Kim Fish, a patient care assistant and union member at Staten Island University Hospital, was on duty the night Superstorm Sandy hit New York four years ago. After evacuating their family to higher ground, her husband, Jon, returned home to watch over their property. As the storm intensified, Kim got a call from her sister-in-law with terrifying news. Jon was trapped in their living room by floodwaters up to his neck and didn’t think he was going to survive.
“I was on the phone with my 7-year-old daughter who asked me if her daddy was going to die, and that’s when I collapsed on the floor like an accordion,” said Kim. “I got up and burst out of the sand-bagged hospital doors to get back home to my husband, but I was stopped by 5-foot deep freezing seawater.”
Kim had to wait out the storm at the flooded hospital not knowing her husband’s fate, as patients poured in with hypothermia and severe wounds. Some had been shocked while swimming through water that contained submerged fallen power lines.
When dawn broke, she was overjoyed to learn that her husband had survived by climbing a ladder into the attic and wrapping himself and their dog in fiberglass insulation.
“We survived, but every December there are 23 silver angels on my church’s Christmas tree, representing our neighbors who didn’t make it,” Kim said.
Overall, Sandy caused more than $71 billion in damages and killed 155 people in the United States alone.
Why do we highlight Kim’s story?
Unions and environmental advocates have had our differences over the years, but increasingly we are finding common ground based on our shared concerns. We both want a future of prosperity, security and health for our country. And more than ever, union members — like Kim and her family — are experiencing firsthand the threat the climate crisis poses to those core values.
Scientists have shown that as more heat-trapping gases from the burning of dirty fuels are recklessly dumped into our atmosphere, storms like Sandy are growing more intense.
Climate change also threatens the health of Americans and people around the world by expanding the spread of deadly diseases that thrive in warmer weather, such as Zika, West Nile, dengue fever and chikungunya.
Burning oil, coal and gas is not only throwing our climate dangerously off balance, but it is also poisoning the air we breathe and the water we drink. Researchers have found that more than 200,000 people die each year in the United States because of toxic air. Too often, working class areas and communities of color are hit the hardest, like in the Bronx, where the asthma hospitalization rate is five times higher than the national average.
Alarmingly, Donald Trump’s administration has started slashing protections against toxic dumping in our water and air. President Trump recently signed an executive order repealing the Clean Power Plan, which is designed to reduce pollution from coal plants. He has also proposed cutting the Environmental Protection Agency’s budget by $6 billion and laying off 3,000 staff, crippling their role as a watchdog for Americans’ health.
These cuts come at a time when experts are warning that if we do not act immediately to lower dangerous gas emissions, runaway climate change could cause worldwide food shortages, droughts, rising seawaters, heatwaves and conflict, threatening the economy and security of the world.
But we do not have to accept this apocalyptic prediction, because we know exactly how to solve the problem, and we have the technological capability in our hands right now. Clean energy from solar and wind has made enormous advances in recent years, becoming cheaper than dirty fuel in many cases, and driving economic progress.
There are over 3 million renewable energy jobs in the United States, and solar and wind jobs are growing at a rate 12 times faster than the rest of the economy. Wind turbine technician is projected to be the country’s most rapidly growing occupation in the next decade.
Clean energy is a win-win-win-win for job creation, health, global security and solving climate change. We just need to overcome the entrenched power of dirty fuel corporations and move the political will to action. That’s why union members, environmental advocates, community groups, indigenous people and youth are organizing The March for Climate, Jobs and Justice on April 29 in Washington, with sister marches around the nation.
We are living in a highly interconnected world, where the fates of all of us are bound together. This realization has moved us to march side by side for a better future, and we urge you to join us.
“The best of humanity was really on display after Sandy, and neighbors were helping each other recover around the clock,” said Kim. “I just hope we don’t have to wait for the next superstorm to show that kind of empathy and solve this crisis.”