Alex Harris

Alex Harris

@harrisalexc.bsky.social

Lead climate reporter at the Miami Herald. Florida woman through and through

2,113 Followers 204 Following 38 Posts Joined Oct 2023
4 months ago
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‘Street is lake, urgent!’ Herald mapping reveals flooding blind spots As climate changes soaks South Florida, flood complaints are piling up.

Our latest in the Floods of Trouble series for the @miamiherald.com shows where reports of flooding or drainage issues have been reported since 2014 in Miami-Dade and Broward.

✍️: @harrisalexc.bsky.social and me

www.miamiherald.com/news/local/e...

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4 months ago

I signed. Join me!

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4 months ago
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From a crewmember on yesterday's Teal 74 mission into now-Category 5 Hurricane #Melissa. As clear of an eye as you will see in the Atlantic basin.

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7 months ago
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Corals keep cooking in climate-heated seas. These crossbreeds may keep hope alive ‘We’re scattering the seeds. We have to wait for the oaks to grow up.’

As the scientific tide starts to turn on coral restoration via regrowing fragments of fast-growing corals, a new idea is starting to gain traction -- crossbreeding corals with their stronger neighbors in the Caribbean. My latest on 'assisted gene flow'
www.miamiherald.com/news/local/e...

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8 months ago
https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2025/06/12/vermont-floods-barre-rebuilding/

Fascinating story from @annamphillips.bsky.social about the clash between government buyouts vs small towns that can’t afford to let people go. Makes me wonder what that will look like in some rural, riverfront Florida communities. Or maybe even the Keys one day? t.co/yPnKGxgWue

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9 months ago
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And Sohail Al Jamea made this lovely animation explaining the process we're talking about. Notice how the higher groundwater levels make it even easier for rainfall to cause flooding

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9 months ago
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Adding in the groundwater connection doesn't necessarily show flooding in new areas. @semerriam.bsky.social overlaid flood complaints in Fort Lauderdale with Broward's future scenarios mapping and found they match pretty well

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9 months ago
https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/environment/climate-change/article307805065.html

Part 3 of my series exploring real estate and climate change in South Florida explores groundwater flooding!
t.co/3JAbNTYCsQ

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9 months ago
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The reason South Florida is so vulnerable to sea level rise lies beneath our feet. When heavy rains fall or seas rise, groundwater levels do too.

But most local, state and fed agencies in Florida don't account for this. It could mean we see more flooding, faster, than expected.

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9 months ago
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It could also raise flood insurance costs -- by about 5% -- for 44k Floridians in 12 different communities, including Hialeah, Hollywood and Orange County.

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9 months ago
https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/environment/article306904706.html

Cities and counties across the state say it will stop them from enacting much-needed fixes to problems they discovered after previous hurricanes. But the bill's sponsors say it's only meant to stop 'overregulation' and keep govs 'laser-focused' on recovery t.co/s6H8sTP6JS

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9 months ago
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A Florida bill that slashes red tape for hurricane recovery efforts also has some provisions that local govs say will make it more difficult to rebuild stronger -- and higher -- after a hurricane.

With @rballogg.bsky.social, who's been watching this already unfold in Manatee

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9 months ago
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U.S. hurricane forecast: ‘Everything is in place’ for another above-average season Officials pledge that, despite understaffing, “every warning will go out.”

I guess we'll find out. We're days away from the start of hurricane season, and NOAA says it will likely be another active one.

www.miamiherald.com/news/weather...

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9 months ago

And Ken Graham, head of @nws.noaa.gov, swore the agency was prepared for the season.

"We had some folks go, but we’re going to make sure we have everything on the front lines. Every warning is going to go out," he said.

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9 months ago

At a presser this morning, NOAA and NWS officials got grilled on widespread understaffing at offices around the nation.

Laura Grimm, acting head of @noaa.gov, swore the @nhc-atlantic.extwitter.link is "fully staffed" and "ready to go," but Herald reporting shows they're down at least one met.

