“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.” -Alvin Toffler

Thursday, October 27, 2022

Training Opportunity-E0202 Debris Management Planning for State Tribal Territorial and Local Officials



FEMA EMI News
Website Update

E0202 Debris Management Planning for State, Tribal, Territorial, and Local Officials

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Emmitsburg, MD — You are subscribed to EMI News for FEMA. The following information has recently been updated, and is now available on https://training.fema.gov/emi.aspx

1749-Training Opportunity-E0202 Debris Management Planning for State Tribal Territorial and Local Officials

E0202 Debris Management Planning for State, Tribal, Territorial, and Local Officials

Course Description:
This course will better prepare participants to fully plan for, respond to, and recover from major debris-generating events. 

Read more in Training Opportunity 1749.

Emergency Management Institute Mission

To support the Department of Homeland Security and FEMA’s goals by improving the competencies of the U.S. officials in Emergency Management at all levels of government to prepare for, protect against, respond to, recover from, and mitigate the potential effects of all types of disasters and emergencies on the American people. Read more...

  

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

DDOT and FHWA are hosting the 12th Annual DBE Summit & Networking Event on Friday, November 4, 2022

 

DDOT and FHWA are hosting the 12th Annual DBE Summit & Networking Event on Friday, November 4, 2022 from 8:30 am - 2:00 pm at the Kellogg Conference Center, Gallaudet University, 800 Florida Avenue, NE, Washington, DC  20002.  
The Summit is OPEN to ALL VENDORS!  

This is the Infrastructure Session and will include the following presentations:

  •  Infrastructure Investments and Jobs Act Funding Presentation
  • DDOT's A/E Schedule
  •  Forecast of Opportunities in Operations
  • Forecast of Opportunities in Infrastructure
The event is hybrid so participants may register for in-person or virtual attendance.  In-person attendees will receive free parking and lunch.  

Registration is available using the QR code below or here:  https://dcnet.webex.com/dcnet/j.php?RGID=r906c1981b6c5812abc81cbaa407d458a.

We look forwawrd to seeing you at the 12th Annual DBE Summit & Networking Event.

Warm Regards,

Andrea Jackson, Deputy Compliance Officer

Small Business Inclusion Office/Office of Civil Rights

DDOT

FEMA Releases National Continuous Improvement Guidance.

  NIMS Alert 24-22
National Incident Management System


About NIMS


  

  FEMA Releases National Continuous Improvement Guidance


FEMA published the National Continuous Improvement Guidance, which provides an approach to conduct consistent and rigorous continuous improvement activities before, during and after real-world incidents. The guidance is intended for the whole community, including state, local, tribal and territorial partners; nongovernmental organizations; the private sector; and other organizations with emergency management functions.

To download the guidance, please visit https://preptoolkit.fema.gov/web/cip-citap/ncig.

FEMA will host a series of 60-minute webinar sessions to launch the National Continuous Improvement Guidance. The webinars will provide an overview of the guidance and discuss revisions based on feedback from the national engagement period held earlier this year. Guest speakers will discuss the importance of continuous improvement in emergency management. Webinar sessions will be offered through mid-December 2022. To register for a webinar, please visit https://preptoolkit.fema.gov/web/cip-citap/events.
Webinar 1: 1 - 2 p.m. ET on Nov. 1. (Guest Speaker: MaryAnn Tierney, FEMA Region 3 Administrator)
Webinar 2: 12 - 1 p.m. ET on Nov. 7. (Guest Speaker: John Benson, Director, Iowa Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management)
Webinar 3: 4 - 5 p.m. ET on Nov. 17. (Guest Speaker: Melanie Bartis, Deputy Coordinator, Harris County Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Management)
Webinar 4 - Spanish-speaking session: 11 a.m. - 12 noon ET on Dec. 2. (Guest Speakers: Jose Marchand, Lead Continuity Analyst, and Michelle Ortiz, Continuous Improvement Coordinator, FEMA Region 2, Puerto Rico Caribbean Area Office)
Webinar 5: 10 - 11 a.m. ET on Dec. 13. (Guest Speaker: Clint Osborn, Deputy Director, District of Columbia Homeland Security and Emergency Management Agency)
For questions, please contact FEMA-CITAP@fema.dhs.gov.

