2013 ncse conference tie briefing packet

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NCSE Conference 2013 Disasters and Environment: Science, Preparedness and Resilience 13 th National Conference on Science, Policy and the Environment Washington, DC| January 15-17, 2013 Symposium 15 Tuesday, January 15, 3:45 - 5:15pm EST Coastal Cities: Planning for Resilience, Adaptation, and Sustainability - Lessons from the Northeast and Superstorm SandyBreakout Workshop 4 Wednesday, January 16, 2:00 - 5:15pm EST Coastal Communities: Planning for Resilience, Adaptation and Sustainability - Building Resilience in Coastal Communities: An International AgendaBRIEFING PACKET

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Briefing packet on the symposium and workshop hosted by TIE at the 2013 National Council for Science and the Environment's (NCSE) Conference, Disasters and Environment: Science, Preparedness and Resilience

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Page 1: 2013 NCSE Conference TIE Briefing Packet

NCSE Conference 2013

Disasters and Environment:

Science, Preparedness and Resilience 13th National Conference on Science, Policy and the Environment

Washington, DC| January 15-17, 2013

Symposium 15

Tuesday, January 15, 3:45 - 5:15pm EST

―Coastal Cities: Planning for Resilience, Adaptation, and

Sustainability - Lessons from the Northeast and Superstorm

Sandy‖

Breakout Workshop 4

Wednesday, January 16, 2:00 - 5:15pm EST

―Coastal Communities: Planning for Resilience, Adaptation

and Sustainability - Building Resilience in Coastal

Communities: An International Agenda‖

BRIEFING PACKET

Page 2: 2013 NCSE Conference TIE Briefing Packet

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Mission Statements:

The National Council for Science and the Environment's

(NCSE) mission is to improve the scientific basis of

environmental decisionmaking.

The Tufts Institute of the Environment (TIE) is an

interdisciplinary university-wide institute that initiates,

facilitates, and promotes environmental education, research,

and outreach toward a sustainable future.

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Briefing Packet

Table of Contents

Subject Heading Page

Logistics, Contact Information & Social Media ….……………… 3

NCSE Conference Agenda ………….………..…………………… 4 - 8

Our Definition of Resilience ………………………………………. 9 - 10

Summary of Symposium 15 …………………………….....……… 11 -12

Symposium 15: Panelist Profiles ……………………….…….…… 13 - 16

Relevant Publications by Panelists………………..…….…..…….. 17 - 21

Summary of Breakout Workshop 4 …………………...………….. 22 - 23

Workshop 4: Discussant Profiles ……………………..…………….24 - 27

Additional Readings …………………………………….…………..28 - 30

This packet was produced by the staff at the Tufts Institute of the Environment

(TIE) to internally support and foster collaboration within both the

Symposium and Breakout Workshop organized for the 13th annual NCSE

conference. More general info about the conference itself can be found at:

www.environmentaldisasters.net

For revisions, additions, or any other suggestions to this document, please get

in contact with Emily Geosling at [email protected].

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NCSE Conference 2013

Disasters and Environment: Science, Preparedness and Resilience 13th National Conference on Science, Policy and the Environment

Washington, DC| January 15-17, 2013 Conference Venue

Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center

1300 Pennsylvania Ave, NW

Washington, DC 20004

Nearest Metro Stations: Federal Triangle (Orange/Blue lines) and Metro Center

(Orange/Blue/Red lines)

Click here for venue, travel, and lodging info.

