[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 87 (Tuesday, June 2, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H3646-H3647]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
URBAN FLOODING AWARENESS ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Quigley) for 5 minutes.
Mr. QUIGLEY. Mr. Speaker, as Members of Congress continue to debate
whether or not climate change is real, Americans are paying the price.
To the climate doubters that I serve with, I will remind them that
there are over 200 peer-reviewed scientific studies that conclude that
climate change is real and that man contributes to it, and there are
zero peer-reviewed scientific studies that say the opposite.
Climate change often brings images to mind of melting icecaps and
rising sea levels, but the effects of climate change are being felt
every day by people around the country. Climate change is causing even
more destructive storms which, when combined with our aging
infrastructure, is resulting in cities around the country being
pummeled by urban flooding.
A little more than 2 years ago, residents in my district endured
their second 100-year flood in a mere 3 years. A 100-year storm means
that there is a 1 percent chance that a storm of that magnitude will
happen every year, but folks in Chicago are experiencing these storms
with greater intensity and frequency.
The morning after the rains bombarded Chicago in 2013, I visited
numerous community members and their homes. The damage I saw was
devastating: thousands of homes and businesses flooded; tons of
carpeting, furniture, and memories are ruined; businesses shattered;
and entrepreneurs' dreams crushed, along with millions of dollars in
damages.
Throughout the region, we saw the closure of schools, libraries, and
even hospitals were forced to relocate patients. That kind of
devastation cannot be ignored. Our constituents cannot be ignored.
In Chicago, over the past century, we have seen countless storms that
have caused pipes to back up into houses and dump upwards of 1.5 inches
of rain in a single day. What is more, rains of more than 2.5 inches a
day are expected to increase another 50 percent in the next 20 years.
The National Climate Assessment, released by the Obama administration
last year, predicted that the frequency and intensity of the Midwest's
heaviest downpours will more than double over the next 100 years. That
means even more trouble for our Nation's already deteriorating
infrastructure and the cities around the country that rely on that
infrastructure to keep them safe. Storm drains are outdated; sewers are
inadequate, and families are at risk.
Whether it is because of flooded pipes or the lack of permeable
surfaces in our cities, our constituents are paying the prices.
Thousands of households in America are affected every year by urban
flooding, yielding catastrophic economic, environmental, and social
damage in some of our country's largest cities. Basements with water
damage decrease property values by an estimated 10 to 25 percent.
But the impacts don't end there. Chronically damp houses can cause
respiratory problems and higher insurance costs. Additionally, almost
two out of five small businesses cannot open after experiencing a
flooding disaster. Urban flooding erodes streams and riverbeds and
degrades the quality of our drinking water sources and the health of
our aquatic ecosystems.
It is time we come up with a national response to this growing
problem. That is why I am proud to introduce the Urban Flooding
Awareness Act. This legislation will finally create a definition of
urban flooding to be used when designing flood maps and will require a
first-of-its-kind study to analyze the costs associated with urban
flooding and develop solutions. It would also help us better protect
downstream communities from the flooding impacts of development in
upstream areas.
Existing regulatory and policy mechanisms are not adequate for this
task. It is time we develop new strategies. By identifying the most
effective and economical remedies to urban flooding, we are better
preparing our communities to defend themselves against the devastation
caused by increasingly intense weather.
{time} 1015
And investing in real solutions to this problem now is the only way
to avoid higher costs down the road. We can learn from our successes
and investigate innovative new strategies for funding crucial new
programs that eliminate flood risk and damage. Our cities need the best
tools available if they are going to survive this era of supersized
storms.
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