Friday, June 23, 2017
The Geography of Disaster Risk and Resiliency in America
The Geography of
Disaster Risk and Resiliency in America
In this eBook Route Fifty features a handful of stories
and dispatches from recent trips to Alaska, Oregon and Washington state,
featuring locations that provide snapshots of the very real dangers and
disruptions that emergency planners, first responders, public officials and other
stakeholders face, plus the strategies and technologies helping our communities
be more resilient.
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What's Inside This New Route Fifty eBook
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Portage,
Alaska: A Town
That Sank and (Mostly) Disappeared
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Oso,
Washington: How
a Deadly Landslide Improved Access to Better Mapping in Washington State
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Bend,
Oregon: The Very
Real Dangers of Building in the Wildland-Urban Interface
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Thank you. Real Men Read. June 2, 2017
On behalf of KIPP DC: Discover Academy, please allow me to
extend our deepest gratitude for your participation in Real Men Read Day June
2, 2017! We had more than 30 Readers! Because you chose to share your time with
us, more than 300 students of color were able to hear, see, and experience men
from all different backgrounds and career paths reading to them and sharing
their life’s stories! We are so incredibly grateful for your service daily to
our community and want to share our appreciation for you making us a priority!
The day was tremendously impactful and a true testament of the care and concern
many of you have for children of color. For that, we say thank you! We
hope to see you again next year and for years to come! Stay connected! Click
below you will see some of our highlights from Real Men Read Day!
Again, thank you for showing up to share with our students, and
we wish you the very best as you continue to serve!
Yours in service,
Dr. Renix
Yours in Service,
Dr. Alicia Renix
2600 Douglass Rd. SE
Washington D.C. 20020
202.315.6048
From: Alicia Renix [mailto:delivery@smilebox.com]
Sent: Tuesday, June 20, 2017 9:49 PM
To: Renix, Alicia <alicia.renix@kippdc.org>
Subject: RMR 2017
Sent: Tuesday, June 20, 2017 9:49 PM
To: Renix, Alicia <alicia.renix@kippdc.org>
Subject: RMR 2017
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2017. IEM. The Rising Tide of Renters – A Vulnerable Population
The Rising Tide of Renters – A Vulnerable Population
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Posted: 21 Jun 2017 07:56 AM PDT
Author: Gary Scronce, Director of
Preparedness Programs, IEM
This article was originally
published in the IAEM Bulletin, Vol.
34, No. 6 June 2017.
I’m sure most people do not think of
renters as an especially vulnerable population, from an emergency management
or any other perspective. However, south Louisiana’s (particularly the New
Orleans area’s) recovery from Hurricane Katrina, and now the state of
Louisiana’s recovery from the 2016 floods, makes it clear that without
particular attention to renters who have been affected, recovery of the
entire community moves along more slowly. Prior studies have documented that
“disasters tend to disproportionately damage rental and low-income housing,
which also tends to be rebuilt more slowly,…[1]”.
It is an issue that has become more prominent in the recent past and may be a
trend we continue to observe into the near future. As emergency planners and
managers, we need to take this population into account in our work.
Let’s look at some numbers.
According to Escambia County’s (Florida) Long Term Recovery plan from
Hurricane Ivan, renters comprised the majority of applicants for emergency
housing assistance from FEMA[2].
This despite the fact that the fraction of renters in Pensacola was 29.9%,
about the Florida average and below the US average of 33.1% in 2005[3]. Following Hurricanes Katrina and
Rita, 71.5% of the 188,251 housing units in Orleans parish were damaged. At
that time, the percentage of renters in New Orleans was 36.37%, a little more
than 3% higher than the US average.
What has happened to the renter vs.
homeowner balance since then? According to a report by Harvard University’s
Joint Center for Housing Studies released in June 2015[4], the rate of homeownership had fallen for 8 years in
a row, down to 63.7% in 1Q 2015, from a peak of 69% in 2004. Similar results
are reflected in a report from the real estate website Trulia, which showed
that “the share of households renting increased from 36.1% in 2016 to 41.1
percent in 2014[5].” As might be
expected, the proportion of renters is greatest among the largest metro
areas, with New York City at 56.9% and all of the top ten metro areas studied
over 42.5%. Homeownership percentages may improve again, but until then, the
vulnerabilities inherent to renters preparing for and recovering from
disasters apply to a greater percentage of the U.S. population.
The obstacles faced by renters in
preparing for and recovering from disasters were spelled out by Burby in
Urban Affairs Review in 2003[6],
summarized well by MDC as follows[7]:
§ There is less
financial incentive for both renters and owners of rental property to pursue
mitigation measures to increase resiliency to disasters than for homeowners.
