Spencer Rendahl: Unnatural Disasters

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(Host) As former journalist and commentator Suzanne Spencer Rendahl
watches New York and New Jersey slowly recover from Hurricane Sandy,
she’s reminded of a night two years ago, when her family woke up to
similar howling winds – and a strange banging noise.

(Spencer)
I got up at dawn that 2010 February morning in a sleep-deprived,
uncaffeinated daze with my then-three-month-old son on my shoulder. I
looked out the window and mumbled something about seeing pieces of
siding from our house around the yard.

"That’s not siding," my husband announced from another room. "That’s our roof."

That
freak wind storm made New Hampshire a disaster area. But it’s not the
only big storm that twin state residents have recently endured. We also
had the ice storm of March 2011, which knocked out our power and closed
our daughter’s school for two days. And of course Tropical Storm Irene
caused extensive flood damage across Vermont and New Hampshire. And most
recently, we watched in horror as our friends and neighbors to the
south suffered through Hurricane Sandy.

We call these events
natural disasters – but I’m no longer sure that they’re really all that
natural. Scientists can’t say that the windstorm that ripped off my roof
was caused by what some people call "global warming," and others
"climate change." But they can say that thanks to deforestation and the
burning of fossil fuels, we’ve changed the chemical composition of the
air we breathe – the same air that governs Earth’s climate. And many
have predicted for decades that climate change would cause an increase
in these kinds of extreme weather events.

Last summer, the
Midwest suffered the worst drought since the dust bowl. Yet politicians
seemed determined to avoid talking about Climate Change during this past
election season.

With Sandy’s arrival, that silence ended. New
York Governor Andrew Cuomo and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg
have both proclaimed climate change a reality. They warn that we must
prepare for more extreme weather events. Bloomberg Businessweek
magazine’s cover simply declared "It’s Global Warming, Stupid."

So
we’ll stockpile batteries and canned goods. But we’ll also hold
accountable those politicians who call climate change a left-wing hoax.
We’ll join with others around the world trying to curb greenhouse
gasses. We’ll consider more carefully the need to fly or drive. And
we’ll try harder to remember that the real cost of gas may be the
condition of the planet we leave to our children and grandchildren.

After
we lost our roof, I explained over and over on the phone to our
insurance company and friends and family how the wind had peeled strips
of our standing seam roof off one by one.

"Like peeling a banana," my daughter chimed in on cue.

By
the end of that day, we lived under sheets of blue tarp. My husband and
I considered ourselves lucky that no one got hurt and joked that we had
our very own Troubled Asset Relief Program.

But I worry that in
the future my children – like too many of Irene and Sandy’s victims
today – won’t find the fixes – or the humor – nearly so easy.

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