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Regional Disaster Resilience Initiative Focusing on Recovery and Restoration. Human resilience is the capacity to effectively influence and adapt to change. Regional Disaster Resilienc e Initiative. Bring together cross-jurisdictional stakeholders to jointly:
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Regional Disaster Resilience Initiative Focusing on Recovery and Restoration
Human resilience is the capacity to effectively influence and adapt to change.
Regional Disaster Resilience Initiative • Bring together cross-jurisdictional stakeholders to jointly: • Understand our region’s current capacity to quickly and effectively recover and rebuild from a major disaster • Baseline assessment/gap analysis • Identify actions that can be taken to improve our recovery capacity and address gaps • Action Plan
FEMA Disaster Recovery Continuum • Pre-disaster recovery planning • Mitigation planning • Resilience building • Disaster preparedness exercises • Emergency services and • Mass care and shelter • Debris removal of primary trans. Routes • Establish temporary infrastructure • Interim housing • Initiate debris removal • Plan infrastr. repair • Est. recovery one-stop shops • inform community of opportunities to build back stronger • Develop permanent housing solutions • Rebuild infrastr. to meet future needs • Implement economic revitalization strategies • Facilitate funding for business rebuilding • Implement mitigation strategies • Reestablish disrupted healthcare services
Where We Are Today • Housing and Business Recovery Workshop—November 1, 2011 • Infrastructure Interdependencies Workshop I—January 31, 2012 • Resilience Survey http://quake.abag.ca.gov/resilience/survey/ • Gap analysis of current resilience capacities and needs underway • Draft list of priority recovery issues that require regional coordination or cross-jurisdictional collaboration
Interdependencies Workshop I Outcomes • Current understanding of infrastructure interdependencies is very limited. • Collaboration among infrastructure sectors, other essential service providers, and the broader stakeholders on disaster preparedness and recovery efforts is limited, but growing. • No regional disaster recovery framework or process currently exists for operational and financial decision-making post-disaster. • Regional situational awareness during recovery is essential for decision-making. • Stakeholders with years of experience focusing on disaster response find it challenging to look beyond the immediate post-disaster period. Full workshop summary available online http://quake.abag.ca.gov/resilience/workshops/
Presentations today • Dependencies and interdependencies that your organization or sector has with other infrastructures and service/goods providers with focus on those that are of greatest concern • Examples of what your organization or sector is doing to address these interdependencies • Priority gaps your organization or sector faces related to gaining information and awareness on, and mitigating potential interdependencies-related impacts affecting disaster recovery • Actions or activities that should be undertaken to address these gaps
Questions? Contact Danielle Hutchings, ABAG Earthquake and Hazards Program Coordinator danielleh@abag.ca.gov