The climate crisis was hardly a key topic in the primary campaigns of either Eric Adams or Curtis Sliwa. But with recent storms flooding the subways, destroying homes and taking lives, it’s a topic that cannot be ignored.


What You Need To Know

  • Eric Adams' blueprint includes an early warning system for extreme weather to reach all New Yorkers, even if it's a siren

  • Previously, climate crisis barely had a presence on the Democratic nominee for mayor's campaign website

  • Sliwa's webpage on storm resiliency doesn't mention "climate change," but he tells NY1 he understands stakes

“We have to deal with intervention and prevention,” Adams said Friday.

He added, “We can’t play scatter and pray when each storm comes. Once we know what type of storm or what type of weather emergency we are going to receive in the city, we’ll immediately identify it and indicate what level it is to kick in immediate responses throughout the entire city.”

The Democratic candidate for mayor gathered allies in low-lying Coney Island to unveil a blueprint that is his most comprehensive climate crisis plan to date. In part, it would:

  • create an early warning system to reach all New Yorkers, even if it’s a siren
  • bring basement apartments into compliance with city codes
  • conduct climate stress tests of the city by stimulating extreme weather events
  • appoint a climate resilience czar with the City Planning Commission

But before Friday, environmental issues had next to no presence on his campaign platform, his “a greener city, a brighter future” plan brief and buried.

Adams said the ideas have always been there, just not the implementation.

“This is not a new issue for me,” he told NY1.

While climate change wasn’t a focus of Adams’ primary campaign, working-class New Yorkers were. He held his event at a public housing complex for seniors still rebuilding after Hurricane Sandy.

The Republican nominee in the race for mayor similarly has added storm resiliency proposals to his platform in light of Henri and Ida’s impact.

While Adams’ plan offers 20 short-, mid- and long-term policies, Curtis Sliwa’s has four steps that include improving drainage and flood-proofing buildings. But curiously, his policy webpage makes no mention of climate change.

Sliwa clarified.

“I think there’s no doubt that the earth is warming up,” he said. “It’s having ramifications with the Gulf Stream. What used to be consistent in one area is changing, and it’s leading to violent weather situations from time to time. Anybody who’d be in denial of that is just not dealing with reality.”