WJZ News/CBS Baltimore: “‘Nuisance flooding’ impacts South Baltimore communities as sea levels continue to rise”

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WJZ News/CBS Baltimore: “‘Nuisance flooding’ impacts South Baltimore communities as sea levels continue to rise”

BALTIMORE (Jessica Alpert, Rachel Gold) – Maryland’s 3,200 miles of low-lying coastline is becoming increasingly vulnerable to nuisance flooding as our sea levels continue to rise. 

Jessica Albert takes us to the mouth of the Patapsco River to show us how this flooding is impacting South Baltimore communities…

…”Nuisance flooding is not when a storm comes in and blows a bunch of water onto the land, but it’s when the normal cycle of tides produces these huge tides that begin to inundate the soil,” Rogers said. “That gets worse and worse as the sea level grows.” 

Brad Rogers is the Executive Director of the South Baltimore Gateway Partnership which is an organization that receives $8 million a year in casino revenues and uses that money to improve the neighborhoods of South Baltimore.

Over the years, he’s seen the damage done by nuisance flooding and how it’s eroding South Baltimore shores. 

“As flooding gets worse, you have a neighborhood that is getting more and more isolated, more and more vulnerable over time and that’s why now is the time to take action,” Rogers said.

His organization is partnering with the “Reimagine Middle Branch” project, a community-led initiative to re-connect South Baltimore to the 11-plus miles of shoreline along the Patapsco River. 

A portion of the project is to invest $30 million into rebuilding miles of wetlands and landscaping destroyed by rising sea levels. 

“It’s going to improve our protection against flooding and it going to help keep trash and debris out there instead of up here where we have to live with it,” Rogers said.

Reimagine Middle Branch will not only protect the coastline but will also bring amenities to the areas along the Patapsco, making it a place South Baltimoreans can enjoy. 

“This is a beautiful waterfront, but it’s Baltimore’s forgotten waterfront and we’re working to turn it into Baltimore’s next great waterfront,” Rogers said.

Work to restore the wetlands will begin next year and should be done by the summer of 2025.

Watch the full interview here.

Screenshot from the interview of Brad Rogers, a white man wearing a gray shirt and jeans, standing on a pier in the Middle Branch with the waterfront and bridge in the background.