Transcript: Mayor de Blasio Delivers Remarks at the 100 Resilient Cities

July 24, 2017Mayor Bill de Blasio: Thank you. Thank you, everyone. Welcome to sunny New York City.[Laughter]I think we’re exemplifying the situation here with the  torrential rain today and the heat wave last week. So, you got to see it all.  We welcome you.I want to first thank Dan Zarrilli. He is doing an  outstanding job leading our resilience efforts here in the city, and we are  very, very proud to have that energetic approach that he referred to.I’m going to speak to you briefly but I do want to pick  up right away on the point that Dan made. We fight complacency, here, every  single day. And we understand – maybe this is a little bit the nature of New  Yorkers, a lot of you have spent time here – you understand New Yorkers tend to  be very straight forward, very energetic in the way we approach life.What you see is what you get. We understand there’s no  time for complacency and we can’t wait on anyone else to save us. And it’s  fitting that all of you are gathered here because I know you share that  understand and you’re depending on us, we’re depending on you. This is the  power of this gathering. Cities taking matters into our own hands because we  don’t have the illusion that things will change otherwise. We understand the  kind of leadership that we have to provide.So, I’m thrilled everyone is gathering here. I want to  thank Michael Berkowitz. I thought his remarks were very powerful. I want to  emphasize something he said – formal and informal power. And this is something  I have to tell you after three-and-a-half years as mayor of the biggest city in  the United States of America – I’m learning all the time, never ignore that  informal part of the equation because each and every one of you can change the  discussion not only in your city but in your region, in your country.And that finds, in my view, a willing audience. More and  more people around the world are waking up to the fact that something has to be  done. There was a period of time where the issues of climate change were  ignored, understated. Obviously, there are still denialists but I actually  think everyday people get it more and more because of their lived experience.But they need champions. They need leaders to step up and  say, “We’re going to go someplace we’ve never been before in terms of  resiliency, and we have the power to do it even if it isn’t all obvious today.  We do have the power and the ingenuity to do it.”Your leadership becomes crucial because what I’ve found  about mayors not only in this country but all over the world is we tend to be  bolder. I think it’s directly connected to the fact we’re closer to ground. We  actually see what people are living through. We share their experience. We feel  their hardships. We understand their vulnerabilities and we speak to them.We are the tribunes. We are the voices of everyday  people, and everyday people can’t wait for these problems to be solved decades  down the line. They need them to be solved right now.And so that informal power, that – what Theodore  Roosevelt once called the bully pulpit of any mayor anywhere in the world,  takes on extraordinary value, and I urge everyone to always go a little farther  in what you say, push a little harder.I want to thank Raj Shah for his great leadership at the  Rockefeller Foundation, and thank him for the support provided to this crucial  gathering and the work that we’re going to keep doing together.And I want to thank from my own team, in addition to Dan  Zarrilli, I want to thank my Commissioner for International Affairs, Penny  Abeywardena; my Director of Sustainability Mark Chambers; and my Director of  Resilience, Jainey Bavishi who are all doing a wonderful job helping New York  City to move ahead.Now, I got to tell you for New York City, I think there  was an obvious break-point in our understanding and that was the day that  Superstorm Sandy hit us. It was a hurricane mixed with a, what we call a  nor’easter – two different kinds of storms coming together to create something  unprecedented that had a massive negative impact on New York City. Dozens of  people died, thousands and thousands displaced from their homes, billions of  dollars in economic damage.We’re still in the process of recovery today. Probably  the worst natural disaster in the almost 400-year history of New York City as  we know it. That opened up eyes. That helped people to understand it was  personal. It wasn’t theory anymore.It could come home. Climate change could come home and  affect you and your family at any given moment, and therefore real change has  to happen.And the OneNYC plan makes us very proud because it is  directly an answer to what we’ve experienced here in the city, one of the great  coastal cities in the world. We’re not putting our head in the sand and acting  like we can ignore the crisis. We’re saying in the OneNYC plan, frontally, a  lot has to change and it has to change quickly.And more and more the people in this city get it.  Again,  I think there’s an interactivity between what people experience,  opening their eyes – and again sometimes very sad realities that open their  eyes – but also our ability as leaders to keep making the point.Repetition is very good in this case – to keep making the  point that, yes, you see your lives changing and that means we cannot  participate in that classic definition of insanity – doing the same thing over  and over and expecting a different result. We obviously have to do things very  differently. We have to change the way we live. We have to change the way we  govern. We have to change what we invest in.The OneNYC plan – I’m proud of it in particular because  it recognizes and focuses on the fact that we have to fight climate change  while fighting all forms of inequality simultaneously. They go together.The fight against inequality takes many forms. Obviously  social justice and economic justice have to be both addressed but for