1 / 25

PROJECT IMPACT

Learn about Project Impact and how it aims to make communities disaster-resistant, reducing heavy costs and damage to businesses. Discover the four phases of action and the importance of partnerships, risk assessment, prioritization, and community communication.

dorothya
Download Presentation

PROJECT IMPACT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PROJECT IMPACT Building Disaster-Resistant Communities

  2. Heavy Disaster Costs • FEMA spent $20 billion responding to disasters in 49 states over past ten years • Other federal agencies spent billions more • State and local government, private sector and individuals also pay heavy costs

  3. The Damage to Business is Real • Structural loss • Business interruption • Community infrastructure loss • Customer loss • Community loss

  4. Economic Toll from Disasters • Businesses close • People lose their jobs • 40% of small businesses never open again

  5. Project Impact- Working Together • Building Partnerships • Identifying Risks • Prioritizing Needs • Implementing Long-Term Plans To Protect Communities • Community Information Sharing

  6. Making Communities Disaster Resistant Strengthening Structures • Homes • Businesses • Bridges • Roads • Public facilities: schools, hospitals

  7. Making Communities Disaster Resistant • Examining Building Codes • Strengthen codes to meet disaster risks of your community • Restricting Building Areas • Local measures to discourage building in floodplains or high risk areas • Protecting At-Risk Structures • Protect structures in floodplains or high risk areas

  8. PROJECT IMPACT is about cutting disaster costs. Taking Responsibility--Taking Action.

  9. PROJECT IMPACT GOAL is to Make Each and Every Community Disaster-Resistant.

  10. Americans Prepared • Witt launches Project Impact at El Niño summit in Santa Monica in October ‘97 • People took action • Californians secured roofs, cleaned culverts and drains and elevated utilities and electrical panels

  11. El Niño Prevention Pays Off • Despite El Niño related storms and related severe weather, FEMA disaster-related costs remained level.

  12. P R O J E C T I M P A C T A M o d e l f o r C o m m u n i t y A c t i o n

  13. Where It Happens: At the Local Level • 7 pilot Project Impact communities • Over 100 communities by 1999.

  14. Business Partners:Protecting Their Communities • Business partners help to protect their company, employees, and community • Goal to have 500 business partners by September • Small, Medium and Large Companies...Home Depot, Bell Atlantic, Washington Mutual…. • Contingency Planning Exchange Mentoring Program

  15. Businesses Can Contribute-- What They Can Do. • Responsibility to your Company • Anheuser Busch Mitigation Efforts • Responsibility to your Employees • Michael Baker Associates - 10% or $50 off of flood insurance premium • Responsibility to your Community • Washington Mutual - loan program helps to protect their community

  16. The Business Impact is Real • An investment in mitigation gets 100% return -- at least.

  17. The Anheuser-Busch Return • Pre-disaster investment in mitigation efforts saved $300 million in Northridge Earthquake --15X cost of investment in mitigation.

  18. PROJECT IMPACT 4 Phases to a Disaster-Resistant Community 1 Building Partnerships 2 Assessing Risk 3 Prioritizing Needs 4 Keep Your Community Informed

  19. First Phase: Building Partnerships • Organize A Disaster-Resistant Community Planning Committee Invite: • business and industry • public works and utilities • volunteer/community groups • government • education, health care, workforce

  20. Second Phase: Are You Vulnerable?Risk Assessment • What are the community’s risks for natural disasters? • What specific structures and areas are most vulnerable?

  21. Third Phase: Taking ActionSetting Priorities • Identify mitigation priorities and take action • Identify the measures you will take and do it! • Identify and secure resources

  22. Fourth Phase: It Takes Everyone!Communicate Your Progress • Keep your community informed as you take actions • Promote involvement of your partners • Maintain support for your long-term initiatives

  23. Deerfield Beach, FL., A Disaster Resistant Community • Business Alliance meets to.… • Has relocated critical city services into one disaster-resistant building • Retrofitted school to serve as safe shelter • Developed residential home retrofitting program to withstand threat of hurricanes

  24. Where to Get HelpProject Impact Resources • Project ImpactGuidebook • Project Impact Brochure • Project Impact Overview and “Changing the Way America Deals with Disasters” Video • FEMA Technical Assistance • Local Project Impact Coordinator • Award Winning Website www.fema.gov • 1-800-480-2520 • Other Communities

  25. PROJECT IMPACT Changing the Way America Deals with Disasters

More Related