“…One locality, Milwaukee County, showed higher commercial (31%), industrial (19%), and residential reuse (20%), as compared to the national United States Conference of Mayors (USCM) survey responses from 99 cities, which reported 25% commercial, 18% industrial, and 14% residential reuse [8,17,22]. Despite the USCM's lead in confronting climate change locally, there has been a dearth of attention to adaptation needs and natural hazard vulnerabilities to inform cleanup priorities, bolster resilience and add greenspaces to meet community needs [46][47][48][49][50][51][52][53]. As a community-driven process, creating the vision for a healthier environment with brownfields reused as spaces for skills development, training or settings to foster community, employment, and civic participation, can also strengthen attention to flood-risk vulnerability [23,[53][54][55][56]].…”