Well, this has been around for a while. For one:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2023/04/10/sea-level-rise-southern-us/Why would sea levels rise faster in one part of the ocean than another?
(After all, it has been noted (for a few thousand years) that "Water seeks its own level".)
Well, because the change is not the sea rising, but the land subsiding. Rates of change in the northeast US (primarily underlain by crystalline basement (igneous/metamorphic) rock), are only a third (or less) than those of the southern Coastal Plain and the Gulf Coast, underlain geologically by relatively recent and soft sediments. The latter are still dewatering, engaged in lithic compression and consolidation, and subject to compaction, which means (especially when you stack millions of humans and their stuff on them), the land and its underlying rock actually becomes compressed on a regional scale, and relative to mean sea level, drop in altitude.
Climate has squat to do with it, unless it is eroding the land away.