About NIMS


NIMS provides stakeholders across the whole community with the shared vocabulary, systems and processes to successfully deliver the capabilities described in the National Preparedness System. It defines operational systems that guide how personnel work together during incidents.
Learn More


Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Disaster Philanthropy 2022: COVID-19 and beyond November 17, 2022 2PM ET

Each year, millions of philanthropic dollars are distributed to thousands of organizations across the charitable sector in the U.S. and other countries in response to disasters and humanitarian crises worldwide. 

To help understand where funding comes from and how the dollars are used, the Center for Disaster Philanthropy (CDP) and Candid produce the annual Measuring the State of Disaster Philanthropy report.

We are hosting a webinar on Nov. 17, at 2 p.m. ET to highlight findings from the forthcoming 2022 Measuring the State of Disaster Philanthropy report. Panelists will include:

  • Tanya Gulliver-Garcia (moderator), Director of Learning and Partnerships, CDP
  • Vicki Jay, CEO, the National Alliance for Children’s Grief
  • Elaine Martyn, Senior Vice President, from Fidelity Charitable
  • Grace Sato, Director of Research, from Candid
They will discuss philanthropic and governmental response to disasters that occurred in 2020 and the unusual impact of COVID-19 on philanthropic giving.

            

Please register and joi








Invitation: Webinar Pathways to Near Net Zero Communities, 3rd November, UTC 7:00 - 9:00 am/ CET 9:00-11:00

Dear MCR2030 Community,

I would like to inivite you to participate to this event co-organised by Chengdu, Metropolis and C40 Cities in which we will debate on how to built Net Zero communities and how small climate actions can make the difference towards more resilients cities. 

I would also be grateful if you can share this information in your networks.

Thank you! 

How to design good public policies to foster a favourable climate for the green transition?


From Chengdu to Barcelona, from Bogotá to Toronto, a growing number of metropolises are looking at the neighbourhood, district, or community level as a focus for their climate efforts.

During this webinar organised along with Chengdu and C40 you will learn from the experience of government representatives and climate action professionals on:

· How to design good public policies to help foster favourable climate for green transition
· Guidelines, approaches, and index that help grass-root communities navigate their way to net zero transition
· How to adapt different methodologies to various types of communities and neighbourhoods

 

When: 3 November 2022,  9h CET / 15h CST 
Language: English and Chinese
 
 

 

 

You will find more information about the webinar on our webpage.

Call for Presenters. 2023 NVOAD Conference May 8-11, 2023

BEMA International members:

Get involved.

 NVOAD has the 4 C's.  Within BEMA International we have....C5&P
  • Cooperation,
  • Collaboration, 
  • Communication,  
  • Coordination, 
  • Community engagement, and  
  • Partnering 
Expand on this if needed.  

BEMA International



National VOAD is excited to announce the theme for the 2023 National VOAD Conference being held May 8-11 in St. Louis, Missouri is "Gateway to Collaboration".

We need your help in putting together a great conference! Please consider submitting a proposal to present a workshop at the 2023 National VOAD Conference.
Here are some suggested topics for workshops that we will slate as tracks in the final schedule appropriately:

Training and Education
Leading practices, continuity planning, raising the next generation of leaders, resource sharing, tutorials or guidance on old and new subjects

Social Justice in Disaster Response
Case studies, focus on vulnerable populations, social justice implications 

Emerging Practices & Innovation 
Use of technology, new approaches to old problems, creative solutions in limited resource environments

The 4 C's
Creative and diverse partnerships, collaborative programming, cross-sector success stories

All workshop proposals are reviewed and scored by the Conference Workshop Review Committee, which is comprised of representatives from the following stakeholder groups: National VOAD members, partners, board members, and staff. The committee will score and select workshops based on presentations that meet the following five criteria, including:

1. Topic: Relevancy, importance and appropriateness of the topic to the field. Is this a topic that will be of interest to the National VOAD audience?

2. Implementation Goals: Do the stated implementation goals provide the audience with ACTIONABLE knowledge and information?

3. Engagement: Will the presentation engage the National VOAD audience?

4. Quality of Proposal: Does the proposal communicate what the workshop is about?

5. Collaboration: Does this presentation provide an example of collaboration and partnership especially public-private partnerships? 

If you have any questions regarding the request for proposals or the selection process, please contact the National VOAD Conference Office by sending an email to conference@nvoad.org or calling 225-408-4459.