a long  time I think there was a bit of an assumption – a wrong-headed assumption that  if you’re going to address the challenge of resilience and sustainability that  somehow that did not come with economic opportunity for those who had been left  out in our society.We see it the other way around. We think a full bore  effort to address climate change comes with the creation of an immense amount  of economic activity and opportunity but we have to target that opportunity to  those who have not had a fair shake.And so when we think about retrofitting buildings, when  we think about recycling, when we think about renewable energy, when we think  about restoring wetlands, all of that comes with job creation that we want to  target to people in our city who have been economically marginalized.We think addressing climate change and addressing  economic inequality can go hand-in-hand. We also think the definition of  sustainability has to be see in a bifocal light. I always use this example. If  you had a physically sustainable city with massive inequality within it, it  really isn’t sustainable in any true fashion because the social fabric would be  torn apart at all times. Equally, if you had a wonderfully strong social  fabric, lots of opportunity, lots of inclusion but you weren’t addressing the  environmental reality you wouldn’t last long either.We have to see these as two related pieces. And our  OneNYC plan lays out very specific goals. And I want to urge everyone – there’s  a lot of great leaders in this room, a lot of people who have much to be proud  of in terms of the efforts for sustainability and so many other things you’ve  done for your cities – but I want to urge you to be bold in setting numerical  goals and making that a way to rally everyone to the cause.We experiment with this a lot and we took some risks in  the process but what I found is the minute you set the goal, everyone within  the government and outside started to expect the result, and it raised the bar,  raised the level of activity. It raised expectations so the healthy way of  bluntly – fought against the bureaucratic impulse that sometimes holds back our  governments, and gave everyone a reason to organize their thoughts and actions.So, we, for example, believe that we have to  simultaneously achieve crucial goals like the 80 percent reduction in emissions  by 2050. In fact, we want to surpass that. But we also believe we have to  achieve goals for getting people economic opportunity and for getting people  out of poverty.So, I’ll give you an example. In our OneNYC plan – I urge  you all to take a look at it – we specifically say over a ten-year period our  goal is to raise 800,000 people out of poverty, almost a tenth of our  population. 800,000 people – a very ambitious number.We’re now about three years into that effort and I’m  pleased to say by the end of this year we think almost 280,000 people will move  from poverty to an economically sustainable lifestyle. Just after three years  because of big changes that have happened, because of affordable housing  programs, because of better benefits for working people  because  of the increase in the minimum wage that we fought for here in the city and  worked to achieve on the state level. These things are adding up to real  tangible change in people’s economic wellbeing.At  the same time that goal – that 80 by 50 goal – that I know so many people here  share is moving apace. We’ve reduced emission by 14 percent already since 2005,  and as I’m sure everyone is experiencing, the more you do, the more capacity,  the more momentum – we expect that to increase quickly as we go forward. The  two go together. The two go together, and we’re finding that we can play a very  active role in preparing people to get involved in the powerful economic  opportunities around sustainability. We’re spending city resources to train  more and more workers to retrofit buildings. We’re using city law and  regulation to mandate the retrofit of privately owned buildings. We’re showing  – leading by example, requiring all of our city buildings to be retrofitted in  the next few years, and we’re going to an all-electric fleet for our city cars.  All of these things interact. All of them set the bar higher, push everyone  involved [inaudible] activity and create economic opportunity, which then again  must be targeted to those who need it most.So  I’m proud to say these pieces have an impact in everyday life, and we’re  finding that there’s many, many opportunities to make change. We’re proud of  the green infrastructure projects we’re creating around the city; the food  resiliency efforts we’ve done around our food hub in Hunts Point in the Bronx.  We’ve found so many focal points for activity that all align to this  combination of economic and environmental sustainability. And we also found  that we need to be creative – every single one of us in this room. We’re all  trying to be creative, and we’re all trying to borrow from each other. That’s a  wonderful thing about these gatherings. You know I say mayors don’t steal each  other’s ideas, we borrow each other’s ideas. We’re very genteel that way.[Laughter]But  it’s amazing. Some of the things that have been the greatest successes here in  the last three-plus years were ideas we lovingly borrowed from other places,  and then we get the call every day from someplace that wants to see what we’re  doing and work with it. Everyone has a great mutual feedback loop. Cities  around the world constantly upping their games by learning from each other, so  one other things I’d offer is something we just started. Now I know a lot of  you are probably really ahead of us, but we’re one of the great coastal cities  of the world, but guess what? Over the years we turned away from the water.  