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October 29, 2013 by A. Adam Glenn

SPECIAL REPORT RECAP: City Hall, Community Boards Confront Disconnect on Climate Resilience

Over the last week, in a special multi-part investigation from a team of reporters at AdaptNY and our news partner Gotham Gazette, we revealed on a striking disconnect in communication between New York’s City Hall and some of the communities most affected by Sandy, as they try to address the urgent task of adapting New York to climate change.

In-depth reporting found fully half of the community boards we spoke to that represent those hardest-hit areas had serious concerns about their communications with the city.

But to its credit, City Hall responded in the wake of the criticism about community involvement in its climate change planning process by deciding to reconvene two community advisory task forces on the climate resilience issue and pledging “broad-based outreach” to some of the city’s hardest-hit neighborhoods as part of a Department of City Planning study.

Take a look at our in-depth, two-month-long investigative report below:

SPECIAL REPORT: Are The City’s Most Storm-Vulnerable Communities Being Heard?

  • Community Boards — Voices Of Neighborhoods Ignored?
  • MAP: NYC Flood Zones Heading Inland

SPECIAL REPORT, PT 2: Snapshots from NYC Communities on Climate Frontlines

  • MAP: Are Communities Hardest Hit By Sandy Being Heard by City Hall?

SPECIAL REPORT, PT 3: City Promises ‘Broad-Based Outreach’ To Communities To Prepare For Future Storms

 

 

Posted in Extreme Weather, Rebuilding, Resilience, Sandy's Lessons, SPECIAL REPORTS. RSS 2.0 feed.
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Harlem Heat Resources

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