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Opinion: NYC’s Aging Water Infrastructure Needs a Climate-Change Upgrade

1 Comment

  • Mark Mangona
    Posted September 20, 2022 at 2:18 pm

    The water mains are fine even if a pipe breaks now and then. Water mains have nothing to do with the storm sewers that need to be upgraded to deal with climate change. And the water mains are in good condition overall. This story confuses the two issues.

    There are no inequities in storm sewer design — the standard is the same across the city. That standard is now inadequate because of climate change. There are still some areas where there are no storm sewers at all, but a lot of those neighborhoods are in mostly white parts of Staten Island.

    The water and sewer systems have their own source of capital funding from water and sewer bills. If the political will existed to dig up and replace every storm sewer with a larger one it could be funded, but it would be very expensive and disruptive and the political will isn’t there.

    If you just read the page that’s linked to in the story itself, it says that $1.7 billion was spent on watershed protection, not on “water infrastructure repairs and maintenance.” If the city only spent $1.7 billion on water repairs and maintenance in the last 30 years we’d be in big trouble like Jackson, MS. The real number is much higher. And watershed protection is completely different from repairs and maintenance.

    Residents of “waterfront communities” weren’t hit that hard by Hurricane Ida, it was the neighborhoods largely in central Queens where the flash flooding took place. Ida didn’t really cause a storm surge or shoreline flooding, the flooding was from intense rain. And if it caused shoreline flooding it would have been from the ocean, not from sewers.

    Other than those things the story is generally accurate. But this is pretty bad.

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