Mayor Announces Program to Help Curb Effects of Extreme Summer Heat

June 14, 2017Launches new $106 million Cool  Neighborhoods NYC program, expanding the Administration’s aggressive climate  resiliency agendaNEW  YORK—Before  the hottest days of the summer arrive, Mayor de Blasio is announcing the launch  of Cool Neighborhoods NYC, a new $106 million program designed to curb  the effect of extreme heat, and protect against the worst effects of rising  temperatures from climate change. This comprehensive city program will involve  proactive and reactive measures in heat-sensitive neighborhoods to help  mitigate the threat to public health from the urban heat island effect exacerbated  during summer months.“Climate  change is a dagger aimed at the heart of our city, and extreme heat is the edge  of the knife,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “This is a question of equity;  hotter summers, exacerbated by climate change, are a threat that falls  disproportionately on communities of color and the elderly. We are answering  that question with programs designed to protect the health of New Yorkers,  expand our city’s tree canopy, promote community cohesion, and more.”Every  year, hot summers cause dehydration, heat exhaustion, and heat-stroke – all  outcomes that disproportionately impact older adults and vulnerable  populations. Extreme heat kills more New Yorkers than any other extreme weather  event, and leads to an average of 450 heat-related emergency department visits,  150 hospital admissions, 13 heat-stroke deaths, as well as 115 deaths from  natural causes exacerbated by extreme heat.Rising  temperatures, more frequent and longer-lasting heat events threaten the New  York’s livability. The New York City Panel on Climate Change (NPPC) projects up  to a 5.7°F increase in average city temperatures and a doubling of the number  of days above 90°F by the 2050s. The NPCC also projects that heat waves in the  city will increase in intensity and duration.Cool  Neighborhoods NYC is a comprehensive resiliency program aimed at reducing these heat-related  health impacts and deaths, by lowering temperatures in heat-vulnerable  neighborhoods, strengthening social networks, and improving quality of life for  all New Yorkers. The program expands the City’s current heat reduction efforts,  like NYC °CoolRoofs, and adds new initiatives like Be a Buddy NYC, and  providing climate risk training for home health aides. The City will also work  with health departments and other stakeholders across New York State to support  an expansion  of the Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP) to assist qualified households in  paying utility bills related to the operation of air conditioners.As  part of Cool Neighborhoods NYC, the City announced an $82 million  commitment to fund street tree plantings in neighborhoods in the South Bronx,  Northern Manhattan, and Central Brooklyn. These areas have been identified as  disproportionately vulnerable to heat-health risks, according to the City’s Heat  Vulnerability Index, which combines metrics proven to be strong indicators of  heat risk.  

The City will also invest $16 million to support planting  trees in parks and an additional $7 million to support forest restoration  across the five boroughs. The City has identified a priority list of 2.7  million square feet of private- and public- roofs in the heat-vulnerable areas  of the South Bronx, Central Brooklyn, and Northern Manhattan to conduct  strategic outreach to owners and target the successful NYC °CoolRoofs program over the coming years.Additional  key Cool Neighborhoods NYC components include:Launching Be a  Buddy NYC: The City is launching a two-year, multi-stakeholder pilot to promote community  cohesion. Through partnerships with community-based organizations, Be a  Buddy NYC will develop and test strategies for protecting at-risk New  Yorkers from the health impacts of extreme heat in the South Bronx, Central  Brooklyn, and Northern Manhattan.Partnering with  home health aides:  The City, in partnership with three home care agencies, will promote heat and  climate-health information and engage home health aides as key players in  building climate resiliency. The agencies will use their continuing education  curriculum to educate nearly 8,000 home health aides on climate-related risks  and to recognize and address early signs of heat-related illness.Partnering with  news reporters: The City will host a workshop and will conduct outreach to health and medical reporters  and meteorologists to improve the way that New Yorkers receive crucial  information about heat and the protective actions they need to take to stay  safe indoors, and to encourage caregivers and social contacts to check on  vulnerable neighbors, friends and family.Collecting innovative data: The City will invest  in the collection of baseline neighborhood-level temperature information to  assess current risk, more effectively target new initiatives in the most  heat-vulnerable neighborhoods, and in the long-term, provide baseline data to  accurately measure the impact of interventions. Cool  Neighborhoods NYC is led by the Mayor’s Office of Recovery & Resiliency and will be  implemented in partnerships with NYC Parks, the Health Department, Small  Business Services, Emergency Management, and members of the private sector.“Adapting New York City for the risks of  climate change is one of the great challenges of our time,” said Daniel Zarrilli, Senior Director for Climate Policy  & Program and the Chief Resilience Officer for the NYC Mayor’s Office. “Higher temperatures and frequent heat waves, in addition to  storms and rising sea levels, present an enormous challenge to the city and its  most vulnerable residents. That’s why today’s commitment to the Cool  Neighborhoods NYC program will ensure New Yorkers have the tools to better  protect themselves and their neighbors from rising temperatures.  This  unprecedented investment in heat mitigation is a critical part of our OneNYC  program to ensure that New York City is ready for the risks of the future.”“As  we observe high temperature records being broken year after year, the City must  take action against the growing threats we face from climate change and extreme  heat,” said Jainey Bavishi, Director of the Mayor’s Office of Recovery and  Resiliency. “Heat kills more New Yorkers than any other natural hazard, and Cool Neighborhoods NYC is a crucial step towards reducing heat-related  health impacts and deaths in neighborhoods at the highest risk. Through a  combination of targeted new investments, stronger community partnerships, and  innovative new initiatives, we are delivering on our OneNYC commitments to  build a more resilient and equitable city.”“A  tree planted today is a promise made to tomorrow – and as stewards of an urban  forest 2.6-million trees strong, NYC Parks is focused on making good on the  promise of a sustainable future. In the coming decades, a strong and healthy  tree canopy will provide crucial protection against a warming climate. Cool  Neighborhoods NYC gives us the resources we need, providing more  than $100 million for strategic street tree and park tree planting,” said Mitchell  Silver, NYC Parks Commissioner“As  global temperatures keep rising to record highs each year, New Yorkers are more  vulnerable to extreme heat," said Health Commissioner Dr. Mary T.  Bassett. “In our city, most heat-related deaths happen behind closed doors  in homes without air conditioning. 