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10 months ago
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With hurricane season ahead, Trump cuts leave Florida weather offices understaffed Florida NWS offices appear to be down at least 16 staffers ahead of hurricane season.

Hurricane season is three weeks away (!) and Florida is missing meteorologists. What the current federal cuts (and prospective ones) could mean for storm forecasting: amp.miamiherald.com/news/weather...

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10 months ago
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There's evidence that could be changing, both from new academic studies and some anecdotal evidence from spots whalloped by storms last year -- like the beautiful but floodprone neighborhood of Shore Acres in St. Petersburg.

“Perhaps the tides are shifting," said one researcher

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10 months ago
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But why??? Simply, it's because people will still pony up for waterfront property, despite models showing a steadily encroaching tide, because they see that tide as far away.

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10 months ago
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We had an analyst look at home sales in neighborhoods touched by intense flooding: the 90-day flood in the Keys, hurricanes in Miami or a 'rain bomb' in Fort Lauderdale. (Un)surprisingly, they went up after a flood event. Way up.

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10 months ago
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Climate change is coming for Florida’s real estate. Why don’t prices reflect it? So far, property values have remained remarkably resilient to flood risks – more resilient than many of the actual homes.

Read the whole story, the second installment in a
@miamiherald.com series on real estate and sea level rise, here: www.miamiherald.com/news/local/e...

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10 months ago
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I get this question alll the time. If sea level rise is going to flood more Miami houses, why on earth is the market still so red hot?

Let's get into it. [With @semerriam.bsky.social]

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10 months ago
Chart showing FEMA Flood claims yearly in Florida since 2000. Claims rise in the wake of major hurricanes, and additional development in those hurricane-prone spots also drives the number of claims up.

FEMA data shows the agency has paid out $16.8 billion in damages since 2000 on more than 220,000 claims — some doled out repeatedly to the same problematic properties. The agency doesn’t share the addresses, even with buyers.

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10 months ago

Stay tuned for more parts of this series that explores how Florida real estate and sea level rise collide!

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10 months ago
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Thousands of Florida homes have flooded before. Tips to avoid buying one FEMA flood zones are only the place to start.

We also have a handy guide for potential buyers with questions to ask and places to look for more info: www.miamiherald.com/news/local/e...

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10 months ago
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We heard from people who lost their homes in unexpected flooding, people whose realtors encouraged them to lie about flooding on their seller disclosure and people who were stuck in court for years trying to hold their sellers accountable.

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10 months ago
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In part one of my new series, @semerriam.bsky.social and I found a culture of secrecy for flood histories. It's a problem that is only expected to worsen as climate change makes flooding more common in the Sunshine State

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10 months ago
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How secret flood histories cost Florida home buyers and mask state’s risk “We’re trying to avoid someone getting left holding the bag on a property that floods.”

Buying a home is already a tricky process, but in Florida, trying to find one that hasn't flooded and hopefully won't flood again is harder than it should be.

And home buyers pay the price.

www.miamiherald.com/news/local/e...

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11 months ago
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FEMA moves to end one of its biggest disaster adaptation programs In an internal FEMA memorandum obtained by Grist, the Trump administration announced it plans to dismantle the Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities program.

Localizing a great scoop from @zteirstein.bsky.social + Jake Bittle last week grist.org/politics/fem...

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11 months ago
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Millions in South Florida flood-control projects on hold after Trump FEMA cuts On the chopping block: projects in Miami, Key West and Broward.

South Florida is losing tens of millions of dollars for flood control projects aimed to stem not just future SLR flooding but current day flooding because Trump admin slashed funds
www.miamiherald.com/news/local/e...

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1 year ago
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Surviving hurricanes, sea rise in Keys may mean $3 billion in home buyouts, elevations A bird’s eye look at the Florida Keys is all it takes to understand that little stands between the chain of islands and the sea.

The government taking your property is.... not popular in Florida.

Back in 2020, the Army Corps suggested mandatory buyouts of flooded homes in the Keys, but Monroe County fought it. Instead, the feds are doing voluntary home elevations

(Original plan here) www.miamiherald.com/news/local/e...

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