For at least a decade Quinault Nation has tried to escape the rising Pacific. Time is running out
TAHOLAH, Wash. (AP) Standing water lies beneath the home Sonny Curley shares with his parents and three children on the Quinault reservation a few steps from the Pacific Ocean in Washingtons Olympic Peninsula. The back deck is rotting, and black mold speckles the walls inside, leaving the 46-year-old fisherman feeling drained if he spends too much time in the house.
You can tell your bodys not right; its fighting, said Curley, standing in the familys kitchen. Youre using your energy to fight something thats not supposed to be there.
These are the effects of an ocean that has moved ever closer since Curleys parents bought the house about 15 years ago in Taholah, the tribes largest village, where the Quinault River empties into the Pacific. He estimates the ocean was about 30 feet away back then. Now waves sometimes top a 15-foot seawall, and the familys been forced to evacuate three times in the past four years, just as Curleys 84-year-old mother struggles with advancing dementia.
Its scary, said Hannah Curley, Sonnys sister, who lives three blocks away and hasnt had to evacuate. Nights when its really stormy, Ill go and check on them a couple times during the night, and then I have cameras up too, so we can see if its getting really bad.
https://apnews.com/article/tribe-quinault-sea-level-rise-climate-change-995a69656e77ff1825ec72fa07727478