NJ Plans To Rebuild Better than LA Did After H. Katrina

NJ Keeping Eye on 600M for Superstorm Sandy Relief.

As New Jersey prepares to spend $600 million on homes clobbered by superstorm Sandy, the state is taking steps to avoid the pitfalls of the country’s largest-ever rebuilding effort — in Louisiana after Hurricane Katrina.

There, hundreds of millions of federal dollars were given to residents to elevate homes in New Orleans. But in many cases, the work was never done, federal auditors have found. Eight years after the 2005 hurricane, Louisiana can’t account for how most homeowners spent grants intended to raise homes above the threat of floodwaters.

Unlike Louisiana and Mississippi, New Jersey plans to release home repair and elevation grants in installments — not in upfront lump sums. And the Christie administration also plans to hire private contractors to manage the program and oversee an estimated 30,000 property inspections over the next two years, according to officials and state documents.

But in proposing safeguards to eliminate waste, the Christie administration risks slowing work on homes along the Jersey Shore and in devastated communities …. experts say.

NOTE: Please take a look at the comment below for some important details about a previous attempt in LA>

Here is an article with some pictures of the actual process of elevating a home. The look is quite unusual while the process is going on.

Scientific Lessons Learned from the Deepwater Horizon Spill

English: Platform supply vessels battle the bl...

In an article titled Responding to Future Oil Spills: Lessons Learned from Deepwater Horizon, the HSWire (Dec.3) mentioned an article in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The NAS issue includes a 10 page article titled Science in Support of the Deepwater Horizon Response.  A copy is available here: Deepwater Horizon Paper-Dec 2012

Signs of Lessons Learned!

Here are some positive signs of learning from experience gleaned from articles this week:

LEADERSHIP:  I cannot remember the last time such a positive rating for all levels of government occurred after a disaster. We must be learning something from past events!  See: Superstorm was super-test for state and local leaders; Experts have given New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg good reviews for their performances after hurricane Sandy. Nov.19.  In addition, I would give FEMA high marks for the response phase.

TRANSFER OF KNOWLEDGE FROM EXPERIENCECalifornia Learns From Hurricane Sandy In Northeast; Nov. 19

COMMUNICATION NETWORKS.  For those of you who are interested in the technical details of disaster networks, see this posting from the iDisaster blog.  It talks about the progress made since the Haiti earthquake.

Disaster Experience – if you do not have it, learn from those who do

This candid, public assessment of a N.J. mayor and his actions during the response to H. Sandy reinforces what many of us have been saying for many years, even decades: putting out a major effort and really caring are not enough. Learning about disasters can be achieved from the experiences of others. Those of us in the research community have been trying to get this message across for a long time.

This is one of the first comparative assessments I have seen in the media so far. Hurricane Sandy response: Some towns handled the crisis well, others did not; NJ.com, November 11, 2012. The article begins as follows:

When Mayor Bill Akers reviews the way tiny Seaside Heights responded to Hurricane Sandy he is unsparing in his criticism. Of Bill Akers.

“I could have done a lot better,” he said. “I was overwhelmed. I know I have my shortcomings, but it’s not for lack of effort and not for lack of caring.”