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Ellie Johnston is the Director of Programs at Climate Interactive, an organization that builds online simulators to let anyone test out the most effective strategies to limit climate change.
Johnston also happens to live in Asheville, North Carolina, a city that bore the full brunt of flooding from Hurricane Helene in late September, 2024. In our interview, which took place two months after the storm, she describes her first hand experience with the most destructive hurricane to strike the US since Katrina in 2005. Many people lost their lives, many homes were washed away, and there was no functioning water system during October and into November, shutting down much of the city.
A sense of the disruption from the storm can be seen in the Wikipedia entry on Hurricane Helene in North Carolina:
"Mayor of Canton Zeb Smathers referred to recovery efforts as being for a '21st century storm with 20th century technology' due to telecommunication and power outages forcing first responders to use pack mules and handwritten notes for communication and delivery.[37] Black Mountain residents resorted to using makeshift message boards to list missing residents and humanitarian aid details.[80]"
In her interview, Johnston emphasizes the community's resilience and the role of local organizations in disaster response. She also noted the ongoing challenges, such as water shortages and economic impacts, and the importance of personal and community preparedness for future disasters.
Cindy Ye, from Stuyvesant High School, and Helena Rambler, David Case, and Pierce Siegel, from Hunter College High School, spoke to Ellie Johnston on December 1, 2024.
Send us your thoughts about Bridging the Carbon Gap at [email protected] or via the text button:
Send us a text
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Ellie Johnston is the Director of Programs at Climate Interactive, an organization that builds online simulators to let anyone test out the most effective strategies to limit climate change.
Johnston also happens to live in Asheville, North Carolina, a city that bore the full brunt of flooding from Hurricane Helene in late September, 2024. In our interview, which took place two months after the storm, she describes her first hand experience with the most destructive hurricane to strike the US since Katrina in 2005. Many people lost their lives, many homes were washed away, and there was no functioning water system during October and into November, shutting down much of the city.
A sense of the disruption from the storm can be seen in the Wikipedia entry on Hurricane Helene in North Carolina:
"Mayor of Canton Zeb Smathers referred to recovery efforts as being for a '21st century storm with 20th century technology' due to telecommunication and power outages forcing first responders to use pack mules and handwritten notes for communication and delivery.[37] Black Mountain residents resorted to using makeshift message boards to list missing residents and humanitarian aid details.[80]"
In her interview, Johnston emphasizes the community's resilience and the role of local organizations in disaster response. She also noted the ongoing challenges, such as water shortages and economic impacts, and the importance of personal and community preparedness for future disasters.
Cindy Ye, from Stuyvesant High School, and Helena Rambler, David Case, and Pierce Siegel, from Hunter College High School, spoke to Ellie Johnston on December 1, 2024.
Send us your thoughts about Bridging the Carbon Gap at [email protected] or via the text button:
Send us a text