From a banking community website, this practical information on how to get ready for a disaster: 6 Ways to Prep Your Home for Natural Disasters (updated). Preparing for natural disasters can help you prevent loss of life and property.
Author Archives: recoverydiva
“Canada Not Ready for Climate Change”
Canada not ready for climate change, report warns
Canada is ill-prepared for the increased flooding and extreme weather that will occur under climate change, and needs to act now or face much higher costs to fix damaged buildings and infrastructure in the future, a new report warns.
The federal government is set to announce major infrastructure programs in its fall update Tuesday, but Ottawa and the provinces have yet to properly assess how to make the country’s transportation, electricity and water systems more resilient to the threat from climate change, the University of Waterloo’s Intact Centre on Climate Adaptation says in a report to be released Monday.
Guidance on Planned Relocation
From Reliefweb, this document (22 pages) titled Guidance on Protecting People from Disasters and Environmental Change Through Planned Relocation.
Planning Resources for People with Disabilities – from the CDC
From the CDC this website with resources: Emergency Preparedness: Including People with Disabilities
Mitigation More than Pays for Itself
See this article: A disaster that does not happen saves lives and money
New FEMA Website Aimed at Helping Businesses
According to an article in the current issue of Emergency Management magazine , FEMA has recently created a new site to help get the emergency preparedness message out to businesses. The Hometown Security site is here: www.dhs.gov/hometown-security. The idea is good, but I do not readily see what is new and different about this site.
The Diva welcomes comments from readers.
“How FEMA Learned from its Mistakes”
From Federal News Radio: How FEMA Learned from its Mistakes.
When Hurricane Matthew made landfall in the U.S. in early October, it was a chance for the Federal Emergency Management Agency to prove it’s learned from its mistakes.
“I think that what you see in Matthew is the maturation of FEMA’s ability to be prepared and then respond to a disaster,” said Joe Nimmich, deputy FEMA director, on Homeland Security Month.
Amtrak Gets EM Certification
In case you missed this article in railway age, note that Amtrak receives first-ever Emergency Management recognition. Always nice to have a kind word about Amtrak.
Amtrak has earned accreditation by the Emergency Management Accreditation Program (EMAP), a recognition typically awarded to federal, state, local and tribal emergency response agencies. Amtrak is the first railroad ever to earn the five-year accreditation.
NSF and NOAA Collaboration
From the Homeland Security Newswire, this news about a new scientific collaboration: Harnessing science to help in emergency response.
Four years ago, communities across the East Coast faced Superstorm Sandy, a weather system that claimed more than seventy lives in the United States and caused $65 billion in damages. Earlier this month, Hurricane Matthew devastated Haiti, killing more than a thousand people before turning north to the United States, where it caused another forty-three deaths. The NSF and NOAA collaborate to provide the necessary tools to ensure people respond appropriately to dangerous weather systems