Thursday, June 21, 2012
Embarassment works! A do-over for an antiscientific North Carolina law on sea level rise
Allen Reed in the News Observer via the Associated Press: A rewrite of a bill that controls how North Carolina prepares for climate change along the coast is headed to the general assembly next week. A conference committee met Thursday morning to rework the bill and reject language lamented by the scientific community that would limit the state to using historical data to prepare for rising sea levels.
Committee Chair Republican Rep. Pat McElraft of Carteret County said the rewritten bill has a few major changes. The bill would require more sea level studies by the Coastal Resources Commission during the next three to four years. The state in the meantime would not be allowed to use the state-sponsored scientific suggestions that North Carolina prepare for three-foot sea level rise by 2100. There would also be no law that calculations used would have to be based solely on historic trends.
"Before we set coastal policy for 100 years we need to make sure we're looking at it carefully," said Republican Rep. Ruth Samuelson of Mecklenburg County who also worked on the rewrite. McElraft says the revised version of the bill will be presented next week.
The sea-level discussion started after a state-appointed science panel warned sea levels could rise by more than three feet by 2100 and threaten more than 2,000 square miles of coastal land. The Senate rewrote HB 819, put forth by McElraft in 2011, to legislate against those scientific recommendations....
A NOAA shot of the Outer Banks in North Carolina
Committee Chair Republican Rep. Pat McElraft of Carteret County said the rewritten bill has a few major changes. The bill would require more sea level studies by the Coastal Resources Commission during the next three to four years. The state in the meantime would not be allowed to use the state-sponsored scientific suggestions that North Carolina prepare for three-foot sea level rise by 2100. There would also be no law that calculations used would have to be based solely on historic trends.
"Before we set coastal policy for 100 years we need to make sure we're looking at it carefully," said Republican Rep. Ruth Samuelson of Mecklenburg County who also worked on the rewrite. McElraft says the revised version of the bill will be presented next week.
The sea-level discussion started after a state-appointed science panel warned sea levels could rise by more than three feet by 2100 and threaten more than 2,000 square miles of coastal land. The Senate rewrote HB 819, put forth by McElraft in 2011, to legislate against those scientific recommendations....
A NOAA shot of the Outer Banks in North Carolina
Labels:
law,
North_Carolina,
sea level rise
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