The Glamorous Aspects of Natural Hazards Planning

 

FEMA Region X, OEM, DLCD, Deschutes County Sherriff and OPDR staff at the conclusion of a successful two day NHMP training in Bend
FEMA Region X, OEM, DLCD, Deschutes County Sherriff and OPDR staff at a successful two day NHMP Training in Bend

It’s been an eventful year. Twelve months ago, I had a very limited understanding of planning and an even smaller amount of hands-on experience.  When I started down the road as a planner, I had assumed I would get involved in some of the more glamorous aspects of planning such as transportation or smart growth development. I had never considered natural hazards planning glamorous until January when my Community Planning Workshop group worked with the City of Madras to integrate their Natural Hazards Mitigation Plan (NHMP) into their comprehensive plan. Since starting that CPW-Oregon Partnership for Disaster Resilience (OPDR) project, I’ve gotten more involved with and knowledgeable of the benefits of natural hazards mitigation planning. After my project ended in June, I was sad to think my new found interest in hazard planning had come to an end.

Much to my surprise, I was selected to attend a two-day hazard mitigation workshop this past September.  The workshop was facilitated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and focused on local mitigation planning. Local city emergency managers, sheriffs departments, representatives from Oregon Emergency Management and the Department of Land Conservation and Development, and other organizations across the state and northwest (including Alaska and Washington) were in attendance.

The workshop was very valuable considering my previous CPW project involved all the concepts that were being taught in the workshop. A lot of the information and recommendations that were demonstrated were the same lessons that I had learned through the trial and error of my CPW project.  The training also helped me understand why certain policies are in place. I can now look at planning requirements and understand their importance instead of seeing them as arbitrary boxes that need to check off.

After attending the workshop, hazards mitigation planning is just as much an important and essential planning discipline as transportation planning. That notion was reinforced the next day while working a fair in Lincoln City aimed at increasing residents’ awareness and preparedness for natural hazards. While at the fair, I displayed Lincoln County Risk Maps that showed the potential impact of a tsunami along the Oregon coast, and chatted with visitors, primarily area residents, about our risk maps, the tsunami and natural hazards planning. Because of the training and my previous work experience with my CPW project, I knowledgeably and confidently explain why residents should be aware of potential hazards and why taking a proactive approach to eliminating or reducing the impacts is the best solution for the community. It was a rewarding experience and I was humbled when residents would sincerely thank me for helping their community be more prepared for natural hazards.

Drew Pfefferle OPDR Oregon Partnership for Disaster Resilience CSC Community Service CenterAbout the Author: Drew Pfefferle is a second year Community and Regional Planning graduate student and CPW graduate teaching fellow (GTF). He is from Twin Falls, Idaho and graduated from California State University Chico with a degree and Parks and Recreation Administration.

Inside the Body of a Resilient City

Cities are a network of interdependent systems, not unlike the human body; each one depends on the next to function properly.

But unlike our bodies, whose integrated systems work together when faced with injury or illness, and which have mastered “safe failure” so that one interruption doesn’t lead to catastrophic malfunction, our cities’ systems are often developed in silos.

When one system fails, it brings the others down with it.

Inside the Body of a Resilient City Oregon Partnership for Disaster ResilienceAs we look toward building more resilient cities, we’re working on new ways to redesign how our water, energy, and transportation systems work together.

Learn more about the vital role of well-designed, well-connected systems in the face of future growth, stress, and shock:

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This blog is from 100 Resilient Cities
Pioneered by The Rockefeller Foundation