Warren Edwards

Community Resilience – What Federal Government Can Do

In a 2009 paper by the British Think Tank, Demos, titled, “Resilient Nation,” author Charlie Edwards suggests that for the UK, the role of central government in community resilience should be limited and mainly supportive of local and regional efforts. He recommends a central government role based on four “Es” – Engagement, Education, Empowerment and Encouragement. Although written for the UK, the paper has great relevance for the US and is well worth reading. The full paper can be found on the Demos web site at http://www.demos.co.uk/. These four Es may be useful in thinking about how DHS relates to other partners in the homeland security enterprise in the area of disaster preparedness and recovery.

The federal government (largely through the Department of Homeland Security, Federal Emergency Management Agency) plays two significant roles in community disaster resilience. In the first role, DHS is the leader of the federal response to incidents of national significance – the nation’s first responder at the federal level. As such, DHS acts in a top-down manner as a cabinet-level department within the federal government. In the second role, DHS is the leader of the nation’s “homeland security enterprise” and must coordinate many different types of efforts including disaster preparedness and recovery. In the past, DHS has fulfilled this role by acting as the approver of state and local plans, providing funding for preparedness planning and coordinating federal efforts to prepare for recovery.

DHS has steadily improved its ability to carry out the first role. But while the National Response Framework lays out an operational framework for response, the framework has not been fully effective in helping DHS carry out its second role – coordinating preparedness and recovery efforts across the Homeland Security Enterprise. In fact, the lessons of the past decade demonstrate inherent tensions in these two roles that produce expectations that often cannot be met within the constraints of traditional emergency management. read the entire article >

Warren Edwards

A Resilient Building Certification Program

From the very beginning the Community and Regional Resilience Institute has been progressing toward a way for communities to be certified as resilient. That is one of the most significant reasons to establish a sound intellectual construct in the “Common Framework for Community Resilience” that will lay the foundations for an eventual certification program. Because of this, we are always interested in programs that will look at aspects of community resilience certification.

At a recent meeting in Atlanta, an expert panel consisting of representatives from government, academia, insurance, non-profit organizations, and designers, came together to address aspects of what a resilient building certification program should entail. The meeting was hosted by the Resilient Home Program, a partnership between Clemson University, North Carolina State University (NC State), Savannah River National Laboratory and the US Army Corp of Engineers – Construction Engineering Research Lab and funded by the Southeast Region Research Initiative (SERRI).

The meeting was part of the ongoing efforts of the Resilient Home Program, which was established to determine the way in which home owners prepare for, and recover from, natural disasters; to find ways to make new and existing homes more resilient; to educate the public on home resiliency; and to encourage homeowners to take steps to make their homes more resilient. read the entire article >

Warren Edwards

National Thinking About Community Resilience Must Evolve

As we move from an almost completely protection centric view of homeland security to one acknowledging the requirement for a broader paradigm that includes protection, prevention, response and recovery, it is a significantly positive step that the concept of community resilience seems to have forced its way into the new doctrine. Community resilience is at least now a subject of conversation. Unfortunately, the national view of communities and where they fit in the homeland security enterprise remains quite shallow and does not recognize the full potential of community resilience to be the foundation of a resilient nation.

National leader speeches as well as federal web sites and publications now include words on resilient communities in almost every discussion of national needs. But the words always focus on individuals and families very occasionally going further to acknowledge organizations and the private business sector. Communities are certainly about families and individuals. But they are far more than that. Communities are the foundations of our civil society – where individuals live, work, play, raise families and derive their values. Communities are complexes of built and social infrastructure. Most of the built infrastructure is privately owned and operated. Much of the social infrastructure resides in organizations independent of governmental structures. Communities create the wealth of the nation in their small businesses, retail outlets, housing markets and individual investments. Communities educate the nation, care for the nation’s physical and mental health and provide opportunities for faith and spirituality. And communities are inherently resilient.

Nationally, we need to understand and capture that complexity in our thinking about, planning for and encouragement of community resilience. Resilient communities must be the foundation of a national disaster resilience culture. read the entire article >

Warren Edwards

Community Resilience: Ready for the Holidays

Every blog needs a holiday edition. This is mine.

In a workshop last week, someone – I don’t really remember who – stated that the holiday season in general is a great time for families to prepare for disasters. That sounds a bit strange but actually makes good sense. DHS and FEMA through Ready.gov have been continuously pressing families to “get a kit, make a plan and be informed.” The idea expressed at the workshop was that families are together more in the holiday season than they are likely to be any other time in the year. Why not spend a little time this holiday season using this family time to do something really important. Everyone from over-excited children to bored teenagers to grumpy adults can benefit from this family bonding experience.

