The Great Honolulu Mega Tsunami Flood And Rail Disaster
by John Bond
Approximately 14 HART
Rail Stations and 70% of the Rail route are subject to extreme floods, tsunami, hurricane storm surge and
sea level rise.
Boxed in RED show the HART rail route
sections most affected by floods, tsunami, hurricane storm surge and sea level
rise.
HART
Rail stations, access stairs, elevators and escalators and parking facilities
will be flooded while sewer, water and power service vaults will be in
corrosive salt water. Power will be shut off, sewage will spill into the
downtown areas and repair costs will be in the billions.
There have been some
significant changes and updates in 2015 that the HART Rail FEIS did not
address. New FEMA Flood Plain maps have been released and President Obama issued
EO 13690. Since HART Rail is being built in sections, HART has not adequately addressed the new maps, EO 11988 and EO 13690 in their route and station plans.
Especially the DOT requirements Order 5650.2 and FEMA Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) for the National Flood Insurance Program: 44 CFR Parts 59,
60, 65, and 70.
https://www.fema.gov/national-flood-insurance-program-laws-regulations
https://www.fema.gov/pdf/floodplain/nfip_sg_appendix_e.pdf
The Floodplains Compliance Process according to all of the online Federal
documents can grandfather already built facilities BUT NOT those not yet built.
HART Rail is being built in sections and the final construction design plans
for most of the flood plain sections have not been issued. There is still time
to correct the very badly planned and highly vulnerable rail route.
https://www.fema.gov/national-flood-insurance-program-laws-regulations
https://www.fema.gov/pdf/floodplain/nfip_sg_appendix_e.pdf
The Floodplains Compliance Process according to all of the online Federal documents can grandfather already built facilities BUT NOT those not yet built. HART Rail is being built in sections and the final construction design plans for most of the flood plain sections have not been issued. There is still time to correct the very badly planned and highly vulnerable rail route.
Elevated Rail Guideway does NOT protect vulnerable station access, parking, utilities support
While the HART rail
is on elevated pylons, planned sections 2, 3 and 4 station access are near sea
level and in FEMA mapped flood zones. The measured subsurface groundwater level
in many areas of downtown Honolulu is just 3-4 feet and steadily rising. Most of the entire HART rail construction
geology is in very porous ancient coral limestone reef karst with known
subsurface voids, caves and waterways.
HART
Rail stations, access stairs, elevators and escalators and parking facilities
will be flooded while sewer, water and power service vaults will be in
corrosive salt water.
However the City is NOT complying with
NFIP floodplain management and EO 11988
Honolulu transit
consultant Parsons Brinckerhoff wrote in the 2003 Final EIS:
"...extreme disruption of existing
underground utilities and constant
dewatering made necessary by a high water table and poor soils
would drive (rail) construction costs to unacceptable levels." -2003 FEIS
dewatering made necessary by a high water table and poor soils
would drive (rail) construction costs to unacceptable levels." -2003 FEIS
The December 2015 HART
rail Project Management report shows that contractors are having continuous
problems with drilled column cement pours
A flood event by either heavy rains, hurricane storm surge or tsunami
will create standing salty water far inland. Encroaching sea level rise is also
driving the ground water level up further inland.
There MUST be an analysis showing why there is NO OTHER ALTERNATIVE than the low sea level flood plain route HART Rail
is planning into downtown Honolulu. In fact there ARE reasonable alternative
routes but they have never been discussed in light of the 2015 FEMA Flood plain
maps and the POTUS Executive Order.
Manoa
professor Fletcher studies coastal hazards and says 70 percent of beaches on
Kauai, Maui, and Oahu are eroding.
University of Hawaii at Manoa professor
Chip Fletcher predicts stronger El Nino years in the future, which means more
beach erosion.
“We’re overdue,” he said. “We need to
start making things happen now.
We need to catch up.”
We need to catch up.”
Low level water inundation by hurricane
storm surge and tsunamis will cause massive electrical, sewer and water damage
flooding underground vaults. Powerful sea water forces will knock down structures,
slam cars and trucks into structures. The
useful capacity of HART rail to provide operational service in low land flooded
areas will be reduced to ZERO.
The costs to repair and rebuilt will take many years and many billions of dollars. Honolulu cannot expect Federal bailouts as these environmental conditions will be happening all over the United States. Hurricane Sandy, a classic storm surge case, has greatly depleted available FEMA disaster recovery funds. Honolulu will have to expect FEMA recovery fund delays and relatively little funds to rebuilt transportation infrastructure.
