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Comparative Emergency Management

Comparative Emergency Management. Session 23 Slide Deck. Session Objective. Explain the Most Common Categories of Recovery Assistance Provided in the Aftermath of Major Disasters. Shelter and Housing. Differences in damage and destruction due to: Construction materials

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Comparative Emergency Management

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  1. Comparative Emergency Management Session 23 Slide Deck Session 23

  2. Session Objective • Explain the Most Common Categories of Recovery Assistance Provided in the Aftermath of Major Disasters Session 23

  3. Shelter and Housing Differences in damage and destruction due to: • Construction materials • Construction type and adherence to safety codes • Structure age and maintenance • Soil makeup • Physical and geographic location • Elevation • Proximity to the hazard source • Geological processes (e.g., liquifaction) Session 23

  4. Shelter and Housing Three Categories of Damage: • Damaged, but requiring only simple repairs • Damaged, but requiring major repairs • Damaged beyond repair or destroyed Housing ‘Triage’ Session 23

  5. Shelter and Housing Interim Shelter Options • Congregate shelters • Travel trailers / Manufactured homes • Rental Markets • Hotels • Tents Session 23

  6. Shelter and Housing • Congregate Shelter Problems • Displacement • Loss of the structure’s ‘normal use’ (e.g., school used as a shelter) • Environmental impacts of dense unplanned settlement • Permanence of ‘slums’ • Example – Italy / Turkey Session 23

  7. Shelter and Housing Planning Considerations • Site Selection • Wraparound Services • Building Materials and Design Selection • Owner-Driven vs. Outside Construction • Property Rights and Other Legal Matters Session 23

  8. Site Selection • Rebuilding on the Same Site • Community integrity maintained • Livelihoods maintained • Motivation to recover • Infrastructure exists • Relocate • No need to remove rubble before rebuilding • Proximity to hazard can be increased Session 23

  9. Wraparound Services • “Those facets of society that allow an individual, and likewise, the society as a whole, to survive and to function effectively” • Examples • Food and commodity markets • Educational facilities • Healthcare facilities • Transportation systems and access • Utilities • Employment • Religious and social communities Session 23

  10. Building Materials / Design • What kinds of structures built • What materials used • Decisions must be more than cost-based • Styles and materials must: • Be culturally acceptable • Accommodate new risk information • Sources of materials: • Debris (recycled) • Local • Outside Session 23

  11. Owner-Driven vs. Outside Construction • Five primary options: • Owner Driven Construction • Government Driven Construction • Donor Driven Construction • Contractor Driven Construction • A combination of the above players Session 23

  12. Property Rights and Other Legal Matters • Property ownership • Access to title/deed • Destruction of government records • Can be established through community memory • Informal settlements present problems • Holistic recovery planning is possible through legal control of recovery • Moratorium • Easing of laws or policies Session 23

  13. Infrastructure “the basic facilities and services needed for the functioning of a community or society, such as transportation and communications systems and water and power lines” Session 23

  14. Infrastructure Components • Transportation • Energy • Communication • Health • Government • Flood control • Education • Water (treatment, delivery, and waste) • Commerce and banking Session 23

  15. Infrastructure Improvement • Modernization • Expansion • Increase efficiency • Reduction in risk Session 23

  16. Infrastructure Issues for Consideration • Component prioritization and rate of recovery • Ownership • Sources of infrastructure reconstruction expertise • Reconstruction labor and materials • Access to infrastructure • Hazard risk reduction Session 23

  17. Physical Recovery • Illnesses and injuries • Physical trauma to victims • Health infrastructure sees increased demand • Coincides with reduced capacity / deficit of technical skills and expertise • Shortage of equipment, supplies, prosthetics, medicineand equipment Session 23

  18. Illness and Disease • Pre-existing diseases become poorly maintained, because of: • Vectors • Reduced physical resilience • Increased transmission • Vaccination gaps • Epidemiological surveillance is required Session 23

  19. Most Vulnerable Groups (Health) • Children and adolescents • The elderly • Pregnant women or mothers of infants • Single parent households • People with pre-existing diseases • HIV/AIDS • Kidney disease • Cancer • People with disabilities • Displaced people • Poor people Session 23

  20. Nutrition • Reasons for a poor diet: • Financial problems • Severed supply chains • Psychological trauma • Lack of time • Diet linked to disease Session 23

  21. Psychosocial Care • Trauma experienced by: • Adults / Parents • Children • Responders • As a result of: • Experiencing fear of injury/death • Hopelessness • Loss • Lack of control • Victimization of secondary intentional hazard • Witnessing pain or death • Displacement • Cultural losses • Loss of routine • Unemployment Session 23

  22. Psychosocial Options • Mental health counseling • Strengthening and support of traditional and social networks • Resumption of religious services and the repair or reconstruction of religious facilities and institutions • Resumption of normal routines • Reunification of families • Remembrance (museums, memorials) Session 23

  23. Cultural Recovery • Disasters can devastate/destroy culture • Historic buildings • Art • Clothing • Landmarks • Loss of culture is a loss of identity Session 23

  24. Economic Recovery / Livelihoods • Lost resources, production, jobs, business opportunities, heavy government expenditures • Economic recovery tied to the resumption of jobs • Local businesses must be quickly returned • Injected cash can help the local economy • Opportunity for increase in capacity post-disaster • Pre-existing problems may be addressed Session 23

  25. Environment • Two factors: • Damage as a direct result of the hazard • Damage as a result of the destruction of man-made technologies and systems • Debris • Environmental protections (e.g., mangroves, wetlands) • Pollution Session 23

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