Symposium and Workshop Contact information:

Antje Danielson

Administrative Director

Tufts Institute of the Environment

(617) 627-5521 (office)

[email protected]

Emily Geosling

Program Coordinator

Tufts Institute of the Environment

(617) 627-5522 (office)

[email protected]

Lilah Sloane

Program Assistant

National Conference and Educational Assessment Program

The National Council for Science and the Environment

[email protected]

(202) 530-5810 ext. 237

Social Media information

TIE‘s Facebook profile: www.facebook.com/TIEatTufts

TIE‘s Twitter handle: @TIE_Tufts , www.twitter.com/tie_tufts

NCSE Twitter handle: @ncseonline or @ncseconf , www.twitter.com/ncseonline

Twitter hashtags to use when tweeting about the conference: #NCSEconf #disastercon

#SeaLevelRise #Solutions #ClimateChange #SuperstormSandy

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NCSE Conference 2013 Draft Agenda

Symposium 15 and Workshop 4 highlighted

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

7:45 a.m. Registration, Continental Breakfast, Exhibition, and Scientific Poster presentations

open

8:25 a.m. Opening and Introduction

8:30 a.m. Keynote Address: Margareta Wahlström, Special Representative of the Secretary-

General for Disaster Risk Reduction, United Nations

9:00 a.m. Keynote Address: W. Craig Fugate, Administrator, Federal Emergency

Management Agency (FEMA)

9:30 a.m.

Plenary 1: Japan 2011: Cascading Disasters

Moderator: Jon Hamilton, Correspondent, Science Desk, NPR

Timothy Mousseau, Professor of Biological Sciences, University of South

Carolina

Yoshimi Inaba, Chairman, Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc.

Kenichiro Sasae, Ambassador of Japan to the United States*

Admiral Robert Willard (USN, Ret.), Commander, U.S. Pacific Command

2010-2012; President and CEO, Institute of Nuclear Power Operations

10:30 a.m.

Plenary 2: The Gulf Coast: Diverse Converging Issues

Moderator: Admiral Thad Allen (USCG, Ret.), Senior Vice President, Booz Allen

Hamilton

Marcia McNutt, Director, U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)

Bill Walker, Gulf of Mexico Alliance Management Team; Executive

Director, Mississippi Department of Marine Resources

Nancy Rabalais, Executive Director and Professor, Louisiana Universities

Marine Consortium

Bernard Goldstein, Chair, Coordinating Committee of the Gulf Region

Health Outreach Program

11:30 a.m.

Plenary 3: Aridity and Drought and their Consequences

Moderator: Veronica Johnson, News4 Meteorologist, NBC Washington

Margaret Hiza Redsteer, Research Scientist, U.S. Geological Survey

(USGS)

Luc Gnacadja, Executive Secretary, United Nations Convention to Combat

Desertification (UNCCD)

Donald Wilhite, Professor of Applied Climate Science, School of Natural

Resources, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Roger S. Pulwarty, Physical Scientist and Director, National Integrated

Drought Information System (NIDIS), Physical Sciences Division and

OAR/Climate Program Office

12:30 Lunch (on your own)

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p.m.

2:00 p.m.

-

3:30 p.m.

Symposia A:

1. International Roles in Environmental Emergencies

2. Tools to Identify Vulnerability to Disasters: Part 1

3. Inundation Risk and Vulnerability Assessment

4. Preventing Catastrophic Losses to the Cascading Effects of Forest Fire

5. Lifeline Services at the Interface of the Built and Natural Environment

6. Ecosystem Impacts from Nuclear Energy: Lessons from Chernobyl and

Fukushima

7. Building a New Framework for Understanding and Mitigating Disaster

Impacts on Ecosystems

8. Envisioning Resilient and Sustainable Communities

9. Climate Change, Communities, and Risk: Research from the U.S. Global

Change Research Program and National Climate Assessment

10. Applying Models of Human Behavior and Memory in Disasters Across

Space and Time

11. Florida: A Statewide Case Study of Alternative Approaches to Adaptation

and Recovery

3:45 p.m.

-

5:15 p.m.

