New study shows growing development in areas at risk for natural disasters
and last updated 2021-07-09 17:09:47-04
From wildfires to hurricanes, natural disasters can destroy entire towns.
âWeâre just putting structures in harm s way, and harm s way is becoming a broader and broader area,â the Director of the Cooperative Institute for Research and Environmental Sciences at CU Boulder, Waleed Abdalati, said.
Beachfront properties, cabins in the mountains, houses below sea level all exist in potentially risky areas.
âWho doesn t want to look at the ocean? So there s a lot of development right up to the edge of the water, and over time that edge of the water is creeping inward,â Abdalati said.
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let me tell you how it unfolded just a few hours ago at the eugene faith center. they d already had three fires there, so they hired a security company to be there 24 hours a day. they heard something this morning, a short time ago, and they found a guy crouched down, laying down newspapers underneath an open area of the building. he had lighters on him. police saying that they feel like they caught him possibly in the act of setting yet another fire. this church, by the way, takes up half a block. it s big. already burned 12 offices at that one church. possibly coming back for more. now, they had said the fires that burned in a nearby pub, construction site all within a 1-mile radius, they weren t sure if they were tied together, but they re now looking. and here s the suspect s name, matthew rossi, 31 years old. they re looking at him to have possibly had some help and possibly setting all those other fires since last friday. back to you guys. jon: harris faulkner, thank you. jane: