Court Settlement for AZ Wildfire Two Years Ago

This settlement is important not only for those affected, but also for the changes likely to come in fighting wildfires in the U. S. See: Arizona Reached Settlement With Kin of 19 who Died Fighting Wildfire

Relatives of some of the 19 firefighters killed in one of the nation’s deadliest wildfires joined state officials here Monday to announce settlements in two legal cases against the Arizona State Forestry Division, the agency responsible for the firefighters on the day they died.

The agreements, disclosed on the eve of the fire’s second anniversary, include more than $600,000 in compensation for the families and an acknowledgment that commanders’ misguided decisions put the elite firefighting crew, the Granite Mountain Hotshots, at great risk.

The Forestry Division has also agreed, as part of the settlement to a wrongful-death lawsuit filed by 12 families, to improve training for its incident commanders and firefighters, test better tracking equipment and join a national effort to provide specific lessons about the effects of dry, warmer seasons on the wild lands.

“A Tale of Two Recoveries: Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy”

From Emergency Management Magazine: A Tale of Two Recoveries: Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy; How the social contexts in Mississippi and New Jersey affected recovery.

The authors provide some useful observations and analysis about the recovery process. Be sure to read the whole article.

See also this commentary by blogger Eric Holdeman on the concept of a “recovery concierge.”

The environment and humanitarian intervention – 2 reports

A new document on climate, the environment and humanitarian interventions: Topic Guide: Mainstreaming Environment and Climate Change into Humanitarian Action from DFID.

The guide is intended for DFID advisors, but provides a useful compendium of information on humanitarian actions, environment and the climate.

Readers may also be interested in an earlier document in the same series: Mainstreaming Environment into Humanitarian Interventions – A Synopsis of Key Organisations, Literature and Experience.

Thanks to Chas. Kelly for the citations.

New High Tech Partners for FEMA

How Google Will Pitch in to Help FEMA During Disasters

Google, Microsoft, Intel and other tech companies will start helping the Federal Emergency Management Agency during major disasters. Seven tech groups signed an agreement with FEMA to offer tools and expertise to the agency’s new Tech Corps that will improve how the agency responds to disasters.

Trained volunteers from the organizations will work with FEMA at disaster sites on projects like setting up temporary Internet and phone communication, navigation and mapping systems and analyzing data to speed up rescue and recovery.

Another industry/government partnership may also be of interest. See: As Hurricane Season Approaches, IBM and The Weather Company Collaborate on Emergency Management for Cities