Deadline: Friday, December 9, 2022




Humanitarian Basics. Humanitarian Principles, Standards, and Frameworks

Humanitarian Basics

Humanitarian Principles, Standards, and Frameworks

Are you new to the humanitarian sector? This free online course introduces the humanitarian context including its evolution, structure, principles and standards, and recent trends. Through a real-world scenario, you will experience humanitarian challenges and apply the key principles and standards that guide effective humanitarian work.
Get Started




FEMA Publishes Support Materials for Emergency Management Partners October 2022

bullhornNew support materials are available to governments to help them apply for a FEMA grant program to make them more resilient. 

The materials aid state, local, tribal, and territorial emergency management with submitting more successful Hazard Mitigation Grant Program applications. Materials also help them reduce the time it takes to receive awards. FEMA anticipates the guides will help HMGP funding reach more communities.

The program provides funding to state, local, tribal and territorial governments so they can develop hazard mitigation plans and rebuild in a way that reduces or mitigates, disaster losses in their communities. When requested by an authorized representative, this grant funding is available after a presidentially declared disaster.

In alignment with the “people first” approach outlined in the 2022-2026 FEMA Strategic Plan, these materials provide an overview of program requirements, sample applications and step-by-step instructions that aim to reduce barriers. Guides are especially beneficial to disadvantaged communities that may have difficulties accessing the program. 

The support materials include information for the most requested HMGP project types for various mitigation activities such as acquisition, elevation, flood risk reduction, hurricane wind retrofitting, and soil stabilization. FEMA plans to develop more application support materials for additional project types.   

Visit FEMA.gov to access the HMGP support materials.

FEMA Support Materials for communities. October 2022

Application Support Materials for the Hazard Mitigation Grant Program

The following application support materials are available to better support communities and provide detailed information on how to submit a complete and eligible application for funding. The materials below cover 13 of the most requested HMGP project types:

  • Acquisition and demolition
  • Advance assistance
  • Community safe rooms
  • Elevation
  • Flood risk reduction
  • Generators
  • Hurricane wind retrofit
  • Planning
  • Warning sirens and systems
  • Soil stabilization
  • Wildfire
  • Post wildfire soil stabilization
  • Post wildfire flood and sediment

More application support materials will be developed for additional project types in the near future.

The goal of the application support materials is to reduce barriers that prevent some communities from applying to the grant program. Each project type includes an overview of the requirements, guidance on submitting a complete application, and job aids on technical reviews and environmental and historic preservation (EHP) reviews. The following information is intended for guidance only and is not a request for information.





Monday, October 24, 2022

Enough. Why Disadvantaged Communities Cannot Wait. ThyBlackMan.com

 


Why Disadvantaged Communities Cannot Wait.

October 23, 2022 by Staff  

(ThyBlackMan.com) Anyone who has not been living under a rock throughout their lifetime and has the ability to interpret history in an honest manner should be able to understand that the chronic and egregious effects of discrimination and greed have always been at the forefront of most of society’s problems. The detrimental effects of these forms of ignorance have long prevented human beings across all ethnic, economic, age, gender, disability, and religious backgrounds from being able to reach our collective potential as people to solve life’s problems and live in harmony.

Sadly, for far too long, those challenges and more continue to be exacerbated by our reliance upon and broken promises of the dream-selling people we naively elect and appoint to public office and government positions, but who repeatedly fail to deliver anything worthwhile.

Instead of embracing common sense and reality by recognizing that the overwhelming majority of such officials care less about anyone outside of their immediate families (and some feel the same about their own relatives too), citizens continue to allow those they have empowered to make life-altering decisions on your behalf to do so without unnegotiable expectations and effective consequences. As a result, many of these decision-makers who are supposed to be ‘serving’ in elected or appointed government capacities are instead reaping the rewards of holding onto opportunistic seats where they continue to abuse the public trust by irresponsibly misallocating taxpayer dollars, taking advantage of inflated salaries and benefits (which often include participating in Deferred Retirement Option Plans or another comfy pension plan), wasting public money on costly expenses tied to travel and attending meritless conferences, meetings, trade missions, and association memberships that fail to produce life-improving results for residents of the city, county, or state which such elected officials or appointed government employees represent.


Together…citizen complacency, governmental negligence, and malfeasance are causing catastrophic problems for communities across the nation, with the worst impact being felt by distressed urban communities of color.

Research by a number of reliable sources like the Urban Institute and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, reveal income inequality continues to rise at alarming levels. According to a 2015 report published in the Urban Institute, “Income gaps are only part of the story when it comes to economic inequalities in America.

