Jim Morrison's stories have appeared in dozens of pubs including Smithsonian, The New York Times, Wired, The Washington Post. Winner, Excellence in Reporting 2021, ASJA.
Climate Change Forces Cities to Consider Retreat
An exhaustively reported story outlining the need to begin discussing managed retreat from threatened areas including the coasts and inland floodplains.
Climate Change Turns the Tide on Waterfront Living
The city doesn’t use that politically explosive term, the Voldemort of climate adaptation. Planners here and elsewhere refer to it as the “r-word.” They’re happy to talk about the other r-word — resilience, which includes projects like sea walls, retention ponds, rebuilding wetlands and improved storm-water capacity. Retreat signals surrender, while resilience screams reassurance: Don’t worry. Stay. We’ll protect you. That medicine goes down easier. It has been embraced by dozens of cities an...
North Carolina Bald Cypresses Are Among the World’s Oldest Trees
"There is no other place on Earth like this," Angie Carl says. Her voice carries across the swamp of North Carolina's Black River as we sit floating in kayaks at the knees of our elders, an ancient stand of bald cypress trees.
Following markers of neon-pink ribbons tied to branches, we've paddled to this remote stand to recreate a journey that Carl took eight years ago guiding David W. Stahle, a University of Arkansas scientist. Carl is the fire and coastal restoration manager for The Nature ...
An ancient people with a modern climate plan
For 10,000 years, the Swinomish tribe has fished the waters of northwestern Washington, relying on the bounty of salmon and shellfish not only as a staple of its diet but as a centerpiece of its culture. At the beginning of the fishing season, the tribe gathers on the beach for a First Salmon ceremony, a feast honoring the return of the migratory fish that binds the generations of a tribe that calls itself the People of the Salmon.
At the ceremony’s conclusion, single salmon are ferried by bo...
A Bold Plan to Save the Last Whitebark Pines
The high-altitude tree is vital to its ecosystem, but it’s being decimated by a fungus. Its admirers are fusing old and new methods to bring it back.
Melissa Jenkins usually doesn't take pictures on hikes in Montana's Whitefish Range. Here, the whitebark pine that she works to restore has been so decimated by a fungus that gray skeletal ghost forests reign, haunting symbols of a once widespread species. But last summer, she paused to snap a shot of survivors flanking the trail, ragged but def...
Norfolk wants protection from future flooding. Agreeing on how isn’t easy.
After residents of Norfolk’s historic Freemason neighborhood objected to proposed floodwalls snaking through their community, blocking river views, potentially depressing property values and leaving condominium buildings exposed, staff members from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers walked the planned path with local leaders in January.
Jack Kavanaugh, a retired admiral who heads the neighborhood civic league, said he was encouraged when an Army Corps official assured residents that “we’re not ...
How ‘Daylighting’ Buried Waterways Is Revitalizing Cities Across America
For a century, Jordan Creek cut across downtown Springfield, Missouri. As in so many other 19th-century cities, the waterway was a founding centerpiece of the town. But over the decades, the creek regularly unleashed a tantrum of flooding into the city’s commercial heart. By 1927, residents had tired of rebounding from one watery attack after another. They created tall concrete banks to cage the creek. When that wasn’t enough and the area flooded again five years later, the city entombed the ...
Monarch Mecca
The remarkable story of the endangered monarch butterflies migration to the mountains of Mexico.
Rafting Through Time — Medium
A six-day journey on the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon in words and pictures.
Norfolk has a plan to save itself from rising seas. For many, it’s a $2.7 billion mystery
Public discussion over the largest infrastructure project in Norfolk’s history has left residents and business leaders with more questions than answers. Have officials told the whole story?
By Jim Morrison
Virginia Center for Investigative Journalism at WHRO
The meetings to discuss Norfolk’s $2.7 billion storm risk plan were on opposite sides of the Elizabeth River, a month apart in March and April 2023.
The first gathered leaders of some of the city’s poorest Black neighborhoods on the south...
The New Math of Climate Resilience
A groundbreaking project in Norfolk, Virginia, multiplies the impact of a $112 million federal grant by making social vulnerability and environmental justice, not just property values, major factors in its calculations.
In Norfolk, an environmental headquarters plans to live with the water, then surrender to reality
For Marjorie Mayfield-Jackson of Norfolk’s Elizabeth River Project, signing a groundbreaking agreement to tear down the organization’s new $9 million headquarters when waters rise too high was bittersweet.
“It’s hard to not even have had the grand opening yet and we’re talking about celebrating taking it down,” she said.
When, decades from now, time and tide can no longer be denied, the nonprofit will surrender the 6,500-square-foot Pru and Louis Ryan Resilience Lab in a final act of adaptati...
Instrumental Lifeline from Hampton to Swannanoa
(L-R) Chris Jaconson, Roberta Lea, Kelly Murphy, Bobby Black Hat Walters, Karen Benson, and Karl Werne raised $7,700 to benefit musicians in need recovering from Hurricane Helene.
Bobby Jaramillo arose early, as usual, on a September morning in the building that was home, studio, and storage building for an extensive collection of guitars and other instruments, amps, speakers, and a recording studio. Rain poured down at his place in Swannanoa in the Blue Ridge Mountains east of Asheville.
He ...
Fired With Finesse
North Carolina potters continue a rich history of creating innovative work anchored in the region.
Getting High -- Serious Tree Climbing
I don’t get dizzy, but I do get an involuntary rush, spiking my heartbeat. I’m less than a third of the 243 feet to the top of the Amos Alonzo Stagg tree, the sixth largest living thing on Earth and the most famous challenge — the Mount Everest — of serious recreational tree climbing.
While I’ve occasionally gotten into a rhythm, the climb mostly has been a stuttering, herky-jerking up the rope. To my right, Genevieve Summers ascends with the effortless grace of a sinewy ballerina, silently f...