Checking for non-preferred file/folder path names (may take a long time depending on the number of files/folders) ...

Flood Injustice in 500-Year Floodplains


Authors:
Owners: This resource does not have an owner who is an active HydroShare user. Contact CUAHSI (help@cuahsi.org) for information on this resource.
Type: Resource
Storage: The size of this resource is 707.4 KB
Created: Sep 15, 2024 at 4:50 a.m.
Last updated: Sep 15, 2024 at 5:34 a.m.
Citation: See how to cite this resource
Sharing Status: Public
Views: 94
Downloads: 0
+1 Votes: Be the first one to 
 this.
Comments: No comments (yet)

Abstract

Urban flooding presents a global challenge, disproportionately affecting socially vulnerable communities. In the U.S., catastrophic floods are compounded by climate change, aging infrastructure, rapid land development, and population growth. Flooding causes more damage than any other severe weather-related event, with annual average cost of US $4.5 billion and an average of 17 fatalities per year between 1980-2024. FEMA's outdated 100-year floodplain delineations fail to capture evolving flood risk, leading to development inside and outside of 100-year floodplains and potentially higher flood risk for vulnerable communities. Excluding development in 500-year floodplains would better reduce risk, although encroachment of urban development into 500-year floodplains exacerbates risks. Despite extensive coastal flood risk and environmental justice research, few studies have been conducted in inland areas like the Intermountain West. Our study analyzes FEMA's National Flood Hazard Layer and data from the 2017-2021 American Community Survey to quantify flood injustices in Salt Lake County, Utah. Our objectives include assessing demographic attributes within and outside 500-year floodplains, identifying household and population flood injustices, and overlaying 500-year floodplain maps and selected flood injustice variables. Results show that although 44% of Salt Lake County’s 500-year floodplain is in the City of South Salt Lake, the cities of Millcreek and South Jordan emerge as most vulnerable for 500-year flood injustices, these cities have flood risk ratios of 1.92 and 1.67, respectively, where a risk ratio greater than 1.00 indicates potentially concerning flood injustice. This study contributes to a deeper understanding of flood injustices in inland urban areas, shedding light on the intersection of flood risk and social vulnerability at microscales. Identifying flood injustice communities can inform targeted interventions and policy measures to mitigate flood injustices and enhance flood resilience and adaptation in inland urban areas for vulnerable communities.

Subject Keywords

Coverage

Spatial

Coordinate System/Geographic Projection:
WGS 84 EPSG:4326
Coordinate Units:
Decimal degrees
Place/Area Name:
40.754700, -111.892622
North Latitude
40.8216°
East Longitude
-111.4769°
South Latitude
40.4339°
West Longitude
-112.1059°

Content

How to Cite

Farshid, A., S. Null (2024). Flood Injustice in 500-Year Floodplains, HydroShare, http://www.hydroshare.org/resource/43d39b74f7194676ae5220d4fab1842a

This resource is shared under the Creative Commons Attribution CC BY.

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
CC-BY

Comments

There are currently no comments

New Comment

required