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_add-on a)Add-on Item a) Sponsored by: City Attorney City Commission Meeting: 10-27-15 Page 1 of 2 RESOLUTION NO. __________ 1 2 A Resolution of the City of South Miami, Florida, (“City”) authorizing the 3 City Attorney to take action to support the Clean Power Plan (“Plan”) and to 4 oppose any attempt to stay the Plan and authorizing the City Clerk to 5 transmit to local governments a copy of the City’s Clean Power Plan 6 Resolution and requesting their support of the Plan and opposition to stay of 7 the Plan. 8 9 WHEREAS, at the City Commission meeting held on October 6, 2015, the Mayor 10 and City Commission passed a resolution supporting the EPA’s Clean Power Plan as a 11 way of significantly reducing greenhouse gas emissions that threaten the City and South 12 Florida region through climate change and sea level rise and opposing any requests that 13 the Clean Power Plan be stayed during any periods of legal challenge or litigation; and 14 15 WHEREAS, all of South Florida, including the City of South Miami, is threatened 16 existentially by sea level rise induced by global warming; and 17 18 WHEREAS, each state has a unique mix of electricity-generation resources, 19 technological feasibilities, costs, and emissions reduction potentials; and 20 21 WHEREAS, the Clean Power Plan establishes state-by-state targets for carbon 22 emissions reductions, and offers a flexible framework under which states may meet those 23 targets by allowing each state to combine any of the options in a flexible manner to meet 24 their targets; and 25 26 WHEREAS, the support of other municipalities and counties in South Florida for 27 the Clean Power Plan will help build momentum and show South Florida’s commitment to 28 tackling the effects of climate change. 29 30 NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE MAYOR AND CITY 31 COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF SOUTH MIAMI, FLORIDA, THAT: 32 33 Section 1. The above recitals are found to be true and correct and are hereby 34 adopted by reference as if incorporated and set out in full in this resolution. 35 36 Section 2. The City Commission hereby authorizes the City Clerk to send copies 37 of the City’s resolution in support for the federal Clean Power Plan to all municipalities 38 and counties in South Florida and to request their support and their authorization to add 39 their names to letters of support, including the proposed letter drafted by the Broward 40 County Attorney’s office, a copy of which is attached, and to provide information 41 regarding how each local government anticipates its jurisdiction will be affected by 42 climate change, the things they are doing to mitigate those effects, including the cost of 43 the mitigation, and the plans they have for future mitigation. 44 45 Page 2 of 2 Section 3. The City Attorney is hereby authorized to include the City of South 1 Miami in any motion to intervene filed by any of the interested parties who support the 2 Clean Air Plan (“the Plan”) and who oppose a stay of the Plan, including the motion 3 proposed to be filed by the Attorney General for the State of New York on behalf of New 4 York and other states and municipalities. In addition, if allowed by Law and rules of 5 Court, the City Attorney is authorized to add the city’s name to an amicus brief to be filed 6 by Michael Burger, Executive Director for the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at 7 Columbia Law School, or others, on behalf of numerous local governments in support of 8 the Clean Air Plan. 9 10 Section 4. If any section clause, sentence, or phrase of this resolution is for 11 any reason held invalid or unconstitutional by a court of competent jurisdiction, the 12 holding shall not affect the validity of the remaining portions of this resolution. 13 14 Section 5. This resolution shall take effect immediately upon adoption. 15 16 PASSED AND ADOPTED this ____ day of _____________, 2015. 17 18 19 ATTEST: APPROVED: 20 21 22 _____________________ ______________________ 23 CITY CLERK MAYOR 24 25 READ AND APPROVED AS TO FORM, COMMISSION VOTE: 26 LANGUAGE, LEGALITY AND Mayor Stoddard: 27 EXECUTION THEREOF Vice Mayor Harris: 28 Commissioner Edmond: 29 _____________________________ Commissioner Liebman: 30 CITY ATTORNEY Commissioner Welsh: 31 32 Office of the Mayor October 27, 2015 Gina McCarthy EPA Administrator Environmental Protection Agency 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. Washington, DC 20460 Re: Clean Power Plan Rule Dear Administrator McCarthy: We, the undersigned elected representatives of Southeast Florida, write to you to express our strong support for the Clean Power Plan, the new Environmental Protection Agency ("EPA") rule restricting power plant carbon dioxide emissions pursuant to § 111(d) of the Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. § 7411(d). The rule is critical to the citizens of Florida. Any delay in implementing