
None of the 2,400+ words in the New York Times‘ story (6/3/19) on Midwest flooding are “climate.”
The New York Times’ 2,400+ word report (6/3/19) by Julie Bosman, Julie Turkewitz and Timothy Williams on the historic flooding in the Midwest—amidst the wettest 12 months ever since recording began 124 years ago—is an illustrative example of how not to do disaster coverage.
Recalling the Great Flood of 1993 and focusing on the four inundated towns of Davenport, Iowa; Valmeyer and Prairie du Rocher, Illinois; and Clarksville, Missouri, along the Mississippi River, the Times provided yet another example of a major news outlet covering the catastrophic effects of the ongoing climate crisis without ever mentioning that crisis—among other human contributions to the disaster that go unacknowledged—leading readers to think that there are no solutions to mitigate or prevent these disasters (FAIR.org, 1/18/13).
One could be forgiven for coming away from the New York Times report that “relentless floods” just happen as isolated occurrences, and that there’s just not that much we can do about it.
The Times mentioned that the 2019 deluge is “reviving painful memories of the Great Flood,” and that the “consequences of the decisions made in the aftermath of 1993” have “suddenly come back,” but when it explained those decisions, it mostly confined them to the local level, without setting them in the context of other important decisions made at the state and federal level.
The Times treated Valmeyer as an exemplar on how to respond to disasters, as “experts in flood management” hailed Valmeyer as a “case study,” and cited Mayor Howard Heavner claiming that Valmeyer is proof that “you can do everything right and the community can still be in danger.”
But when one reads closely on what Valmeyer did to be such a role model, one discovers that people essentially just moved away from the river, as a resigned Heavner said: “You can only position yourself so there is the least amount of loss.” Apparently, the only flaw in their otherwise flawless response is that “not everyone moved.”
The Times’ previous reporting (1/6/16) on Valmeyer’s response to flooding noted that “nearly everyone” who moved to what’s called New Valmeyer agreed that “they had no choice.” So why would people “choose” to stay behind in a mostly uninhabitable and hazardous location?
The current report hints at an answer from the only other source cited to explain this, Heavner’s own father Robert, but doesn’t expand on its significance, instead framing his being too poor to move as a personal choice or failing. It quotes him as saying that staying in the bottom area was “the most economical way to do what I did,” with his son the mayor claiming that he couldn’t force poor people to leave because they “chose their own path.”
This is consistent with FAIR’s previous findings (Extra!, 8/07; FAIR.org, 9/1/17) on how corporate media marginalize the poor, who often stay behind in hazardous areas because they have no place to go and no means to leave, in their coverage of disasters.
In Clarksville, the Times uncritically mentioned that Clarksville depended on a “dwindling set of volunteers” from the Americorps, National Guard, prisoners and the elderly to build “monumental sandbag walls,” and noted the paltry number of volunteers Clarksville has in 2019, compared with the 2,000-some volunteers it had in 1993.
In Prairie du Rocher, the Times detailed how local officials took a “desperate gamble” in defying the advice of the Army Corps of Engineers in 1993 when they blasted and dug up holes in the levee above town to divert the flow away from the community’s center. They plan on doing the same this year, except that they “hope” to “blast the levee at a higher point.” Local levee commissioner Steve Gonzalez also wants to convince the federal government to incorporate the town into a national park, to “make Washington responsible for fortifying the community from floods.” If such plans fail, continual increases to the cost of the government subsidized National Flood Insurance Program run by FEMA and Washington’s further plans to raise premiums on those policies might “be the final nail in the coffin” for Prairie du Rocher.
Several questions could’ve been asked here: Why should Clarksville depend on a “dwindling” number of volunteers to deal with flooding? Why do local officials in Prairie du Rocher have to make “desperate gambles,” or plot to convince the federal government to take responsibility for the town’s safety?
The Times doesn’t discuss how the federal government’s refusal to adequately fund disaster infrastructure and management programs—in order to pay for continuous tax cuts for the rich and corporations—leave the country unnecessarily vulnerable to disasters. Nor does it discuss the Trump administration’s FEMA leaving out climate change in its strategic planning for disaster response, or failing levee systems consisting mainly of makeshift soil barriers, instead of the kind of modern water-diverting infrastructure in place in a country like the Netherlands, because the federal government refuses to appropriate funds to the few flood projects it authorizes, when it doesn’t reject them altogether (Roll Call, 6/13/18; The Hill, 4/5/19).
ProPublica (8/6/18) found that the cost-benefit calculations used by the Army Corps of Engineers to prioritize its scarce resources are essentially formulas to justify devastating poorer towns, like the ones in the Times’ report, as it pursues levee systems that protect the most high-value land at the cost of intensifying the flooding for others nearby, by cutting off a river’s ability to spread over the floodplain. This would partially explain why Midwest towns like Valmeyer, Clarksville and Prairie du Rocher are flooded as much as they are.
