Rhode Island's coastline, aging infrastructure, and communities are on the front lines of a changing climate, and the Ocean State can't afford to wait until the next storm to act. As Lieutenant Governor, Xay will chair the Emergency Management Advisory Council, coordinating preparedness across state agencies and all 39 cities and towns so Rhode Island is ready before disaster strikes instead of scrambling after. He's led on resilience before. As Mayor, he created the first resiliency department in the state, combining utilities, public works, and planning under one roof. As chairman of Providence Water for nearly a decade, he moved one of the region's largest utilities onto its own solar power, saving nearly $1 million a year, keeping water rates among the lowest in the state, and piloting lead service line replacements. Xay will bring that same practical approach statewide, modernizing roads and bridges, protecting clean water and Narragansett Bay, cutting energy costs, and making every community more resilient. Climate action isn't abstract to Xay. It's about protecting the homes, jobs, and neighborhoods Rhode Islanders count on, and making sure working families aren't the ones left paying for the damage.