TRENTON – During a summit today at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, Commissioner Catherine R. McCabe announced that the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection is launching work on a comprehensive plan to make coastal areas more resilient to the impacts of severe storms and sea-level rise.

The Coastal Resilience Plan will become a blueprint for protection of property, lives, infrastructure and natural environments by guiding policies, regulations, resources and funding.

“Our coast is an ecological and economic treasure, integral to our identity as a state,” McCabe said during the summit attended by coastal researchers, municipal officials and other stakeholders. “Faced with the realities of global warming and sea-level rise, it is imperative that we put in place a cohesive, integrated plan that safeguards this treasure.”

Responding to climate change and reducing its impacts is a DEP priority. More than half of the state’s residents live in coastal areas. Under Gov. Phil Murphy, New Jersey is resuming its national leadership role in the fight against global warming and sea-level rise, committing to a 100-percent clean energy future and rejoining the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative.

Over the next year, the DEP will conduct extensive outreach to gather input from stakeholders as well as advice from coastal scientists and environmental leaders. The DEP has launched a Coastal Resilience Plan website to provide important updates on the plan and other information, including meeting dates and research projects.

The DEP is concurrently developing a planning support system that will help inform the development of coastal resilience strategies and funding. This dynamic system will reveal the relationships of environmental, economic, and social factors that must be considered for efficient and effective risk management in a changing coastal environment.

“There is no one-size-fits all solution,” McCabe said. “Adapting to sea-level rise requires innovation, flexibility and commitment to planning and preparation.”

Toward these goals, the DEP announced the award of grants of up to $200,000 each for four regional planning teams to identify and implement innovative solutions to coastal and river flooding. Grants were awarded to teams comprised of local officials and community groups in Hudson, Essex and Middlesex counties, Long Beach Island, and Atlantic City and its neighboring communities.

  • Ventnor Team – Brigantine, Atlantic City, Ventnor, Margate, Longport, Northfield, Pleasantville, Atlantic County and the American Red Cross.

Each team will be responsible for identifying regional assets, setting resilience priorities, selecting a community-supported comprehensive resilience and adaptation strategy, and implementing actions from that strategy.

The grants were awarded on a competitive basis to regional teams made up of at least three contiguous municipalities and at least one community-based organization. Counties, regional planning commissions and utility authorities were also eligible to participate. Funding for the regional planning grants comes from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s National Disaster Resilience grant program.

Regional teams will be partnered with multi-disciplinary consulting teams to identify important community assets, assess vulnerability to future flooding along the coast and from rivers, identify actions to reduce flood risk, evaluate these options using a detailed cost-benefit analysis, and develop regional resilience and adaptation action plans. As part of this program, funding will be available to implement some of these planning actions.

The DEP has also recently received a $226,000 grant for a Project of Special Merit from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to improve on the methods that are used in resiliency planning to address the needs of under-represented and socially vulnerable populations.

 

Categories: Downbeach

Nanette LoBiondo Galloway

Award winning journalist covering news, events and people of Atlantic County for more than 20 years.