"Without strong, meaningful climate leadership, there is a chance that the good work Floridians are setting in motion will be squandered. We need to be the nationwide trailblazer when it comes to addressing climate change, and we can achieve this if the state legislature creates a permanent Chief Resilience Officer and establishes a well-funded Statewide Office of Resilience in the 2021 session," writes Jon Paul “J.P.” Brooker, the director of Florida conservation and an attorney for Ocean Conservancy.
1 month ago Share In announcing Resilient Florida on Jan. 28, DeSantis said it is designed to help local and state agencies “tackle the challenges posed by flooding, intensified storm events, sea-level rise.” by: Jim Turner News Service of Florida
A few years ago, Republican lawmakers were averse to publicly acknowledging climate change, outside of rising sea levels affecting some coastal South Florida communities.
Now, as many lawmakers accept the science and back the need to develop a statewide plan to address the impacts of rising sea levels, hurricanes and flooding on a predominantly flat state, questions focus on a debt-adding $1 billion resiliency program pitched by Gov. Ron DeSantis.