These deaths are preventable.  The  evidence-based actions our city is taking in the face of a changing climate are  needed more than ever in the absence of federal leadership. Cool  Neighborhoods NYC is a wonderful example of how local government,  communities and residents can work together to make all New Yorkers safer today  and in the future.”  “As  temperatures rise during the summer months, the Cool Neighborhoods NYC initiative is helping combat extreme heat and reducing our carbon footprint,”  said Gregg Bishop, Commissioner of the NYC Department of Small Business  Services. “As part of this initiative, our successful NYC °Cool Roofs program is installing reflective coatings on millions of square feet of roofing  across the city. These coatings lower building temperatures, reduce energy consumption,  and help cut carbon emissions.”“Extreme  heat is deadly, and our dense urban environment that traps and absorbs heat  creates a dangerous situation for vulnerable New Yorkers,” said NYC  Emergency Management Commissioner Joseph Esposito. “The new programs  included in Cool Neighborhoods NYC will help reduce the risks from  extreme heat, and New Yorkers can also help us beat the heat this summer by  taking preparedness steps like drinking lots of water and checking in on family  members, neighbors, and friends when temperatures rise.”“New  York City is investing $1.5 billion to build green infrastructure across the  five boroughs that will improve the health of local waterways while also  cleaning the air and lowering summer temperatures,” said Vincent Sapienza, Acting Commissioner, Department of Environmental Protection.   “Importantly, the increased tree canopy and vegetation in our green  infrastructure will improve air quality in neighborhoods with less than average  street tree counts and higher than average rates of asthma among young people.”“The  Cool Neighborhoods NYC plan to have home health aides identify at-risk older  adults is a wise decision that will save lives, as many olders without air  conditioning may choose to stay home during heat emergencies rather than go to  cooling centers. The plan exemplifies how we can tap into this existing network  of aides to better identify and address heat-related illnesses,” said Department  for the Aging Commissioner Donna Corrado.“As  the agency that controls our streets and roads, nearly a quarter of New York  City""s land mass, DOT is doing our part to combat the devastating effects of  climate change,” said Polly Trottenberg, Commissioner at the Department of  Transportation.  “As part of the Mayor""s Cool Neighborhoods NYC  effort, we are helping keep New Yorkers cool by replacing dark-colored asphalt  with materials like planted medians that radiate less heat, as well as by  adding green infrastructure, lighter-colored concrete, and painted pedestrian  spaces throughout the city.  Our Street Design Manual will also make  sustainable practices accessible to everybody who constructs or repairs our  streets.”“We  all look forward to warm weather in the summer months, but extreme heat pose a  very real threat to our most vulnerable residents. This sound investment  protects New Yorkers and continues to make our city greener, better prepared,  and more resilient against extreme heat and other threats associated with  climate change,” said Council Member Mark Treyger, Chair of the City  Council’s Committee on Recovery and Resiliency.“Extreme  heat waves during the summer months can come as a severe threat to our most  vulnerable populations, particularly the elderly. As temperatures rise year  after year due to climate change, these threats will become more acute and it  will be on all of us to look out for the health of our fellow New Yorkers. This  investment is a positive step forward that will help all residents during the  coming months," said Council Member Ritchie Torres."Environmental  injustice takes many forms and inequity of cooling infrastructure is certainly  a pernicious incarnation." said Council Member Corey Johnson, Chair of  the Committee on Health. "It’s crucial that we take the short and  long-term steps required to ensuring all New Yorkers are healthy and happy  through the hot summer months. I applaud Mayor Bill de Blasio and the Office of  Recovery & Resiliency for their focus and creativity in solving this  fundamental problem."“We  are honored to partner with the City and the New York City Department of Small  Business Services in particular to contribute to cooling our communities. The  NYC °Cool Roofs program not only improves the energy efficiency of  buildings in our most vulnerable neighborhoods, but it also provides paid  training and workforce support to men and women striving to build bright new  careers. It""s a win-win!” said Jennifer Mitchell, Executive Director,  Sustainable South Bronx, a division of The HOPE Program“With  heat waves on the rise it is critical that we protect New Yorkers in the places  most likely to experience extreme heat and adverse health impacts. Cool  Neighborhoods NYC is a critical step towards improving equity in access to  green space and green space benefits in the city. In the Urban Systems Lab we  are committed to supporting this initiative with evidence based science and  applaud this major investment in trees for urban climate change adaptation,” said Timon McPhearson, Director, Urban Systems Lab, The New School.“The  Natural Areas Conservancy is founded on the principle that science-based land  management is the most effective and sustainable way to manage urban natural  resources.  We are so pleased and excited that our research in of NYC’s  forests has contributed to this incredible investment,” said Sarah  Charlop-Powers, Executive Director of the Natural Areas Conservancy.“Our  mission is to strengthen our community by providing a continuum of vital  services and activities that enrich the lives of New Yorkers. The continual  service that we provide to vulnerable individuals makes us a trusted asset in  communicating the risks of extreme heat to those that need it the most. We look  forward to incorporating the City’s curriculum into our program in order to  prepare our home health aides to keep New Yorkers safe during extreme heat  events,” said Judy Zangwill, Executive Director,  Sunnyside Community Services.“Through our homecare services, we strive to empower New Yorkers  to get healthy, live longer and be happier in the comfort of their own homes.  This last point is crucial when it comes to extreme heat events. The City’s new  program will arm home health aides with the tools necessary to keep individuals  comfortable in their homes while also identifying warning signs when additional  emergency actions are needed,” said Marie Andreacchio, President, Allen  Health Care Services.“New  research tells us that, in the not too distant future, cities like New York  will be spending a staggering 5.6% of their total economies on urban heat and  local climate change if they don""t act now to address heat.  In today""s  money, that makes heat and local climate change a nearly $90 billion challenge  for the city,” said Kurt Shickman, Executive Director, Global Cool Cities  Alliance.  “New York has long been a leading city in identifying and  targeting policy to ease its heat challenge and this new set of initiatives  furthers that reputation.  The benefits of these efforts will be seen in  the healthier, happier and more prosperous New Yorkers they enable.  The  world needs this kind of leadership now more than ever."“Climate  Change is causing cities to get hotter, faster, and with deadlier  consequences,” said Michael Berkowitz, President of 100 Resilient Cities.  “New York City is continuing to tackle this challenge head-on, and doing it in  a way that yields a whole host of other benefits for residents through cleaner  air, more walkable streets, better collaboration with health workers, and  more.  

