Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Community Resilience and Personal Responsibility

In its recently released report, Personal Preparedness in America: Findings from the 2009 Citizen Corps National Survey, FEMA discovered that we as individuals are not as prepared for disaster as we should be. The report (www.citizencorps.gov/ready/2009findings.shtm) provides a detailed look into individual perceptions of disaster readiness and responsibilities as well as interesting evaluations of demographic and contextual insights. I don’t think that anyone should be very surprised by this report.

Since Hurricane Andrew (maybe Hugo), American expectations of outside assistance particularly federal assistance have grown steadily, rapidly and unrealistically. Perhaps most evident in Katrina, our citizens and our communities seem increasingly to believe that FEMA will be on site at almost any level of disaster within 48 hours and will fix the problem. This report reveals, for instance, that more than 60 percent of the respondents plan to rely on emergency responders in the first 72 hours following a disaster despite repeated warnings from governments at all levels to the contrary. As interestingly, even among those who deem themselves prepared for disaster, the survey finds that most do not have adequate family plans and lack even a basic understanding of their community’s plans.

This problem is only a failure of the federal government in that we continue to believe that we can craft national solutions to local problems. At its heart, this is an indication of community failure. Very few communities have coherent, highly coordinated, individual preparedness efforts with a common message across jurisdictions and well thought ways to transmit the message to the full fabric of their societies. I am sure that there are some. In fact I highlighted one in my posting of March 24, 2009, the “I’m Ready Campaign” in Shelby County, Tennessee. The FEMA report, however, says that our communities are not doing enough or are not doing it right.

I am a big advocate of FEMA’s Citizen Corps. The thousands of Citizen Corps councils across the nation are in exactly the right place to solve this challenge. Citizen Corps hasn’t had greater success because communities continue to rely on federal funding of the councils, an expectation which belies the very name of their mission “citizen” corps. No matter how hard we try, the nation will never provide the resources to fully support all the nation’s communities in this way -- nor should we. This is a local community problem. Federal funding of what should be local initiatives only continues to foster the belief that preparing communities to recover from disaster is a federal responsibility. Communities have an inherent responsibility to protect their citizens. They need to put the skin in the game to get individual preparedness right.

2 comments:

  1. Mr. Edwards,

    I really enjoy your postings. I agree that Citizen Corps is in a unique position to assist in our recovery and resiliency efforts. We should support programs such as these to better prepare our Nation for the inevitable disastrous events that will occur. I was proud to provide a 5 star rating for some of the Citizen Corps ideas on the DHS Dialogue.

    Faron

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  2. Mr. Edwards,

    I have to mention that the idea that Preparedness, Resiliency and Recovery are a local issue is true, but false at the same time.

    “This problem is only a failure of the federal government in that we continue to believe that we can craft national solutions to local problems.”(CARRI- BLOG Tuesday, September 8, 2009 - Community Resilience and Personal Responsibility.)

    It is clear that though disasters may be localized, they do impact the entire Nation in a very negative way.

    It reminds me of a virus, such as H1N1, where the disaster may begin locally, its negative effects can spread Nationally.

    By relying on State and local governments, local programs, and other locally focal initiatives to implement their own remedies to disaster, we subject our entire Nation to their successes and/or failures.

    The federal government is in the unique position to see the “big picture” of disasters and how they impact our Nation, as well as having the resources, the funds and the responsibility to protect our Nation as a whole from disastrous epidemics that can follow such events.

    We should never allow a single State in our Union to decide alone, how it will protect us all from a disastrous event. The efforts we undertake should be both Federal and Local, not one or the other.

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