneurship for Sustainability

3min
page 80

Urban Playground: How Child-Friendly Planning & Design Can Save Cities

3min
page 78

Humans + Nature + Mindfulness Resilient Sustainable Cities

3min
page 77

Creating Child-Friendly Smart Cities

3min
page 79

Architects as Healers: Buildings as Medicine

6min
pages 74-75

Health Tech Will Make Smart Cities Smarter

3min
page 76

Visual Utopias

3min
page 73

Pocket Parks

4min
page 72

Claiming Safe Streets for Livable Cities

4min
pages 70-71

America’s Top 100 Bicycling Cities

6min
pages 66-67

Where Are Self-Driving Cars Taking Us?

3min
page 68

Smart Design in Dutch Cities

3min
page 69

Urban Mobility: Bicycles, E-Cargo Bikes & the City

7min
pages 64-65

Building the Future of Sustainable Government

7min
pages 62-63

Water as Leverage for Sustainable Development

5min
pages 54-55

Financing Green Resilient Urban Infrastructure

4min
page 61

Miami and South Florida in 2050 A Dispatch from the Future

3min
page 59

Living Seawalls: Bringing Marine Life Back to Concrete Coastlines

3min
page 60

Integrating Equity into Climate Planning

3min
page 58

Transforming Streets to Adapt to Climate Change

2min
page 56

Choosing Change: How Bold Mindsets Will Save the World

4min
page 57

If We Act Together: Keeping 1.5ºC Alive

5min
pages 52-53

Next-Generation Infrastructure & Sustainable Mobility for Smart Cities

2min
page 51

Smart and Resilient Cities Tools for City Leadership

3min
page 49

Digital Twin: Collaborative Subsurface Infrastructure

3min
page 50

Greening Our Gray Cities with Nature-Based Solutions

6min
pages 46-47

Investing in the Future Smart and Sustainable Tourism

4min
page 48

Bangkok: Porous City

1min
pages 44-45

Transforming the City

3min
page 43

The Race to Resilience

3min
page 42

The Future of Work Civic Innovation in the New Economy

8min
pages 28-29

Kyiv Smart City: Digital Infrastructure

6min
pages 40-41

Coral Gables Resilient Smart Districts

5min
pages 32-33

Future City: Resilient by Data Adoptive by Design

3min
page 34

Better Governance, Better Livelihood, Better Industry

7min
pages 36-37

The Case for an Innovation Agenda that Is Social in Nature

6min
pages 30-31

Smart & Sustainable Urbanism

3min
page 35

Digital Transformation with Sustainable Standards

6min
pages 38-39

Why Mayors Should Rule the World

8min
pages 18-19

Why It Is Time to Reevaluate the Function of a City

6min
pages 26-27

Smart Cities Are Resilient Cities

6min
pages 20-21

Miami: Sustainable & Resilient

4min
pages 14-15

The Need for Developing Nations’ Model of Smart Cities

3min
page 24

Miami-Dade County: Climate Action

6min
pages 16-17

The Emergence of a Human-Centric Data-Driven Community

5min
pages 22-23

Innovation Guerilla Against Bureaucracy

3min
page 25
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