The FEMA web site even has a page that outlines holiday gifts that increase preparedness. OK, so maybe they are not as great a gift as a pony or a play station, but they could make great supplemental stocking fillers. The site, http://www.fema.gov/news/newsrelease.fema?id=50059, lists gift ideas from weather radios to fire extinguishers. Check it out.

Resilient communities engage all their citizens and prepare across the full spectrum from individuals and families to governments, organizations and businesses. Here is a small way we can all help our community become more resilient this holiday season.

Season’s Greetings!

Warren Edwards

Community Resilience: The Third Roundtable

The Community and Regional Resilience Institute conducted its third invitational Community Resilience Roundtable in Washington on December 1. The purpose of these roundtables has been to assemble a diverse group of resilience stakeholders, let them know what CARRI is doing, obtain their feedback and solicit their advice. This year’s group, by far the most senior and diverse assemblage to date, provided excellent counsel and guidance as CARRI presented an early draft of its work, “Toward a Common Framework for Community Resilience.” CARRI intends that the common framework described in this document will be the starting point for a broader development process that includes practitioners, researchers and a wide variety of other stakeholders.

A “common framework” would provide the nation and its communities with a widely accepted, coherent, measurable way of understanding community resilience and applying that understanding to the community in a meaningful way. In this context, a “framework” is an intellectual construct that is coherent (its parts fit together) and complete (considers the entire subject). A framework for community resilience should assist the community by helping it to discover how the interdependencies within and outside the community impact its resilience in a systematic and consistent manner. The framework should also help the community identify external resources that will aid in recovery and redevelopment after a disaster and provide guidance for pre-crisis investments.

The early draft of CARRI’s “Toward a Common Framework for Community Resilience” has been through an initial review by CARRI’s national research advisor team and their recommendations as well as the outstanding comments from last week’s CARRI Roundtable are currently being incorporated. The resulting revision will be circulated to a wider audience of reviewers and then serve as the starting point for a national dialogue on community resilience.

Those wishing to participate in this second review should contact the Community and Regional Resilience Institute at info@resilientus.org.

Warren Edwards

Community Resilience: Long-Term Recovery

FEMA has formed a working group to examine policies and practices for disaster recovery. The effort is welcome and long overdue. As a part of the input to the working group, there is an invitation to the public at large to comment by providing answers to a series of questions. (I have noted in the past that current FEMA leadership seems to be committed to listening. This is another welcome indication.) Thoughtful answers to FEMA’s recovery questions from across America will be helpful in shaping good recovery policies and programs.

A fundamental question is how to define a successful disaster recovery. CARRI believes that successful disaster recovery begins well before a disaster occurs with a deliberate and well thought out plan to achieve community recovery. Successful disaster recovery addresses all domains of community life – economic, social, ecological and physical systems – meeting the needs of the full fabric of the community in a sustainable and inclusive manner. While speed of recovery is important, thoughtful consideration to reduce vulnerabilities for future events is also required. Successful recovery includes adaptation where weaknesses can be identified and corrected as part of the recovery process in order to make the community more resilient to future incidents. Over time, successful disaster recovery should increase community functionality above pre-disaster levels so that recovery after the next disaster is less costly and more rapid. The ideal process for community recovery facilitates and is in harmony with long-term community goals.

We believe that there are three primary characteristics that influence the speed and quality of successful recoveries. First, resilient communities have deliberate plans for recovery in the same way that they have deliberate disaster response and emergency management plans. They plan in detail how the community will achieve a rapid return to normal. Second, successful disaster recoveries involve the full fabric of the community in every phase of their approach to recovery: planning, preparedness, response, and short- and long-term recovery. Third, successful recoveries involve broad-based use of formal and informal (official and unofficial) communication networks to facilitate recovery processes and involvement. These networks are identified and rehearsed before the disaster and thereby extend the reach and impact of formal, official communications. They also include all parts and domains of the community. The informal, unofficial networks are incorporated into official, long-term recovery communication networks.

These systematic examinations by FEMA of federal policies and programs that will ultimately influence community resilience are very welcome. We should support them fully and thoughtfully.

Warren Edwards

A Few Stray Items

Just a couple of items of interest for today:

The DHS Summer Employment Program application period ends next week. Each summer the department offers summer employment in the form of paid internships to full-time or part-time college and university students. This is an outstanding opportunity for qualified students to gain on-the-job experience in a number of areas all of which are posted on the website at www.dhs.gov/xabout/careers. CARRI has hosted DHS interns for the past two summers and has found them to be bright, helpful, knowledgeable and a true benefit to our work. In fact, one of them chastised me this morning by e-mail for not having crafted a good CARRI vision statement. The application period ends November 27th so if you have a candidate, get them to the DHS web site as quickly as possible.

