This past weekend, a longtime friend and colleague passed away. She was a wonderful person and a pioneer in the emergency management field. Here are some details from the obituary in the local newspaper in TN:
Time to Retreat from the Coast?
From NBCBoston: Rising Seas: Time for Mass. Towns to Retreat From the Coast?
“As climate change reshapes the coastline, some towns are weighing whether to protect vulnerable waterfront homes or encourage the owners to leave. Environmental experts say it’s a choice all coastal communities will face.”
Mitigating Wildfires
From the WashPost: The Biden administration can’t stop wildfires. But it can make them less destructive.
“Rarely in recent memory has the United States seen a wildfire season as awful as in 2020. Scorching temperatures turned vast swaths of forest into tinder. Ferocious winds whipped small sparks into infernos, spinning up towering smoke clouds and terrifying fire tornadoes. Half the continent was suffocated by ash and smoke. By the time winter rain arrived, nearly 10 million acres had burned.
A century of poor forest management and unchecked climate change have pushed the West into a “new world of fire,” said Michael Wara, director of the Climate and Energy Policy Program at Stanford University’s Woods Institute for the Environment. Traditional methods of firefighting falter in the face of such huge, unpredictable blazes. Instead, fire experts and environmental groups are hopeful that President-elect Joe Biden will adopt a more scientific approach to the issue, removing fuels from forests and shoring up community defenses to make wildfires less destructive, rather than simply trying to put them out.”
Some New Threats to Consider
A new set of threats, from Inside Climate News: Fueled by Climate Change, Wildfires Threaten Toxic Superfund Sites. Blazes at the imperiled hazardous waste sites could release toxins ranging from acid mine drainage to radioactive smoke.
Worth Pondering
From the Wash Post: The great acceleration. The virus isn’t transforming us. It’s speeding up the changes already underway.
Resilience in Recovery
Article from GovTech: NIST Issues Disaster Recovery Playbook for Community Resilience. The National Institute of Standards and Technology has published a guide to help emergency managers and community stakeholders ask the right questions to maintain and restore vital services after a disaster.
Here is the direct link to the NIST 50 page paper: COMMUNITY RESILIENCE PLANNING GUIDE FOR BUILDINGS AND INFRASTRUCTURE SYSTEMS
Understanding Risk Forum
More on Disaster Housing
New GAO Report on Disaster Housing
New GAO Report: Disaster Housing: Improved Cost Data and Guidance Would Aid FEMA Activation Decisions, GAO-21-116: Published: Dec 15, 2020. Note that the full report is 50 pages.
Building Codes Save Lives
New report from FEMA: Building Codes Save: A Nationwide Study Losses Avoided as a Result of Adopting Hazard-Resistant Building Codes, November 2020
Note this is a major report – 189 pages.