Symposia B:

12. Tools to Identify Vulnerability to Disasters: Part 2

13. Wildland Fire in a Changing Climate

14. Military Bases and their Communities

15. Coastal Cities: Planning for Resilience, Adaptation, and Sustainability--

Lessons from the Northeast and Superstorm Sandy

16. Climate, Environment, and Readiness (CLEAR) Action Plan for Virginia -

Incorporating Expertise from CA's Bay Area and the City of Philadelphia,

PA

17. Mapping a Path to Resilience: The Intersection of Environmental Disasters,

Ecosystem Services, and Security

18. Enhancing Preparedness and Building Resilience in the Rapidly Changing

Arctic

19. Learning from Disasters: Environmental Disasters as Teachable Moments

20. Informing Disaster Resilience Policy

21. Women and Climate Change Disaster Resilience: Local to Global

Ecological Impacts and Strategies

22. No Regrets Resilience along the Gulf Coast

23. Unmeasured Consequences of Major Natural Disasters and Conflict

5:30 p.m. Keynote Address: Amanda Ripley, Author of The Unthinkable: Who Survives When

Disaster Strikes -- and Why

6:30 p.m. Reception

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

7:45

a.m.

Registration, Continental Breakfast, Exhibition, and Scientific Poster presentations

open

8:30

a.m. Keynote Address: Mark Tercek, President and CEO, The Nature Conservancy

9:00

a.m.

Keynote Address: Jane Lubchenco, Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and

Atmosphere and Administrator, NOAA

9:30

a.m.

Plenary 4: Feedbacks: Environmental Changes Driving Environmental Disasters

Moderator: Juliet Eilperin, National Environmental Reporter, The Washington Post

Gary Machlis, Science Advisor to the Director, National Park Service

James Murley, Executive Director, South Florida Regional Planning Council

Tom Tidwell, Chief, U.S. Forest Service

private sector perspective*

10:30

a.m.

Plenary 5: Climate Change and Disasters

Moderator: Heidi Cullen, Chief Climatologist, Climate Central

Amy Luers, Director, Climate Change, Skoll Global Threats Fund

Kathryn Sullivan, Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Environmental

Observation & Prediction; Deputy Administrator and Acting Chief Scientist,

NOAA

Christopher Shore, Director, Natural Environment and Climate Issues, World

Vision International

Kristie Ebi, Consulting Professor, Department of Medicine, Stanford

University; former Executive Director, IPCC WGII (Impacts, Adaptation, and

Vulnerability) Technical Support Unit

11:30

a.m.

Plenary 6: The "Human Factor" in Environmental Disasters

Moderator: Andrew Revkin, Journalist and Senior Fellow for Environmental

Understanding, Pace University

David Kaufman, Director of Policy and Program Analysis, Federal Emergency

Management Agency (FEMA)

Gerald Galloway, Research Professor, A. James Clark School of Engineering,

University of Maryland

Joe Ruiz, UPS Corporate Contributions Manager & Humanitarian Relief

Program Manager, The UPS Foundation

Kathleen Tierney, Director, Natural Hazards Center, University of Colorado

12:30

p.m. Lunch (on your own)

2:00

p.m. -

5:15

p.m.

Breakout Workshops:

1. Ready or Not: Resilience Indicators

2. Connecting Tools with Decision Makers

3. Grid Collapse: Electric Power and Disasters

4. Coastal Communities: Planning for Resilience, Adaptation and Sustainability -

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Building Resilience in Coastal Communities: An International Agenda

5. Managing the Wildlands-Urban Interface for Fire Safety

6. The U.S. Flood Control Program at 75: Moving from Flood Control to Risk

Management

7. Impacts of Earthquakes on the Environment and Human Health

8. Resilient Buildings and Communities: Responding to Disasters and a Changing

Climate

9. Policies and Frameworks for Integrating Resources into Disaster Planning

10. Reducing Risk and Vulnerability: A New Future in Green Disaster

Management, Climate Change Adaptation and Disaster Risk Reduction

11. Natural Resource Managers and Disaster Risk Reduction: Protecting Coastal

Ecosystems

12. Enhancing Preparedness and Building Resilience in the Rapidly Changing

Arctic: Developing an Action Plan

13. Megadroughts

14. Environmental Emergencies: How to Manage Recent Trends of Climate

Change and Urbanization

15. Building Community Resilience and Capacity through Extension Programs

16. Responding to Drinking Water and Wastewater-Related Disasters and

Preparing for Climate Change

17. Resilient Community Disaster Recovery

18. Legal Issues in Emergency Management

19. Out of Harm's Way: Natural Disasters and Population Movements

20. Supporting Community Resilience

21. Risk Perception and Communication: How We Respond to Disasters

22. Predicting and Responding to Famine

23. Cities and Disasters

5:45

p.m.