It’s kind of breath taking if you go and look over any vista of the Hudson  River or the East River or the Harbor, you see relatively few vessels. But  meanwhile our roads are more congested than ever before literally. We’ve got an  aging infrastructure, so that congestion is hurting us all the time. And our  mass transit, which for years a lot of people feared and weren’t using enough,  now with greater safety more and more people are turning to mass transit –  particularly out subways – and they’re overcrowded.So  what we hoped would be a more mass transit focused society, well that’s come to  pass to the point that there’s not enough space on the train. Well, it dawned  on us that we have to use other alternatives, so we’re turning to the water.  And we just started this year NYC Ferry, and I urge you all if you have a few  free minutes go and take one of these ferries, experience what it’s like.  They’re beautiful new boats for only $2.75 – the same cost as to get on the  subway – you can go to different parts of the city. Someone at a press  conference the other day noted that this only started a few months ago and it’s  been wildly popular already. Well beyond the ridership levels we experienced –  expected, excuse me – and someone asked at a press conference, one of the  journalist said ‘to what do you attribute the success?’ And one of the folks  running the ferry program said ‘it’s simple, it’s $2.75 to get on a boat. And  by the way, they had beer on tap.’[Laughter]So I  want to note the positive use of beer in making social change and environmental  change.[Laughter]This  may be, you know, the one thing you’ll remember from my remarks today is that  if you offer affordable beer you can get people to change all their  environmental habits for the better.[Laughter]But,  we are now – so that’s a City of New York run service. It’s not part of our  regional transportation authority. That’s run by the City of New York, and we  found it to be a great investment that’s going to allow us to create a whole  new modality of transportation and use the water and get people off the  streets, get people out of overcrowded subways. When you take that, which is  brand new, plus the light rail we hope to build in our city soon; plus select  bus service, which is express bus service with protected lanes so they can move  more quickly; plus Citi Bike, which I’m sure a lot of you are familiar with –  these are all ideas that have only been started in the last years, in the last  decade or so in this city. Some of them brand new like the ferry service and  the light rail, but they all synergize. We just need more and more good,  sustainable transportation options, and more and more reasons for people to get  out of their cars. And remember my friends, we all are bedeviled by the  challenge of the automobile. What a double-edged sword it has been for our  society, but our job is to show people there are better alternatives and  constantly make them appealing and available to people. And you know the famous  line from the movie – if you build it, they will come – we’re finding that  already with our ferry service – tremendous response to this new option.So  let me conclude with this. We all know that we’re in a time in history where  there’s just no resting for us. We all chose these jobs willingly, and we didn’t  choose them to sit around and take it easy. We came into office at a time when  there’s an urgency, and I think it’s reflected in the younger generations  coming up now – the kids who have just gotten out of college and folks that are  20s and 30s, and I’m also asked about their political character here in this  country. And I say I’m very, very hopefully about that generation because I  think they’re been affected by the urgency of the moment. This is a generation  that grew up understanding the danger of climate change; understanding the  danger of economic inequality; understanding that they had no guarantees for  their economic future compared to previous generations, and they have to fight  hard and work hard. I think that’s an encouraging sign – that urgency. We have  to feel it too on behalf of them and all who will come after them. So we have  to keep upping our goals. In this city I’ve asked of all of my agencies –  literally every city agency – come back to me in September. In light of  President Trump’s decision to leave the Paris accords we now have to do more.  It’s as simple as that. I think a lot of you have seen we’re very, very proud  in this country – over 300 American cities, in reaction to President Trump’s  decisions, over 300 American cities say well if our national government isn’t  going align to the Paris accords we will. Three hundred American cities said  we’ll do it ourselves.[Applause]And  that number is growing all the time, so my message to my agencies is you know  the 80 by 50 goal is absolutely necessary, and it will come with its own  challenges. We all understand the necessity of keeping warming to no more than  two degrees Celsius, but my mandate to my agencies will be let’s look at the  most stringent standards. Let’s look at the 1.5 degrees Celsius standard and  see what – if we wanted to model our role in leading the charge to halt the  growth and keep it to that lower level – what would we have to do even more?  What would we have to even sooner? And let’s start laying that pathway because  if our country is unfortunately has taken a wrong turn temporarily, our cities  and our states just have to go even faster, even harder at the goal to make for  it. That is the nature of all of us at the city level.And  again I just want to say a profound thank you to all of you for being here. We  are thrilled to have you in this city. Thank you for what you do every day for  the people you represent, and a thank you for the boldness that you’re all  engendering by being a part of 100 Resilient Cities. This is an organization  that if you join it means your consciousness is already set to bold, aggressive  action. Let’s push each other. Let’s inspire each other. Let’s go someplace  that no one could’ve imagined in the service of saving this planet.Thank  you. God bless you all.

日期:2022/01/18点击:29