FEMA began a 30-day comment period on the National Flood Insurance Program on November 5, 2009. From several indications it is clear that FEMA is truly trying to listen. There have been a series of public “listening sessions” and FEMA continues to solicit comments via the web. These sessions which were by invitation included a wide spectrum of groups including but not limited to environmental and historic preservation groups, fair housing groups, and representatives from the lending, insurance, emergency management, real estate, land use, planning and engineering industries. To learn more about the NFIP and to provide input go to, www.fema.gov/business/nfip. It is your opportunity to comment and be included in the discussion.

Warren Edwards

National Resilience – Who is leading?

I spent most of last week in DC. Some of my time was consumed in trying to determine how the concept of resilience is progressing at the national level. There are lots of indicators that meaningful conversations are occurring and that resilience is taking root as a more comprehensive way to organize the nation’s thoughts on natural and man-made disasters. For instance, the National Security Council has an office of National Resilience Policy. Significant thought on national resilience seems to have gone into the Quadrennial Homeland Security Review and it may emerge as one of the goals of the Department of Homeland Security. Virtually every federal department and many federal agencies have included the word resilience in their solicitations for studies or in their seminars, industry events, workshops and conferences.

While all of this is positive, I sense a void – a wide disparity in what is meant by resilience. We lack a thought leader or perhaps a number of thought leaders for national resilience. CARRI has spent the last two years working hard to figure out what resilience means in America’s communities and we think we have made significant progress. But if resilient communities can help build a resilient nation, someone needs to begin to organize resilience thought from a national perspective. And while studies in this area will be extremely helpful, we can’t wait a couple of years to determine a pathway.

CARRI will continue to do what we have been doing – trying to sort through the extremely complex issues of resilience in the nation’s communities. We are ready to help at the national level by convening and mobilizing the community effort and working to link it to national thought and national policy. It is interesting that foreign policy can claim a number of thought leaders in academia and in think tanks but domestic policy has very few and resilience has, as yet, no champion. CARRI is looking for partners at the national level.

Warren Edwards

Community Resilience – An Old Dilemma: Resilience vs. Sustainability

The CARRI colleagues have broached the subject of resilience and its relationship to sustainability several times in the past without achieving any significant consensus. The subject surfaced again a few weeks ago and generated a several day exchange over e-mail. The spark for this exchange was an article in the Charleston, South Carolina Post and Courier reporting that the city of Charleston had just hired a Director of Sustainability, the only new position hired by the city this year.

A lively exchange ensued and on reviewing it, I think it is worthwhile to open the subject in this blog. One of the first thoughts on the relationship between the two terms came from Ann Olsen in Nashville. Ann wrote:

“My own thinking is that how the two connect depends on the breadth of the sustainability vision. When sustainability is conceived very broadly, then it seems to me that resilience may be (a) component of sustainability and enhancements to resilience support sustainability. In essence, resilience is all about sustainability through/beyond disaster. If we drew a Venn diagram, the circle of resilience would fall within the circle of sustainability. In reality, though, most folks looking at sustainability are not much thinking about how to sustain through/beyond disaster, and how to develop this capability, so this leaves resilience an undervalued aspect of the broader concept of sustainability. When the focus is more narrow, e.g., primarily environmental, then perhaps the two simply overlap.”

I believe that this subject of resilience and its relationship to sustainability (or vice versa) is one worthy of discussion. Let me know what you think and if the CARRI colleagues don’t jump in with their comments, I’ll post a few more of the e-mail exchanges later.

Warren Edwards

Community Resilience: More Thoughts on What a Community Is

After three weeks bumming around Central Asia, I return to find that the blog has been kept alive through the efforts of my colleagues John Plodinec and Andy Felts. Thank you.

As a follow up to Andy Felts’ October 6 thoughts on what a community is, here is an additional perspective from the CARRI Research Director, Tom Wilbanks. It is extracted from a soon-to-be published CARRI Research Report that summarizes what we know about scale and community resilience.

“The term ‘community’ means different things to different people. To some, a stable, cohesive, socially-interrelated neighborhood is a community. To some, a place of worship is a community. To some, a place of employment can be a community. At the same time, ‘community’ is often used as a social equivalent of a city or town, which is obviously a collection of communities that in some cases may share little more than physical proximity.

“Other uses of the concept are even broader. In this mobile world, connected by modern transportation systems and information technologies, communities can develop that have a strong self-identification but are networks of connections rather than pieces of a mosaic (Wilbanks, 2003). One well-known figure in climate change impact research observed: ‘If I were to die tomorrow, 15 people in my local community would come to my funeral, but 200 people from my professional community worldwide would send a message to my wife.’

“How community size relates to its sustainability is an interesting issue. For instance, a larger size means access to a wider range of resources, but a smaller size means simpler decision-making processes, which can translate into greater agility.”

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