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Friday, March 8, 2019
March 15, 2019 DEADLINE..MITRE Corporation Is Hiring 9th and 10th Grade Students For A STEM Research & Development Internship...Apply Before The Deadline March 15!!! ??? ?
March 14, 2019. Emergency Management and Preparedness-Inclusion of Persons with Disabilities Webinar.
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Webinar
Reminder –
March
14th, 2019
Webinars begin at 2.30pm EST/1.30pm CST/12.30pm
MST/11.30am PST/9:30am Hawaii.
Registration: Free on-line at http://www.adapresentations.org/registration.php Registration closes at midnight, March 13th, 2019. Of the phases of the disaster cycle, the recovery phase is the longest but the least explored with respect to the experiences of people with disabilities. This session will provide an overview of what research reveals about the needs of people with disabilities and their families post-disaster. Barriers to the recovery process as well as the resource and service roles of state and local agencies, FEMA, and voluntary organizations post-disaster will be discussed. Learning objectives:
Attendees will
identify recovery services and resources typically available through various
organizations post-disaster.
Presenters:
Dr. Laura M. Stough is Associate Professor of Educational Psychology and Assistant Director at the Center on Disability and Development at Texas A&M University. She directs Project REDD: Research and Education on Disaster and Disability and currently serves as Chair of the Disability Task Force on Emergency Management for the Division of Emergency Management for the State of Texas and as Chair of the Emergency Management Special Interest Group for the Association of University Centers on Disability.
Dr. Amy N. Sharp is the Director of the Texas Center for Disability Studies at
the University of Texas at Austin. She has developed online directories and
resource guides used by county extension agents and disaster recovery case
managers throughout Texas. Dr. Sharp has conducted evaluation and research
studies on how hurricanes impact individuals with disabilities.
Originally from California, Elizabeth Hong moved to Texas four years ago. Liz is the mother of four children, two with disabilities. She is a former special education teacher, with a passion for educational rights, mental health and helping to support families. She works at Texas Parent to Parent on the Family Support team providing information for families whose child has a disability.
To view upcoming sessions, go to http://www.adapresentations.org/schedule.php
To see previous sessions, go to http://www.adapresentations.org/archive.php
The information presented in this webinar is intended solely as
informal guidance, and is neither a determination of legal rights or
responsibilities by NIDILRR.
Copyright © 2019 Pacific ADA Center, All rights reserved.
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Black Emergency Managers Association
International
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1231 Good Hope Road S.E.
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Washington, D.C. 20020
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Office: 202-618-9097
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bEMA International
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"It is my belief that
the best results in business come from a creative process, from the ability to
see things differently from everyone else, and from finding answers to problems
that are not bound by the phrase 'we have always done it this way.' "
Wayne Rogers
Wednesday, March 6, 2019
NPR: Search The Thousands of Disaster Buyouts FEMA Didn't Want You To See
Search The Thousands of Disaster Buyouts FEMA
Didn't Want You To See
https://www.npr.org/2019/03/05/696995788/search-the-thousands-of-disaster-buyouts-fema-didnt-want-you-to-see
https://www.npr.org/2019/03/05/696995788/search-the-thousands-of-disaster-buyouts-fema-didnt-want-you-to-see
For many families, the nightmare of a catastrophic flood
is only just getting started when the waters recede. But that nightmare — one
that has become increasingly
common across the United States — may be worse depending on who you
are.
An NPR investigation found that white communities
nationwide have disproportionately received more federal buyouts after a
disaster than communities of color. Federal disaster aid is allocated based on
a cost-benefit calculation meant to minimize taxpayer risk. That means money is
not necessarily doled out to those who need it most but rather to those whose
property is worth more — and to those who own property in the first place. That
mirrors the existing racial wealth
gap in the United States.
NPR analyzed records from a Federal Emergency Management
Agency database of more than 40,000 property acquisitions, or
"buyouts," funded by the agency from 1989 through 2017. The program
buys homes from eligible homeowners who opt in. It then turns those lots into
open space.
Our analysis shows that most of the buyouts in the FEMA
database happened in neighborhoods that were more than 85 percent white and
non-Hispanic, even though disasters affect all kinds of communities. For
context, the U.S. is 62 percent white and non-Hispanic.
NPR obtained the records after suing FEMA under the
Freedom of Information Act. We then used the five-digit ZIP codes associated
with the property addresses to compare the buyout data with U.S. Census Bureau
data on demographics. We chose Census Bureau data sets that best corresponded
with the time frame of each buyout record.
Some ZIP codes won't come up with many — or any —
records, which could mean that FEMA buyouts didn't happen there during the time
period for which we received records or that those records don't appear in the
database.
But other ZIP codes have hundreds of records. After
Hurricane Floyd in 1999, the database shows, hundreds of households took
buyouts along the East Coast in cities like Manville, N.J. (08835), where part
of our investigation focused. The records indicate hundreds of buyouts after
Hurricane Katrina in 2005 in places like Pearlington, M.S. (39572), which is
close to where that catastrophic storm made landfall.
Even without including 2017's Hurricane Harvey, records for ZIP codes in
flood-prone Houston (like 77040) show more than 1,600 buyouts dating back to
1995.
The database also includes more than just severe
flooding: A 1998 landslide
resulted in dozens of buyouts in Kelso, Wash. (98626), and in 1991, an ice storm
wreaked havoc across parts of Indiana (46060 and 46952, among
others), according to the database.
Below, you can search for FEMA buyouts in your ZIP code
or any other part of the country. Any records found will be returned with the
most recent ones first. The federal "Fiscal Year" shown can refer to
when the disaster occurred or when federal funds were allocated. You can also
download the entire database.
How Federal Disaster Money Favors The Rich
In the early and mid-20th century, fewer than 20 percent
of U.S. counties experienced a
disaster each year. Today, it's about 50 percent. According to the 2018 National Climate Assessment, climate
change is already driving more severe droughts, floods and wildfires in the
U.S. And those disasters are expensive. The federal government spends
billions of dollars annually helping communities rebuild and prevent future
damage.
But an NPR investigation has found that across the country, white
Americans and those with more wealth often receive more federal dollars after a
disaster than do minorities and those with less wealth. Federal aid
isn't necessarily allocated to those who need it most; it's allocated according
to cost-benefit calculations meant to minimize taxpayer risk.
Tuesday, March 5, 2019
March 9, 2019. Washington, D.C. Feed the Hood Project. Volunteers Wanted.
Volunteers Needed
Volunteers Needed! Join us this Saturday, March 9 at Barry Farms Recreation Center. Feed the Hood is a monthly grassroots project coordinated by NBUF and its community partners to ensure the less fortunate have access to food, clothing, personal hygiene items and medical supplies. During the event, NBUF, in collaboration with volunteers and community service groups, prepare an average of 200 care packages that are distributed to homeless men and women that reside in NBUF-DC's sponsored park, Shepherd Park. Register to volunteer or bring supplies via the link below.
Monday, March 4, 2019
Unfold a chair, sit at the table. Will you help lead Sister Cities International?
“We are now faced with the fact that tomorrow is today. We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now. In
this unfolding conundrum of life and history there is such a thing as being too
late. Procrastination is still the thief of time. Life often leaves us
standing bare, naked and dejected with a lost opportunity . . .This may well be mankind’s last chance to choose between chaos or
community.”
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,
‘Where Are We Going From Here: Chaos or Community’.
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Monday, February 25, 2019
Opportunity: CDEMA Procurement. February 2019
Interested Bidders are invited to request the full bidding
documents via email procurement@cdema.org.
Deadline for Pre-Qualification submission is 18th March
2019.
Please click here for
further details.
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