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Damning news report revives questions about Trump, NC Legislature and flood control • NC Newsline

Damning news report revives questions about Trump, NC Legislature and flood control • NC Newsline

Former President Donald Trump will be in Fayetteville today for an event dubbed a “town hall.” So it seems at least possible that he and the North Carolina Republican officials who usually come to such events to support him will be asked a question or two by those in attendance. If that's the case, and there's someone in the audience with a little courage, here's a question that deserves to be asked:

Why have both the Trump administration and North Carolina lawmakers repeatedly blocked rules that would have strengthened flood protection and storm standards that may have saved lives and property during Hurricane Helene?

As The New York Times reported in an extensive report on Thursday, “decisions made by state officials in the years leading up to Helene most likely exacerbated some of that damage, according to experts in building standards and disaster resilience.”

The state officials in question were the Republican leaders of the North Carolina General Assembly.

While the report admits from the outset that “no amount of preparation could have completely prevented the devastation unleashed by Helene,” it also explains in painful detail how GOP legislative leaders have done so since taking control of the General Assembly in 2011 again distorted laws and rules and overrode gubernatorial vetoes intended to protect against the effects of hurricanes and other storms.

Among the rejected proposals were regulations aimed at “limiting construction work on slopes with a high or medium landslide risk.”

This is from the report:

“These decisions reflect the influence of North Carolina's homebuilding industry, which has consistently fought against rules that force its members to build homes to higher and more expensive standards,” said Kim Wooten, an engineer who serves on the North Carolina Building Code Council , the group that sets home building requirements for the state.

“The homebuilders association has opposed every bill to improve life safety that has been introduced in the General Assembly,” said Ms. Wooten, who works for Facilities Strategies Group, a firm that specializes in building services. She said state lawmakers, many of whom are home builders themselves or have received campaign contributions from the industry, are “voting for bills that line their pockets and make home building cheaper.”

Not surprisingly, there were very similar anti-regulatory actions at the federal level during the Trump years. This is according to a Washington Post report published in the first year of the Trump administration:

“President Trump signed an executive order on Tuesday that he said would streamline the permitting process for building infrastructure such as roads, bridges and offices by eliminating a planning step related to climate change and flood hazards.”

…The White House confirmed that the order issued Tuesday would revoke an earlier executive order from former President Barack Obama that required recipients of federal funds to give strong consideration to risk management standards when building in flood zones, including measures such as elevating structures out of reach rising water. Obama’s 2015 Federal Flood Risk Management Standard was aimed at reducing the risk of flood damage billed to taxpayers when property owners file costly claims.”

As has often been the case in North Carolina over the past decade, Trump's actions came in response to moves by the housing lobby seeking repeal and over the objections of insurers and environmentalists. This, of course, is the same Donald Trump who repeatedly lied about relief and recovery efforts for Helene earlier this week.

Such deregulation measures, unfortunately, are also of the same kind that Americans can expect as early as next year as part of the detailed policy plan drawn up by the Heritage Foundation called Project 2025 – a blueprint for a new one developed by the Republican-led era in Washington, which contains many proposals to limit or eliminate regulations to promote public safety and welfare.

The bottom line: As North Carolinians across the state struggle to catch their breath following the Helene disaster, many questions arise about why we weren't better prepared, how we can engineer a rapid recovery, and how we can make communities more resilient in the future . And as the news reports above make clear, many of these questions about poor preparation need to be directed directly to Republican lawmakers and, whenever he visits North Carolina, to former President Trump.

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