The
University of Hawaii SOEST program has provided very extensive details, 3D
graphics and animations showing how vulnerable Honolulu low lands are to
flooding from sea level rise,
hurricane storm surge and tsunamis. Updated new City tsunami
maps all show a much greater inland evacuation area than previous maps.
http://seagrant.soest.hawaii.edu/csp/benifits
http://seagrant.soest.hawaii.edu/csp/benifits
All City, State and Federal data ALL
SHOW that building new Federally funded infrastructure in extremely low areas
is a MAJOR RISK and alternatives need to be planned as soon as possible.
The
Honolulu project study illustrates the effect of three feet of sea-level
rise on the coastal inundation zones (hurricane and tsunami) and showed
that 80 percent of the area’s economy, nearly half of the population, and
much of the infrastructure and land area at risk of coastal inundation.
US DOT Flood Zones
Protection of floodplains and floodways is required by Presidential Executive Order 11988, US DOT Order 5650.2, the Federal Aid Highway Program Manual (FHWA 1992b); and 23 CFR 650
(CFR 1999). These regulations place special importance on floodplains and floodways and require Federal agencies to avoid conducting, allowing, or supporting actions on a floodplain or within a floodway. If a project is located within a floodplain or floodway, results from sufficient analysis must be included in the project’s Final EIS, as specified in USDOT Order 5650.2.
http://www.fta.dot.gov/printer_friendly/12347_2237.html
"Floodplain Management," places special importance on floodplains and directs federal agencies to avoid conducting, allowing or supporting actions on a floodplain. When contemplating a mass transportation project, maps of the Federal Insurance Administration should be consulted to determine if the proposed project site is located within the 100-year floodplain. Executive Order 11988 (PDF),
FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) are available for review here:
https://msc.fema.gov/portal/search (Hawaii or Honolulu)
http://gis.hawaiinfip.org/FHAT/ (This Hawaii site is somewhat easier to
use)
Significant floodplain encroachment
would involve one or more of the following impacts:
- A considerable probability of loss of human life;
- Likely future damage associated with the encroachment that could be
- substantial in cost or extent, including interruption of service on or loss
- of a vital transportation facility: and
- A notable adverse impact on natural and beneficial floodplain values.
In
Mapunapuna small fish including baby Hammerhead sharks have been seen coming up
through the storm drains which are directly connected to the ocean.
The Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) document must identify why the Proposed Action is the only practicable alternative, and provide supporting documentation reflecting the
consideration of alternatives to avoid or reduce adverse impacts on the floodplain.
Ocean Flooding At High Tide
THE WHITE HOUSE
January 30, 2015.
January 30, 2015.
On January 30th, President Obama issued
Executive Order (EO) 13690 that revises Executive Order 11988 and proposes a
new Federal Flood Risk Management Standard (FFRMS).
The Federal Government must take action, informed by the best-available and actionable
science, to improve
the Nation's preparedness and resilience against flooding. Executive Order 11988
of May 24, 1977 (Floodplain Management), requires executive departments and agencies to avoid,
to the extent possible, the long- and short-term adverse impacts associated
with the occupancy and modification of floodplains and to avoid direct or
indirect support of floodplain development wherever there is a practicable
alternative.
As part of a national policy on resilience and risk reduction consistent with my Climate Action Plan, the National Security Council staff coordinated an interagency effort to create a new flood risk reduction standard for federally funded projects. The views of Governors, mayors, and other stakeholders were solicited and considered as efforts were made to establish a new
flood risk reduction standard for federally funded projects.
Unless an exception is made under paragraph (2), the floodplain shall be:
As part of a national policy on resilience and risk reduction consistent with my Climate Action Plan, the National Security Council staff coordinated an interagency effort to create a new flood risk reduction standard for federally funded projects. The views of Governors, mayors, and other stakeholders were solicited and considered as efforts were made to establish a new
flood risk reduction standard for federally funded projects.
Unless an exception is made under paragraph (2), the floodplain shall be:
(i) the elevation and flood hazard area that result from using a climate-informed science
approach that uses the best-available, actionable hydrologic and hydraulic data
and methods that integrate current and future changes in flooding based on climate
science. This approach will also include an emphasis on whether the action
is a critical action as one of the factors to be considered when conducting the
analysis;
"(ii) the elevation and flood hazard area that result from using the freeboard value, reached by adding an additional 2 feet to the base flood elevation for non-critical actions and by adding an additional 3 feet to the base flood elevation for critical actions;
"(ii) the elevation and flood hazard area that result from using the freeboard value, reached by adding an additional 2 feet to the base flood elevation for non-critical actions and by adding an additional 3 feet to the base flood elevation for critical actions;
"(iii)
the area subject to flooding by the 0.2 percent annual chance flood; or
"(iv) the elevation and flood hazard area that result from using any other method identified in an update to the FFRMS.
"(iv) the elevation and flood hazard area that result from using any other method identified in an update to the FFRMS.