LTC 224-2018 City Water Resilience FrameworkMJAMIBEACH
OFFICE OF THE CITY MANAGER
NO. LTC #
224-2018
L TTER TO COMMISSION
TO: Mayor Dan Gelber and Members •f the Ci Commission
FROM: Jimmy L. Morales, City Manag
DATE: April 25, 2018
SUBJECT: City Water Resilience Framework
I am pleased to share some news about another exciting learning opportunity for Miami
Beach as part of the 100 Resilient Cities Network. The attached flyer is a brief overview
of an engagement with Arup to develop a City Water Resilience framework. Miami Dade
Water & Sewer is taking the lead on behalf of Resilient Greater Miami & the Beaches.
The end result and goal is simple - it is about bringing together stakeholders and making
better water related decisions for our region.
Arup is an independent firm of designers, planners, engineers, consultants and technical
specialists, working across every aspect of today's built environment. It was founded in
1946 and has offices and clients around the world. Arup will be visiting Greater Miami
and the Beach in May and will be conducting stakeholder meetings and interviews. Our
staff will be involved in this process.
This is yet another opportunity to leverage our international, regional and local
partnerships in making Miami Beach a resilient and sustainable community.
Please contact ACM/CRO Susy Torriente if you have any questions.
Thank you.
JLM/SMT
THE CITY WATER
RESILIENCE FRAMEWORK
RESILIENT GREATER MIAMI AND THE BEACHES
THE CITY WATER RESILIENCE FRAMEWORK
RESILIENT GREATER MIAMI AND THE BEACHES
Water systems are the lifeblood of a city. They
constitute a complex ecosystem - an interdependent
web of physical and environmental assets, policy,
institutions and social capital - whose health and
balance are key to the resilience of cities and the
communities that inhabit them.
An urban water system cannot be thought of in isolation from the hydrological
context within which it sits. The impact of these risks is further compounded
in space and time at the city scale by the rapid urbanisation within the cities
themselves. Tackling such risks, for example flood, drought, water stress, rising
water costs and emerging contaminants requires taking a holistic approach that
pushes the system boundary out beyond the administrative boundary of the city to
that of the basin(s).
Arup, with support from the Rockefeller Foundation, is taking a deep dive into
understanding the water system of a city. Phase one of The City Water Resilience
Framework (CWRF) will look to provide a common understanding of what the
characteristics of a resilient urban water system are - a global standard for water
resilience assessment. It will recognise the complexity and scale of any urban water
system and build resilience - bringing stakeholders together from across the basin to
make more resilient decisions and deliver better outcomes.
Once established, the CWRF can be used by cities not only to diagnose resilience
vulnerabilities but to support cities in making more robust, integrated planning and
decision making based on that understanding.
STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT
Engagement with our five partner cities is a vital component of our work in
developing the CWRF. It is fundamentally important to us that the framework is
grounded in the practical experiences of cities and its stakeholders. We are not
only interested in hearing the perspectives of water managers and specialists,
but from a diverse set of stakeholders; of citizens, business, environmental
groups, etc. Of interest to us is exploring how the water system impacts on, and is
impacted by other systems including energy, agriculture, industry, transport, digital
communications, etc.
PROJECT OVERVIEW & OUTPUTS
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H • Interviews • Focus Groups • Workshops
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W • Community Leaders • Water Manage
H • Specialists • .Environmental Groups
• C'rize & usi _ sRe•res _ atve
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Net ems water IIs1Yenee'leas I
• Perceive' l,i,fries • Info 'd
• Coping With .+ , or Stress
• Planning & Decision Making Acro's's
e
Jurisdictions
I. Map Review II. Field Visits
f11. Interview Stakeholders
IV. Focus Groups With Stakeholders V. Workshops
City Water
Resilience Framework
"Of the more than 1,000
applications to the 100 Resilient
Cities Network, more than 60%
indicated challenges with water
- too much or too little - as
critical resilience risks. There is
tremendous opportunity for the
cities in this cohort to provide
lessons and expertise to the many
cities around the world grappling
with water challenges."
Andrew Salkin, Senior Vice President of
City Solutions at 100 Resilient Cities
We are calling on all stakeholders
to examine the physical and
governance structures of our
water basin. Only by examining
the characteristics and
challenges facing all segments
- drinking water, surface water,
wastewater, stormwater and
groundwater - can we assess the
resilience of this vital resource.
Operationalize
Water Resilience
Contributing Efforts
.Resilience
T. B MIAMI
aleg
• Regional
Climate
Action Plan
Resilient Utility
Coalition
•Regional
Scorecard
• Urban Water
Resilience l 7 ,.7
Blueprint
1J i1 Local, State & Federal
1 ii Government
Q9•• •n
• n •n • Regulations, Polio
Lllll9i. IQ & Plans
PARTNER CITIES
Five cities, with a diversity in terms of size,
geographic location, water challenges faced
and because of their commitment to taking
a strategic approach to water resilience,
are partnering with Arup through the
development of Phase 1 of the CWRF:
Amman: Population 4 million,
Drought, Water Supply,
Flooding
Mexico City: Population 21.3
million, Water Supply, Flooding,
Subsidence
100 RC Member
Cape Town
100 RC Member: Greater
Miami and the Beaches
Cape Town: Population
3.7 million, Drought, Rapid
Urbanism
Greater Miami: Population
2.7 million, Sea Level Rise,
Flooding, Rising Ground
Water
Hull: Population 323,000,
Sea Level Rise, Flooding
"Miami is surrounded by water, nestled between the Everglades and Biscayne National Park, and our
population has settled in the spaces between an intricate network of canals. These characteristics in
combination with a porous limestone aquifer have resulted in the need for strong water management.
Enhancing a common understanding and increased collaboration between all influencers will be
essential in meeting water needs as we face increasing natural and man-made challenges."
PARTNERS
The development of the framework is being overseen by a
Steering Group with representatives from The Rockefeller
Foundation, 100 Resilient Cities, the World Bank, University
of Massachusetts -Amherst, and The Resilience Shift.
s,
;;:' ROCKEFELLER UMASS
FOUNDATION AMHERST
THE WORL,D BANK >oo
CITIES
For the development of the CWRF, Arup is partnered
with the Alliance for Global Water Adaption and the
Stockholm International Water Institute.
ARUP SSS
iOAGWA SIWI
The Miami -Dade Water & Sewer Department is working to develop a CWRF with the Resilient Greater Miami & the Beaches partners, which
includes Miami -Dade County, the City of Miami and the City of Miami Beach.
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