The Rising of Tides
The Sunday Miami Herald wrote about what Miami Beach is doing to fight flooding during high tides. Pumps are moving water to the Bay and in some places roads and sidewalks are being raised so cars and pedestrians don't have to drive or walk through sea water regularly.
Ocean levels are rising and dealing with how it is affecting Miami Beach isn't just front page news, its a political and engineering issue. It's not just about hurricanes, its about high tides that are already here. They are the "King Tides" that can swamp places like Las Olas Blvd and parts of A1A in Broward, and lots of places on the beach, and even Matheson Hammock in the Gables is under water twice a day at this time of the year.
The really big effects of a rising sea level are probably decades away, but we really need to start doing stuff now if parts of South Florida will continue to be liveable.
Ocean levels are rising and dealing with how it is affecting Miami Beach isn't just front page news, its a political and engineering issue. It's not just about hurricanes, its about high tides that are already here. They are the "King Tides" that can swamp places like Las Olas Blvd and parts of A1A in Broward, and lots of places on the beach, and even Matheson Hammock in the Gables is under water twice a day at this time of the year.
The really big effects of a rising sea level are probably decades away, but we really need to start doing stuff now if parts of South Florida will continue to be liveable.
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