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Let's Stop Improvising Disaster Recovery
Sun, 2014-08-17 21:28 — Kathy Gilbeauxsubmitted by John Patten
rockinst.org - by James W. Fossett - July 2013
“We can surge troops and equipment, but you can’t surge trust.” - General Carter Ham
The American intergovernmental system needs to stop improvising the way it manages long-term recovery from major disasters such as Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy and the terrorist attacks of 9/11. From financing to decisions about the proper response to long-term climate change, the American system for disaster recovery is ad hoc, uncoordinated, and reinvented from scratch after every major disaster. As a result, recoveries have been lengthy and conflictual, imposed considerable welfare costs on families and businesses, and have resulted in only marginal improvement in the vulnerability of areas afflicted by these disasters.
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