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Sandy: Building Back Stronger, Safer & More Resilient

Sandy: Building Back Stronger, Safer & More Resilient. Tim Crowley, Director, Mitigation Division, FEMA Region II. December 2012. Content. The FEMA Mission Building Back Jersey Strong Community-Based Informed Decision Making Everyday Risk Identification

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Sandy: Building Back Stronger, Safer & More Resilient

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  1. Sandy: Building Back Stronger, Safer & More Resilient • Tim Crowley, Director, Mitigation Division, FEMA Region II • December 2012

  2. Content • The FEMA Mission • Building Back Jersey Strong • Community-Based Informed Decision Making • Everyday Risk Identification • Advisory Base Flood Elevations (ABFEs) • Risk Reduction • The New Jersey Situation and Path Forward • Conclusion: Community Resilience • Q&A • Appendix

  3. The FEMA Commitment We are committed to building disaster resilient communities FEMA’s mission is to support our citizens and first responders to ensure that as a nation we work together to build, sustain, and improve our capability to prepare for, protect against, respond to, recover from, and mitigate all hazards.

  4. Building Back as a Whole Community FEMA is only one part of our nation’s emergency management team. We must collectively work together to build back safer, smarter and more resilient The National Disaster Recovery Framework Economic Housing Social Environmental

  5. Building Back Jersey Strong • Working together to build back safer, smarter, and stronger • Citizens are looking to you to better protect the community from flood risk • Mitigation is the foundation for building back more resilient communities • Mitigation is taking action now-before the next disaster

  6. Community-Based Informed Decision Making • One approach does not work for all communities • FEMA partners with your community to provide tools and support for informed planning and decisions that fit a community’s specific needs: • Advisory Flood Risk Information • Building Sciences • Floodplain Management and Insurance • Mitigation Planning and Assistance • Communications and Outreach We’re taking steps to protect our community and reduce the impact of future flooding. Flood insurance is only one way to protect ourselves. As we rebuild our community, there are steps we can and should take to reduce the impact of future floods. We’re working to keep you informed about your flood risk and taking proactive steps to protect our community.

  7. Every Day Risk Identification • FEMA is providing tools to local communities to make informed decisions to build back stronger and more resilient while maintaining a community’s unique character • Advisory Base Flood Elevations (AFEs) • During non-disaster times, FEMA provides tools to communities in order to enable more informed decision making • Flood Risk Database • Flood Risk Report • Flood Risk Map

  8. Risk Identification: ABFEs • What are ABFEs? • ABFEs offer the best available data post disaster recovery and building • How do property owners benefit from ABFEs? • Rebuilding using ABFEs may have a higher initial cost, but will likely result in lower term costs for property owners • What outcomes are we trying to achieve? • Building safer and stronger to help mitigate risk against future disasters ABFE prototype for illustrative purposes only.

  9. Risk Reduction Understanding the updated flood risk allows communities to take action to reduce their risk to future flood events • Proactively Reduce Risk • Add vents to enclosures, install breakaway walls, or relocate structures further from potential flood sources, where possible • Ensure property owners build with freeboard • Engage the community in mitigation planning • Benefits • Lower flood insurance premiums for buildings in high-risk areas that are elevated above minimum requirements • More eligibility for FEMA grant programs

  10. The New Jersey Situation and Path Forward • The Devastation of Sandy • Hurricane Sandy caused $29.4 billion in damages to New Jersey • FEMA estimated more then 122,000 structures in New Jersey were damaged or destroyed* • The Path Forward • Federal funds obligated to assist the residents and communities in New Jersey have totaled more then $730 million • Additional dollars being spent from SBA Loans, Insurance claims, and property owner funds to rebuild • Property owners are striving to “rebuild by Memorial Day” • *http://www.fema.gov/news-release/new-jersey-recovery-one-month-later

  11. Conclusion: Community Resilience Together, we all can create stronger and safer communities that are better equipped to handle the next major storm

  12. Q&A

  13. Tim Crowley| tim.crowley@fema.dhs.gov

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