A decade after city officials promised to protect Edgemere against floods, residents say the neighborhood remains just as vulnerable.
A decade after city officials promised to protect Edgemere against floods, residents say the neighborhood remains just as vulnerable. ·  View in browser
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A boy looks out over Jamaica Bay in the Edgemere neighborhood of New York City. The community, which is flanked by the Atlantic Ocean and the bay, is at growing risk of coastal flooding due to sea level rise. Evan Simon / Floodlight
A decade after city officials promised to protect Edgemere against floods, residents say the neighborhood remains just as vulnerable.
By Evan Simon

Baba Ndanani has lived in one of New York City’s most flood-prone neighborhoods for more than 20 years. His two-story home in the coastal, majority-Black community of Edgemere, Queens sits directly beside Jamaica Bay. During high tides, the bay often creeps into his backyard and climbs the steps to his back porch.

In 2012, during Superstorm Sandy, five feet of water surged into Ndanani’s home. He swam across the street to higher ground, riding out the storm in a disabled car surrounded by water.

“I was praying,” Ndanani told Floodlight. “I just wanted to get out, and that was it.”

After the storm, he returned to his wrecked home and spent two weeks sleeping on top of the overturned refrigerator. “I had nowhere else to go,” he said.

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