Could Climate Change Herald Mass Migration?
Concerns raised as the U. S. Southwest grapples with historic drought, water supply depletion and the creeping sense that things can only get worse, so where is safe?
July 22, 2007
Murray Whyte
Toronto Star - Ontario
The state of Arizona has more than 300 golf courses, a booming economy, endless sunshine and, at last count, at least five Saks Fifth Avenue department stores in short, nearly everything the well-heeled sybarite would need.
There’s just one thing missing: rain.
Photo: Both Buffalo, above, and Cleveland have suffered population declines and stagnating local economies since the 1960s, a trend that drought in the American Southwest may help reverse. (David Cooper / Toronto Star)
For the past month, not a drop has fallen in Maricopa County, home to greater Phoenix, the state’s economic engine and fastest-growing hub. Over that period, temperatures have hovered five to seven degrees above the 30-year average, at one point holding steady at over 109F (43C) for 10 straight days, while hundreds of brush fires burned statewide.
"And they're still building billion-dollar houses, right in the middle of the desert," says Paul Oyashi, incredulous. "It doesn't seem rational, does it?"
In a word, no. Rational, some would say, would be a mass migration from the drought-ravaged American southwest, where Southern California just experienced its driest 12-month period in recorded history, to more verdant climes.
One such place? Cleveland, the battered hub of Cuyahoga County, where Oyashi sits as director of the department of development. "We don't have earthquakes, we don't have brush fires, we've got all the fresh water you could ever want," Oyashi says. "That's logic. But the problem is, it flies in the face of reality."
LOGIC HAS NEVER been the lone or even dominant factor in human behaviour. And in Cleveland, much like all the depressed cities of the Great Lakes rust belt, the reality is this: over the past four decades, the population has bled away to less than half, as it has in Buffalo and Detroit.
And the loss continues. Last year, Cuyahoga was sixth among American counties in population loss, trailing only the four counties in the New Orleans area decimated by Hurricane Katrina as well as Wayne County, home to Detroit.
A foreclosure crisis on defaulted mortgages in Cleveland, mirrored all along the rust belt, left about 10,000 of the city's 80,000 homes vacant. "Jaywalking is far too easy in downtown these days," Oyashi says gruffly.
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AT WATER'S EDGE
Population and housing prices for some Great Lakes cities: Toronto * 1961 City: 672,407; Metro Toronto: 1,576,000 * 2006 City: 2,503,281; CMA: 5,113,149 * Average house price: $382,787 (2007) Detroit * 1960 City: 1,670,144 * 2006 City: 871,121; Detroit/Warren/Livonia: 4,488,335 * Median house price: $160,000 (U.S.) (2005) Toledo * 1960 City: 318,003 * 2006 City: 298,446; Greater metropolitan area: 656,696 * Median house price: $124,000 (U.S.) (2005) Cleveland * 1960 City: 876,050 * 2006 City: 444,313; Greater metropolitan area: 2,114,155 * Median house price: $153,000 (U.S.) (2005) Buffalo * 1960 City: 532,759 * 2006 City: 276,059; Greater Buffalo/Niagara Falls: 1,147,711 * Median house price: $95,000 (U.S.) (2005) Rochester * 1960 City: 318,611 * 2006 City: 208,123; Greater metropolitan area: 1,039,028 * Median house price: $120,000 (U.S.) (2005) *Post-amalgamation, equals former area of Metro Toronto. Compiled by Astrid Lange and Peggy Mackenzie / Toronto Star Library SOURCES: Statistics Canada, Toronto Real Estate Board, U.S. Census, Money.CNN.com |
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