Hurricane Sandy News
NFWF seeks contractor to evaluate Hurricane Sandy Coastal Resiliency Program
The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation announces a new effort to measure effects and benefits of Hurricane Sandy-funded projects across the Atlantic Coast.
Local youths help their own communities recover
A variety of youth programs managed by the National Parks of New York Harbor (NPNH) have helped parks severely damaged by Hurricane Sandy to work their way back to pre-storm conditions. Each year, programs such as New York City’s Summer Youth Employment Program, Youth Conservation Corps, United Activities Unlimited and the Student Conservation Association have employed more than 80 young people through NPNH to clean up beaches, plant beach grass, remove invasive plants and repair infrastructure.
Studying resilience in urban coastal ecosystems: the Science and Resilience Institute at Jamaica Bay
The Department of the Interior’s Hurricane Sandy Mitigation funding is supporting research projects throughout Gateway National Recreation Area’s Jamaica Bay aimed at advancing our knowledge of resilience in urban coastal ecosystems.
Wilderness breach at Fire Island National Seashore: a natural process maintains long-term resilience of the coastal ecosystem
Studies are ongoing to evaluate the ecosystem responses to a Hurricane Sandy created breach at Fire Island National Seashore with the findings supporting science-based breach management decisions at Fire Island and other Seashores.
USGS advances forecast capabilities of coastal storm impacts
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) models of storm-induced coastal change, combined with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) storm surge and wave forecasts, will be available prior to major hurricane landfall to provide more information about the location and type of extreme coastal erosion that can be expected.