Even when cities like Davenport pursued praiseworthy alternatives to levees, like buying out land on the floodplain to embrace the river—which was successful from 1993 until 2019—the Times failed to link the floods overwhelming the city with a changing climate. This is the most glaring omission in the lengthy report’s failure to ever mention the worsening climate crisis, along with its neglecting to cite any climate scientist.

Seems like an important thing for readers to know (Common Dreams, 6/4/19).
Of course, as FAIR’s Jim Naureckas (7/2/12) has pointed out, asking whether the climate crisis caused the flooding is a failure to understand the conceptual distinction between weather phenomena like droughts, floods and unremarkable days, and the climate. All weather events now take place within a changing climate, which will affect the severity and likelihood of these events, as climate scientists are projecting that floods—which are already the most frequent and costliest natural disaster—will become more frequent and powerful, with current and future devastating effects on essential activities like growing crops (Wired, 5/24/19).
While other outlets like Common Dreams (6/4/19) had no problem making the connection, this is also in contradiction with previous reporting in the Times (11/19/18), which warned of projections that increased flooding and other climate-fueled disasters would resemble a “terror movie that is real.” Ironically, just last month, the Times (5/15/19) carried a story about the aversion of leaders in places like Davenport and Clarksville to talking about the impacts of the climate crisis—headlined, “In Flood-Hit Midwest, Mayors See Climate Change as a Subject Best Avoided.” Apparently some Times reporters see it the same way.
Featured image: New York Times depiction of flooding in Valmeyer, Illinois. (Photo: Hilary Swift/New York Times)
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The statement “the federal government’s refusal to adequately fund disaster infrastructure and management programs—in order to pay for continuous tax cuts for the rich and corporations” is premised on an untenable economic theory, really an endlessly repeated myth. The author should read the work of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) economists like Randall Wray. In a nutshell, as a sovereign issuer of fiat currency, the U.S. federal government does not have to collect taxes to “fund” programs like the one discussed (though local and state governments do; they don’t issue their own fiat currencies). See Jim Kavanagh “‘Taxpayer Money’ Threatens Medicare-for-All (And Every Other Social Program)” (The Polemicist, 9/18/18). As long as productive capacity exists, the federal government can basically create money to fund these programs if it wants to. The crux of the issue is that institutional and political forces in the federal government don’t want to, and those are political and ideological choices not neutral economic necessities.
Fantastic report; I try to comment on NYT climate-related articles that don’t mention climate.
Why mention climate when the Democrats don’t want a debate on it, and, far more crucially, when your latte-sipping sophisticates will get, like, sorta anxious if they see it. Profit, market-share. You know.
Anyway, these latte-sipping sophisticates are definitely sophisticated in one domain: global warming denial. They’re just in the highly educated, auto-doublethink section of the denialist party.
At least the Christers either literally don’t believe or accept the science, or, if they do, it’s irrelevant because, you know, Rapture. I’m not sure they’re worse than the sophisticates.
This is what is interesting to me. I am many things, but I am a researcher and I have been looking at what is going on since 2011. Both the owner of ProPublica and the NYT’s are both from Oregon. Why is that interesting to me? OR for much of the community is very concerned about the earth. This is the state where the kids stood up and created a court case to address climate change. However, both of these papers, seem to want to play both sides of the fence without addressing things like ALEC, or ALICE, which are now being addressed by Sludge and Center for Integrity. It just blows me away. I have posted comments about ALEC and it’s agenda, which is climate change denial, etc., on ProPublica’s site and they always removed it.
ProPublica is working on a piece with a journalist from Alaska…. It is called Lawless….
https://features.propublica.org/local-reporting-network-alaska/alaska-sexual-violence-village-police/
It is about the Governor, who is a player in the ALEC crowd and the funding being cut. So here is an article from PRwatch, which I know of personally, but the gent I know left and started his own site. I talk to a lot of people, but this is an article about how the Koch brothers got involved with Alaska politics.
https://www.prwatch.org/news/2019/05/13469/how-kochs-americans-prosperity-hijacked-alaskas-tax-and-budget-hearings
I can go on about the Koch brothers ad nausea. I am just curious, when the boys from OR will start to stand up and say, this Earth is pretty important and perhaps, we are at a point, when they need to decide what side they are on. This is not another day at the beach.
There’s always what is to me, a disturbing amount of reliance on establishment sources for the info that goes into FAIR articles. FAIR seems to still get it right. But I’ve got a grade 10 education, ergo… One thing that I have right is that establishment sources, and corporate media, are a problem. So are some of FAIR’s funders while I’m at it.