Wealth inequality is even greater. The racial wealth gap is 3 times larger than the racial income gap!” The same report cautioned that wealth inequality is increasing, young Americans are falling behind, racial wealth disparities worsen with age, and solutions such as “Helping people enroll in automatic savings vehicles, as well as reforming policies like the mortgage interest tax deduction so it benefits all families, will help improve wealth inequality and promote saving opportunities for all Americans” should be the preferred path. (Signe-Mary McKernan, Caroline Ratcliffe, and C. Eugene Steuerle).

Urban and rural communities throughout every state today do not have any more time to waste. For the average middle to low-income person in America, getting swept up in the disillusionary hype associated with partisan politics, voter registration drives, making financial contributions to campaigns, and voting in elections has continued to prove fruitless to them, while this ‘systematic game’ continues to be nothing more than a ploy towards seizing privilege, power, and money for candidates and those involved with their campaigns who possess personal agendas. Disagree with that observation? Consider another issue involving today’s dysfunctional systems of government. 

According to OpenSecrets (opensecrets.org), a nonpartisan research group that tracks money in U.S. politics and its effect on elections and public policy, Federal-level candidates, and political committees will spend more than $9.3 billion on 2022 federal midterm elections.

State-level candidates, party committees, and ballot measure committees are on track to raise more than $7 billion during the 2022 election cycle. Billions more are being raised and mis-spent (in 2022 and each election year after) on campaigns for candidates running for Mayoral, City and County Council seats, County Executive/CEO, District Attorney/Chief Prosecutor, and other Municipal-level and County-level positions.

Yet, the majority of citizens and small businesses in practically every city across the nation struggle (financially) to survive day-to-day, and income-eligible homeowners are lied to or ignored by City/County-sponsored Home Repair Programs that are supposed to assist them with limited repairs to their homes, although their same city, county, and state governments expect these homeowners to continually pay property taxes each year which the government abuses. Requiring economically disadvantaged people to do more and pay more with less is a heartless and dangerous expectation.

This, in addition to the dismissive mindset and careless misappropriation of taxpayer dollars by those in governmental positions, is atrocious.

Instead, transforming blighted and rustic regions into eye-pleasing, residential and business-friendly neighborhoods benefit entire communities-at-large. The lack of living wage job and trade skill opportunities available to everyone (including ex-offenders & people with low or no skills), unaffordable housing, increases in utility rates, rising food costs, unfair taxation which favors corporate America & the
wealthy, abusive credit reporting practices in the employment hiring process and rental housing decisions, and eye-bulging gas prices combine to force even the most level-headed people to consider lifestyles of desperation that sometimes involve illegal activities. All of which can be interrupted or prevented if voters would make more conscious decisions about who they choose to vote into office, demand much better from people working in government positions, and discover the power of economic boycotts to produce change.

Click on the following tool designed by OECD.org to gauge your own household income, how we compare with the rest of the U.S. and other countries, and see how income inequality affects your ideal world: https://www.compareyourincome.org/. 

Staff Writer; Santura Pegram 

This brother is a prolific writer and socially conscious business professional who has helped to advise small businesses; nonprofit organizations; city, county, and state governmental committees; elected officials; professional athletes; and school systems. He was a one-time protégé-aide to the “Political Matriarch of the State of Florida” – the late Honorable M. Athalie Range.

He can be reached at: Santura.Pegram@ThyBlackMan.com.

 

Black Emergency Managers Association International
Washington, D.C.  20020

 

 

bEMA International
Cooperation, Collaboration, Communication, Coordination, Community engagement, and  Partnering (C5&P)

 

A 501 (c) 3 organization

 

 

 

 

 


“You have to act as if it were possible to radically transform the world. And you have to do it all the time.” —Angela Davis

 

 





Outstanding Comment to Previous Post: Recovery\Debris Removal. Florida. Who has the contracts? Follow the money. October 2022

 https://www.blackemergmanagersassociation.org/2022/10/recoverydebris-removal-florida-who-has.html

Comment:  

NOTHING NEW! T'his is exactly what happened after Rita and Katrina in New Orleans. FEMA is very much aware and if FEMA let it happen again then there are those withing the agency that are benefiting from this atrocity to the resident of those communities.

FEMA has the information and history of many of the contractors and can and should be able to address this issue directly.

What is more important FEMA can Mission Assign the National Guard to remove debris which is hazardous or necessary to be removed to restore order or needed health and safety. The FCO for the disaster should be contacted and someone...YOU? should make a demand that they do their damn job before we get the congress involved in seeing who is benefiting from this deliberate misuse of federal funds.



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