As cities all over the world seek to deal with this challenge, they  can continue to look at New York as one of the leaders in addressing the heat  island effect, and other impacts of climate change.”“By  targeting investments in parks and open space, cities are leading the way on  climate change mitigation and adaptation, while also improving the health and  quality of life of their residents,” said Carter Strickland, New York State  Director, The Trust for Public Land.  “The City’s generous funding for  converting barren schoolyards into playgrounds with plants and trees that are  open on weekends and after school hours is enriching the learning environment  for schoolchildren, providing additional recreational opportunities for  neighbors, bettering public health, shading our cities from additional heat,  and absorbing additional rainfall.  Providing multi-benefits solutions is  a winning strategy.”“With  all the ills of the world that call for repair and redress, combating climate  change may be the great work of our time,” said Rev. Joseph M. McShane,  S.J., president of Fordham University. “It is, I would say, holy work,  taken up on behalf of people separated from us by time and distance; people we  will never know, but whose very lives depend upon the actions we take here and  now. New York is taking the lead among cities, thanks to the enlightened  leadership of Mayor de Blasio. Living as we do on one of the great river deltas  of the world, we can’t afford not to rise to the challenge.”ResourcesFor  more information on what New Yorkers can do stay safe on high heat days, please  visit Beat  The Heat, the destination for everything you need to know about extreme  heat in New York City.The  City’s comprehensive heat resiliency plan, which is a OneNYC initiative, can be found here.To  see the full list of the City’s progress on its OneNYC over $20 billion  multi-layered resiliency program, please visit our citywide resiliency  map here.

日期:2021/12/30点击:12