§ A greater percentage
of renters than homeowners are otherwise socially vulnerable to disasters,
e.g. low-income, single women, minority.
§ Shorter tenure in a
location by renters likely means less exposure to public information on
preparedness and mitigation, maybe less familiarity with local risks and a
smaller social network in the area.
On top of this, fewer renters than
homeowners carry insurance, increasing their vulnerability to a wide range of
disasters. “A 2016 Insurance Information Institute poll conducted by ORC
International found that 95 percent of homeowners had homeowners insurance.
Among renters, only 41 percent said they had renters insurance[8].” I was not able to find specifically the percentage
of renters with flood insurance, but it is realistic to assume that fewer
renters than homeowners buy flood insurance as well.
So what can be done? It was not as
easy as I might have hoped to quickly find good examples or suggestions for
reducing vulnerability for renters, but here are some starting points.
§ Ensure that your local
jurisdiction (city or county) starts developing a disaster housing strategy
and plan in advance of the next disaster, and encourage development of one at
the state level if one does not already exist. Make sure the planning process
specifically addresses renters in the population.
§ Consider what your
community can do in advance of a disaster to line up incentives for landlords
and developers to act quickly to restore affordable rental housing across all
neighborhoods and areas within the community.
§ Work with all of your
whole community partners to develop and deploy public information and
outreach campaigns to stress the need for renters to obtain both renters
insurance and flood insurance to reduce their personal disaster risk and
improve resiliency. Renters can purchase flood insurance. The NFIP supports
that. A number of renters insurance and auto insurance providers allow
consumers to purchase flood insurance in a package with their other products.
§ Also ensure that
renters understand what paperwork will be required to obtain disaster
assistance from FEMA. For instance, if tenants do not have a formal written
rental agreement with their landlord, that lack of a paper trail makes it
more difficult for local and federal governments to provide financial relief
to help with recovery after a disaster [9].
Moving forward, emergency managers
and policy makers should become more informed about issues that challenged
renters recovering from prior disasters, and learn from what has been done
before. MDC’s paper “When Disaster Strikes – Promising Practices – Renters,[10]” lists potential strategies and
contains some case study examples. “Treading Water: Renters in Post-Sandy New
York City” by Make The Road New York in 2014 provides some good quantitative
information. They should certainly also follow what happens with the
renter/landlord-targeted programs about to be implemented as part of recovery
from Louisiana’s 2016 floods. Several programs are being launched to restore
the state’s inventory of available, affordable rental housing units,
including[11]:
§ The Multifamily
Restoration Gap Program, which will make $38 million in loans available for
development of multifamily housing with units priced at affordable rental
rates
§ The Louisiana Permanent
Supportive Housing program, which subsidizes rental housing for persons with
disabilities
§ The Restore Louisiana
Neighborhood Landlord Rental Program, which will provide $36 million in loans
for repairs to flood-damaged rental properties, as well as in-fill of vacant
property, in residential areas
§ The Rapid Rehousing
Program that helps flood survivors, including renters, obtain housing
quickly.
Renters are a significant and
growing percentage of our communities. Until they recover within the
community, the whole community will not have recovered. Taking action to
increase their preparedness and plan for their recovery will help improve the
resilience of the entire community.
[1]
The Long Term Recovery of New Orleans’ Population after Hurricane Katrina,
Elizabeth Fussell, Am Behav Sci, September 2015
[2]
FEMA (2005). “Escambia County Long-Term Recovery Plan.”
[3]
U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Current Housing Unit Damage Estimates:
Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma. 2006 Retrieved from: www.huduser.org/publications/pdf/GulfCoast_Hsngdmgest.pdf
[4]
“The State of the Nation’s Housing 2015,” Joint Center for Housing Studies of
Harvard University, June 24, 2015
[5]
“The Steady Rise of Renting”, The Atlantic CITYLAB, Richard Florida, Feb 16,
2016
[6]
Burby, R. et al. (2003). The tenure trap: The vulnerability of renters to
joint natural and technological disasters. Urban Affairs Review, 2003, 39,
p.32.
[7]
When Disaster Strikes – Promising Practices – Renters, MDC, Inc.
[9]
https://superstormresearchlab.org/2013/10/23/tenants-an-overlooked-vulnerable-population-in-disaster-research-and-recovery/
[10]
When Disaster Strikes – Promising Practices – Renters, MDC, Inc.
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June 29, 2017, Housing Challenges Facing LGBTQ Communities. Urban Institute.
Urban Institute Events
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