FEMA Disaster Relief Funds Reduced by DHS – just as H. Dorian is due!

Update on August 28: According to ABC TV news, the transfer of funds is underway at the present time. The dollar amount noted was $271 million from DHS; $151M is from FEMA.

From CNN: Homeland Security moves $155 million from FEMA disaster relief for immigration enforcement

Here is another take from NBC: Administration Pulling Millions of FEMA Disaster Relief to Send to Southern Border.

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New Guidelines for States Worry CA

Is California too rich to get help from FEMA? New guidelines worry emergency planners

If California experiences another deadly disaster like the 2018 Camp Fire, survivors may have a far more difficult time obtaining federal assistance.
That’s the warning California’s Office of Emergency Services Director Mark Ghilarducci issued at a congressional field hearing Tuesday.
The reason: a new Federal Emergency Management Agency regulation tightening eligibility for federal disaster recovery programs including housing assistance, healthcare, crisis counseling and unemployment assistance.

How to Rebound After a Disaster

From the NYTimes: How to Rebound After a Disaster: Move, Don’t Rebuild, Research Suggests. “But a paper published Thursday in the journal Science makes a case that, sometimes, retreating from nature instead of fighting it can actually open up new opportunities for communities.”

Note that the paper cited is titled The Case for Strategic and Management Climate Retreat, which indicates the authors offer more suggestions rather than findings. The link is to a free download – read only version.

Update: here is another take on the paper, done by hswire: Governments Mull “Managed Retreat” of Coastal Towns Before Rising Seas Claim Them

More and more governments around the world are advised by experts to prepare to make a “managed retreat” from coasts as sea levels rise because of climate change. Scientists say that a decision to leave the coasts should not be “seen largely as a last resort, a failure to adapt, or a one-time emergency action.” Rather, it should be viewed as an opportunity to build better communities away from the rising waters.

“Climate Scientists May Not Be the Best Communicators of Climate Threats”

From the Conversation: Climate scientists may not be the best communicators of climate threats.   An excerpt:

Our study shows that climate scientists have relatively little impact on people’s views. And it demonstrates how difficult it is to match the message and the messenger to an audience when the issues are complex and politically charged.

Thanks to Risa Palm, the coauthor, for the citation.

New Mitigation Framework

Mitigation Framework Leadership Group Pushes Forward on Investing in Resilience.  

The Diva found it interesting to learn why this effort was mounted:

The Investment Strategy comes three years after a Government Accountability Office (GAO) Report in which GAO found that mitigation investments in the post-Hurricane Sandy response were not coordinated within the Federal Government nor the whole community (which includes the Federal Government, nonfederal partners, and individuals). But even prior to Hurricane Sandy, the report finds that, “since 1980, 246 weather-related disasters in the United States caused at least $1 billion in damage each. Damage from these ‘billion-dollar disasters’ together totaled over $1.6 trillion.” As such, the National Mitigation Investment Strategy can save both lives and money through direct investments and property buy-outs in high-risk areas, investing in safety and security measures, and investing in the collection and sharing of data. The report admits that the Investment Strategy has “ambitious but achievable goals”, citing that success requires “maximum participation from the whole community”. Yet, as risks and damage from natural hazards both continue the increase, the Investment Strategy and the efforts of the Mitigation Framework Leadership Group will lead to greater resilience for the livelihood of citizens, the economy, and the environment.