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and gardens, human impacts (trash, emissions,
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construction, pollution), and trees (or lack
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thereof), indicating a desire for more places for
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people to congregate and enjoy the outdoors
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while reducing human impacts.
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Flooding Emphasis on rainfall, flooding, and the ability to
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get to work.
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Emphasis on the ability to get to work, but also
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focused on human impact (including issues such
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as infrastructure, construction, pollution),
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agriculture, extreme heat, and food insecurity.
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Extreme heat No clear theme, but a range of issues such as
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shade, gardens, human impact, and trash.
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Patterns of emerging themes around extreme
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heat related to crops, worker stress, storms/
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flooding, and food insecurity.
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Storms Emphasis on storms related to rainfall, traffic,
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flooding, and hurricanes.
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Focused on hurricanes related to damage, safety,
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food insecurity, and crops, with additional
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emphasis on rainfall.
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Health and
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wellbeing
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Only one story related to health and wellbeing,
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focused on insecurity and safety, combined with
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SLR, hurricanes, human impact, and energy.
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15 stories related to health and wellbeing, with
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themes around negative effects of pollutions,
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food insecurity, crops, extreme heat, worker
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stress/resiliency/fatigue, and the impacts of
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pollution.
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Valence 1 positive, 5 negative, 18 mixed 14 positive, 30 negative, 15 mixed
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https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000041.t002
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PLOS CLIMATE
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Advancing a hyperlocal approach to community engagement in climate adaptation
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PLOS Climate | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000041 June 8, 2022 13 / 26
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The key concerns related to climate change expressed by community members through the
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photovoice exercise grew organically from the participants and as anticipated, differed from
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the geospatial risk factors of the ICRA. Based, for example, on objective measures of greenness
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as identified by the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) and park proximity,
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Fig 1. Little River photovoice examples.
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https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000041.g001
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PLOS CLIMATE
|
Advancing a hyperlocal approach to community engagement in climate adaptation
|
PLOS Climate | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000041 June 8, 2022 14 / 26
|
neither community ranked notably poorly in relation to the MDCUA average. Little River
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ranked 9th in risk for low levels of greenness, and 19th for low levels of proximity to parks.
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Homestead ranked 8th for low levels of greenness and 18th for park proximity. From an objective perspective, both study areas experience a slightly higher risk for low levels of greenness
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Fig 2. Homestead photovoice examples.
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https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000041.g002
|
PLOS CLIMATE
|
Advancing a hyperlocal approach to community engagement in climate adaptation
|
PLOS Climate | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000041 June 8, 2022 15 / 26
|
Fig 3. Integrated climate risk assessment for Miami-Dade County.
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https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000041.g003
|
PLOS CLIMATE
|
Advancing a hyperlocal approach to community engagement in climate adaptation
|
PLOS Climate | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000041 June 8, 2022 16 / 26
|
than urban Miami Dade County, and both are at lower risk for low levels of proximity to
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parks. Residents in both communities, however, featured greenness as a significant area of
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concern, and identified greenness as a desired strategy, illustrating the potential for the community engagement process to serve as an important guide and integral part of designing climate adaptations that meet residents’ needs.
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Similarly, objective measures ranked the risk of Disability at 12th for Little River and 1st for
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Homestead in relation to MDCUA. Using the ICRA to aggregate this data with average household income indicates that Homestead experiences significantly greater at risk for health and
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well-being than Little River. Integrating the photovoice and design thinking outcomes, reveals
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15 photovoice health and well-being stories for Homestead compared to just 1 for Little River,
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and greater emphasis on mobility strategies proposed in the Homestead sessions.
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The hyperlocal scale of the ICRA provide a further advantage for analysis through the illustration of a more detailed distribution of risk (Fig 4). The neighborhood of Little River, for
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example, represents a much higher risk than many of its surrounding neighborhoods or proximate municipalities such as El Portal. Similarly, the climate risk for the Laura Saunders Area
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of the Homestead study area is also high in relation to surrounding areas.
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Table 3. Integrated climate risk assessment scores by raster layer and community.
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Climate Risk
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Factor
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Scale Miami- Dade
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County
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MDC Urban
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Area
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Homestead
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Score
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Homestead
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Rank
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Homestead
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Difference
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Little River
|
Score
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Little River
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Rank
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Little River
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Difference
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Water 1–10 8.4 9.7 9.7 10 0.0 9.7 13 0.0
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Slope 1–10 8.9 8.8 8.8 14 0.0 8.7 16 -0.1
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Avg Household
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Income
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1–10 8.7 8.0 8.7 2 0.8 8.6 5 0.7
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Elevation 1–10 7.7 7.7 8.0 4 0.4 7.4 18 -0.2
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Septic 1–10 4.8 7.6 7.4 19 -0.2 8.5 3 0.8
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Depth to
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Groundwater
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1–10 7.4 7.3 7.6 5 0.3 6.7 20 -0.7
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Surface
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Temperature
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