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How Is Pittsburgh Impacted by Climate Change?

Posted on January 10, 2023   |   Updated on September 30, 2025
Francesca Dabecco

Francesca Dabecco

Cue Fleetwood Mac’s “Landslide.” Such a good song but such a devastating event. (Tanvir Ibna Shafi / Getty)

Cue Fleetwood Mac’s “Landslide.” Such a good song but such a devastating event. (Tanvir Ibna Shafi / Getty)

We’re lucky to not have the threat of hurricanes and wildfires here, but Pittsburgh’s slopes of shale, sandstone, coal, and clay are especially vulnerable to landslides — and it’s only going to get worse with dramatic increases in rainfall. Fun fact from this PublicSource article: The name Monongahela is believed to derive from a Native American word meaning “river with the sliding banks.” Fitting!



So how much should we worry? And what’s being done? There’s some good and bad news.

🔴 Landslides can be financially devastating because there currently isn’t any insurance to cover them.



🟢 A bill, introduced by Rep. Emily Kinkead, D-Brighton Heights, and co-sponsored by Rep. Valerie Gaydos, R-Sewickley, would create a new insurance program for landslide victims, which would also cover slope movement and sinkholes.



🔴 There isn’t public money to cover landslide disasters on private properties, and the city spends millions in taxpayer dollars annually to deal with landslide effects on public infrastructure.



🟢 The city budgeted more than $5 million for landslide remediation in 2023, and Mayor Ed Gainy created a new team within the Department of Mobility and Infrastructure assigned to landslides.



🔴 The city is struggling to hire – not only for this team, but across the board.



🟢 The City Planning Department is updating maps to predict landslide-prone areas and make informed decisions on zoning and developments.



🟢 It’s also operating a pilot program to address greenway issues, clear debris, develop trails, plant slope stabilizing trees, and use goats to weed out invasive species.



🟢 Pitt engineering professors are working on a digital infrastructure effort, Cyberwater, that will model the impact of climate change locally and help officials understand at-risk areas.



Read more in Quinn Glabicki and Charlie Wolfson’s report for PublicSource. (And hear from Charlie on the pod today!)

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