the rule poses a serious threat to the health, safety, and welfare of our residents. We believe the Clean Power Plan, which will reduce greenhouse emissions from fossil- fueled power plants, will mitigate the harm that climate change is having on Florida's fragile environment. That harm includes damaged coastal areas, disrupted ecosystems, more severe weather events, and longer and more frequent droughts. No other state is more vulnerable to climate change than Florida, surrounded on three sides by the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean, crisscrossed by rivers and speckled with lakes. Southeast Florida is particularly vulnerable to the predicted effects of climate change due to its extensive coastline, flat landscape, porous geology, and burgeoning coastal development. In South Florida, Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties collectively have populations approaching 6 million residents. Millions of these residents live on or near the shoreline. Our safety depends on thousands of miles of canals for drainage and flood control. Re: Clean Power Plan Rule Page 2 of 3 Extreme high tides have become increasingly frequent and dramatic due to rising sea levels, over- topping seawalls, pushing up through storm water systems and contributing to flooding in communities far from the waterfront and coastal canals. King tides earlier this year were more severe and expansive than measured during any storm event in the last 20 years even though there was no accompanying rain. Emergency evacuation routes were flooded and businesses closed their doors in Broward County. Although South Miami is not on the coastline, we are experiencing higher levels of flooding, presumably due to rising sea levels which translate into less ability for stormwater to drain into bays and canals. Extreme high tides are damaging property and infrastructure and hastening beach erosion which effects all Floridians as hurricane insurance and ancillary costs from such storms rise as the result of less buffering from the beach ecosystems being increasingly eroded. In November 2012, extreme high tides in nearby Broward County, coupled with a persistent onshore wind, contributed to severe sand loss and beach scouring, battering 2,300 feet of shoreline and causing four blocks of State Road A1A, an emergency evacuation route, to collapse into the Atlantic Ocean. Temporary and permanent reconstruction costs reportedly exceeded $10 million. Regionally in South Florida, it has been estimated that $3 billion in property value is at risk with one foot of sea level rise. A storm surge could magnify this figure significantly. Rising sea levels threaten evacuation routes, energy infrastructure, and water and wastewater infrastructure. Fort Lauderdale, a city of some 165,000 residents, recently estimated that upgrades to the City's storm water system alone, would reach $1 billion to address rising sea levels. Our City is much smaller, 13,700 residents, but the impact is similar, as rising sea levels prevent historical gravity flows of our stormwater system. Rising seas are driving saltwater contamination into South Floridas wellfields. For instance, models developed in collaboration with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) predict a loss of 35 million gallons per day in water supply capacity by 2060 (40% of Broward’s coastal wellfield capacity), due entirely to sea level rise which causes salt water intrusion into drinking water sources. Pumps to necessary replace existing gravity water control structures within the regional flood control system are estimated to each cost $50 million. Existing pump systems are also now inadequate. Modeling performed by the USGS indicates that by 2060, increases in groundwater levels caused by rising seas will require some existing pumps to run 24 hours a day to maintain flood control elevations. Clearly, the effects of climate change on South Florida communities will require massive investments in clean energy and innovative engineering solutions in the coming decades. We believe that the EPA rules are a significant step in protecting our communities and addressing the extremely serious environmental and resulting economic challenges that we are facing. Re: Clean Power Plan Rule Page 3 of 3 We are aware that several states and industry groups have requested that EPA stay the Clean Power Plan during the upcoming litigation, and that it is likely that parties to that litigation will make similar requests in court. The harms our communities are currently facing (and will face in the future) from climate change are real and increasing. We urge you to resist any attempts to stay the Clean Power Plan, which could delay the necessary cuts in carbon dioxide emissions, which are directly linked to global warming and thus, sea level rise. This Plan is a critical and necessary step in addressing a very serious and growing problem in America and the World. Sincerely, Phillip K. Stoddard Mayor