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ND Expert: Hurricanes like Milton, Helene are the new normal

Author: Jessica Sieff

ND Experts

Tracy Kijewski-Correa

Tracy Kijewski-Correa

Pulte Institute for Global Development; Engineering; Keough 91Ƶ of Global Affairs

What appears to have once been a two story home stands in pieces. Above is a blue sky streaked with white clouds. In the background are the calm waters off the Gulf of Mexico. The home's roof and second story have been destroyed, and debris litters the yard. has been blown off. A blue X spray-painted on a white garage door.
A home destroyed by Hurricane Harvey, a Category 4 hurricane, which struck Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi in 2017. Engineers at Notre Dame have been leading assessments of structural damage following major hurricanes and warn rapidly intensifying storms like Helene and Milton are the new normal. (Photo: University of Notre Dame)

There is no rest for weary Florida residents who have yet to recover from Hurricane Helene. Less than two weeks since the Category 4 storm made landfall, battering the state and surrounding southeast region, another major hurricane is charting a dangerous path toward Florida’s Gulf Coast.

Hurricane Milton, a Category 5 storm as of Monday, has reportedly reached sustained winds of 160 mph as it threatens a direct hit to the Tampa Bay area. Forecasters expect its path to cross the state, delivering a hit to Orlando residents as well.

Milton’s rapid ascension—and its arrival coming on the heels of an already devastating storm—is the new normal, according to , professor of and global affairs and the William J. Pulte Director of the , part of Notre Dame’s .

Times are changing

Tracy Kijewski-Correa, female professor is pictured seated, smiling, in front of a gray backdrop. She has long dark hair and glasses.
Tracy Kijewski-Correa

“There have been three hurricanes impacting the Big Bend area of Florida in the past 13 months, each with different characteristics and landfalling in areas previously assumed not to be at high risk based on prior historical events,” Kijewski-Correa said. “They came in such rapid succession that the repairs from earlier storms were not even completed before the next struck. The models used to capture storm risk must contend with the fact that the past no longer predicts the future and that impacts can even be compounded by subsequent storms. Our inability to predict the full scope of future, potentially compounding events questions whether we can keep waiting for the storm to build back better. It’s time to build better before.”

An expert on disaster risk reduction, civil infrastructure and housing, and director of the National Science Foundation-supported Structural Extreme Events Reconnaissance (StEER) Network, Kijewski-Correa was recently part of the study team that authored a .

Increasingly, residents in those communities barely have time to document their losses between storms.

Housing continues to be our greatest vulnerability

“Even in states like Florida with some of the most rigorous building codes, there is no mandate to upgrade homes built before those codes were enacted,” Kijewski-Correa said. “Older pre-code buildings in coastal inundation zones of Florida suffered extreme to complete damage, while those built to modern codes were relatively undamaged. Building codes save property and lives, and reduce the financial burden and community disruption that we all have to bear. We have the engineering solutions to build resiliently, but we lack the political will. In the absence of mandated retrofits, we must continue to create strong insurance, tax and, most importantly, market incentives for owners to upgrade their properties to the latest construction standards or, when necessary, retreat. That is only possible when the growing risk and cost of living in hazard-prone areas is honestly and clearly communicated to the public in multigenerational terms.”

Milton and Helene are a result of human action — and inaction

“There are no natural disasters,” Kijewski-Correa said. “Natural hazards become disasters as the result of human actions. Helene reiterates the importance of heeding warnings, despite prior storm experiences. The failure to do so cost many lives. Both coastal storm surge in Florida and interior Appalachian flooding from Helene were predicted well in advance. Those predictions enabled officials and other trusted local actors to issue actionable guidance on how to prepare and mobilize support for the most vulnerable. Citizens need to heed that guidance. As the climate changes, we will have more extreme rainfall events. These storm events will exceed past precedent, making past experiences less relevant in deciding how to prepare and respond. Reliable guidance delivered by trusted actors must be met with good faith actions by citizens, now more than ever.”

Kijewski-Correa is a faculty affiliate at Notre Dame's .

Contact: Jessica Sieff, associate director of media relations, 574-631-3933, jsieff@nd.edu