People, the Coast and Climate

Published: Aug. 11, 2017, 5 p.m.

b'"Scientists at 13 federal agencies have released the final draft of their report on the impact of climate change on the United States. The report says that the country is already experiencing the effects of climate change. The release of the report constitutes a form of whistleblowing since it was done without the permission of the Trump administration.\\n\\nThere is growing evidence that mortgage and insurance companies take climate change seriously because of the growing book of evidence regarding sea level rise. Tidal flooding on the Eastern Seaboard from Miami to Boston is already occurring. Louisiana\'s coastal land is sinking even as sea levels rise.\\n\\nThree Louisiana residents share their perspectives on the scientific, engineering and humanitarian challenges facing Louisiana, its people and its leaders as we begin to confront the existential threat posed by climate change and natural forces.\\n\\nBob Marshall is a two-time Pulitzer Prize winning reporter based in New Orleans. Marshall earned those awards (and others) for his insightful work on Louisiana\'s wetlands both as a natural and economic resource, and as a buffer protecting Louisiana\'s coastal communities from storms.\\n\\nMarshall continues his work of making sense of climate science for laymen.\\n\\nBren Haase is chief of research and planning for the Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority, the Louisiana entity charged with responding to the disappearance of Louisiana\'s coast, reversing some of that, and protecting our communities as well as possible from future storms that will assuredly batter our coast in coming decades.\\n\\nJohanna deGraffenried was with the Gulf Restoration Network\\xa0when her segment of this show was recorded. In it, deGraffenried talks about the unpleasant truth that even if we succeed in saving some of our coast, many residents will no longer be able to live in the communities they now call home. GNR produced abandonment zone maps using data from the CPRA and the Census Bureau. The late Dr. Ezra Boyd produced those maps for CPRA.\\n\\nThree interviews conducted separately that give a compelling view of the challenges we face going forward."'