1 / 11

Knowing Your Own Community: Conducting a Social Vulnerability Assessment

Knowing Your Own Community: Conducting a Social Vulnerability Assessment. Sessions 24-26. Sessions’ Objectives. Evaluate a sample Community Vulnerability Assessment

robbin
Download Presentation

Knowing Your Own Community: Conducting a Social Vulnerability Assessment

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. Knowing Your Own Community: Conducting a Social Vulnerability Assessment Sessions 24-26

  2. Sessions’ Objectives • Evaluate a sample Community Vulnerability Assessment • Develop a plan for completing the components of a Vulnerability Assessment (other than Societal Analysis) for one geographical area • Complete the Societal Analysis portion for one community

  3. Community Vulnerability Analysis

  4. New Hanover Societal Analysis • Identified areas of special consideration • Concentrations of: • Poor • Elderly • Minorities • Single-parent families • Low education rates • High public assistance • Renters • No private vehicles • Identified where these intersect with hazards

  5. Uses of a CVA • Provides systematic inventory • Establishes a baseline for mitigation • Locates hazardous areas in relation to vulnerable populations • Provides basis for establishing priorities • Involves a variety of parties in process • Increases community awareness

  6. Class Projects • Identification of community: location, geographical boundaries, political boundaries, general demographics • Brief Hazards Identification and Analysis • Societal Analysis (most important section) Population groups and location on map Community level factors: Some examples • Identification of High Risk Areas • Plan for completion of other components of CVA • Description of how CVA would be useful

  7. Societal Analysis • Categories of socially vulnerable groups • Poor • Minorities • Low educational levels • Female-headed households • Elders/Disabled • Renters/Transients • Locations of high concentration Possible Data Sources U.S. Census School records Immigration services Local aging agency Special needs registries Property tax records Facilities locations

  8. Community Level Factors Social Structure • Government • Social services • Social organizations • Neighborhood groups • Social networks • Leadership

  9. Community Data Collection • Interview community leaders • Locate government services, organizations • Consult community directories • Social services • Churches and religious groups • Volunteer service organizations • Check announcements in local newspapers • Look for intra-governmental agreements • Survey sample of residents • Others?

  10. Community Vulnerability Assessment Assignment • Brief overview of Hazards, Critical Facilities, Economic and Environmental Sections • Complete Societal • Analysis Component

More Related