• Codex
    link
    563 months ago

    Poor people move where it’s cheaper to live. It’s cheaper to live where risk is higher. This is how risk is systematically offloaded onto the lower class. We build and live in these dangerous places, and we suffer all the loss and damage from those risks. The owner class takes all the profits and value from those places while investing little to nothing in them (too risky!)

  • justhach
    link
    323 months ago

    Newsflash: with the increasing extreme weather events, everywhere is becoming a “disaster-prone area”.

    Asheville, NC is 300 miles from the nearest coast and still got its shit rocked by a hurricane.

    • @Modern_medicine_isnt
      link
      173 months ago

      300 miles really isn’t very far for hurricanes to penetrate. And Asheville is a bowl in the mountains. So water runs to it, and drains out. It just can’t handle that much rain at once. It’s probably happened before, just long ago.
      That said, I sat on my deck most of yesterday. It was the kind of weather we used to get all summer long 30 years ago. Now it only happens briefly in the spring and fall. Summers are becoming unbearable. Wildfires are the result.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        73 months ago

        For rain and flooding specifically, new development can make it drastically worse without a huge amount of changes. It’s totally possible that a similar amount of rain 20-30 years ago wouldn’t have caused the same scale of damage, because the water wouldn’t have concentrated as fast.

    • @AngryCommieKender
      link
      13 months ago

      Lexington, KY felt that hurricane. I’m not sure how far from the coast they are, but that bad boy was still going strong well over the mountains.

    • @frog_brawler
      link
      33 months ago

      All the MAGAs are moving to FL. They love corruption and FL has it in abundance.

    • @TriflingToad
      link
      13 months ago

      Floridian here. Me too, they drive price of living up like mad. all rich folk that kill native bugs :(

  • @jpreston2005
    link
    63 months ago

    Me over here trying to figure out where I want to move like

      • @bamfic
        link
        English
        33 months ago

        Isnt canada on fire all summer every summer now?

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          33 months ago

          And the winters are too short to kill off the ticks now.

          But we still get way too much snow at once occasionally. But it doesn’t stay for Christmas.

      • @jpreston2005
        link
        23 months ago

        I was actually thinking the Netherlands… but I also want to pursue a career in Stand-up comedy and acting so… Kinda just leaves cities/states deep in disaster areas (LA, NYC, Atlanta) 🙃

  • @andrewta
    link
    6
    edit-2
    3 months ago

    How is Minneapolis/St. Paul Minnesota a high risk area? I’m seeing blue dots in that area.

    • @Katyacat1
      link
      163 months ago

      I think Blue dot is migration to the area and red shading is high risk.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    53 months ago

    Flood Insurance Risk Rating 2.0 is kind of sneakily the second best environmental policy Biden got done (after IRA). Actually charging places in flood plains the amount it costs to rebuild, rather than subsidizing it so people repeatedly rebuild in places that flood all the time, will incentivize people slowly to move away from those areas, or at least pay what it costs to live there and know what they’re getting into.

  • @capital_sniff
    link
    43 months ago

    Is it too late to return some of these spots to France?

  • lieuwestra
    link
    -23 months ago

    So half the country, or a quarter of the continent judging by the map. I would guess 90% of people living there were already deeply embedded in local culture before the term climate change was invented.