NCSE Lifetime Achievement Award

13th Annual John H. Chafee Memorial Lecture: James Lee Witt, Founder and

Chairman, Witt Associates

6:45

p.m. Reception

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

8:00

a.m. Continental Breakfast

8:30

a.m. Keynote Address: Rowan Douglas, Chairman, Willis Research Network

9:00

a.m. Keynote Address: Thomas Loster, Chairman, Munich Re Foundation

9:30

a.m.

Plenary 7: Building Resilient Communities

Moderator: Monica Brady-Myerov, Reporter, NPR

Susan Cutter, Carolina Distinguished Professor and Director, Hazards &

Vulnerability Research Institute, University of South Carolina

Nancy Kete, Managing Director, The Rockefeller Foundation

Gus Felix, Global Head of Operational Risk Management, Citigroup

Joseph Fiksel, Executive Director, Center for Resilience, The Ohio State

University

10:30

a.m.

Plenary 8: No Regrets Resilience: Saving Money, Saving Lives

Moderator: Elizabeth Shogren, Correspondent, Science Desk, NPR*

Howard Kunreuther, James G. Dinan Professor of Decision Sciences & Public

Policy; Co-Director, Risk Management and Decision Processes Center,

Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania

Russ Paulsen, Executive Director of Community Preparedness and Resilience

Services, American Red Cross

Margaret Arnold, Senior Social Development Specialist, The World Bank

Ellis Stanley, Vice President, Western Emergency Management Services,

Dewberry

11:30

a.m. Closing Keynote Address

12:00

p.m. Networking and Buffet Lunch (with youth mentoring tables)

2:00

p.m. Conference ends

Taken from http://www.environmentaldisasters.net/topics/view/81252/

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NCSE Conference 2013

Disasters and Environment: Science, Preparedness and Resilience

A Definition of Resilience

Resilience takes on different meanings for different groups of people. For some, it encompasses disaster mitigation in effort to recover from natural and unnatural disasters. For others, it is understood as planning ahead in order to lessen the effect, or avoid, damage

and disaster in the event of an unforeseen event. For the purpose of finding a common ground at which further and more meaningful discourse can take place, it is important for us

to define resilience in the context of our symposium and workshop session.

Resilience is a community's capacity to adapt successfully in the face of threats and changes. Community resilience is based on the smart and sustainable use of available natural resources and on social constructs that support the community's health and safety. In the face of a changing world and with the availability of new research and development, a community's resilience should be measured and benchmarked in order to continually adapt and increase it.

Our definition has been shaped from scholarly work and literature offering various opinions about resilience, some of which are listed below for further reading:

Berke, Philip R., Kartez, Jack, and Wenger, Dennis. 1993. ―Recovery after disaster:

achieving sustainable development, mitigation and equity.‖ Disaster 17: 93-109. This paper reviews key findings and raises issues that not fully addressed by the predominant disaster recovery literature.

Achievement of equality, mitigation and sustainable development, particularly through local participation in redevelopment planning and institutional cooperation, is the central issue of the review. Previous research and past assumptions about the process by which communities rebuild after a disaster are reviewed. A conceptual and practical significance of this model is then demonstrated by presenting case studies of local recovery experiences, Finally, conclusions on the current understanding of disaster redevelopment planning, as well as implications for public policy and future research are offered.

Burby, R.J., et al. 1999. ―Unleashing the power of planning to create disaster-resistant communities.‖ Journal of the American Planning Association 65(3): 247-258.

Artist Vita Marie Lovett's art quilt Toro, I've a Feeling We're Not in Miami Anymore includes debris found in her south Florida yard after Hurricane Andrew struck in 1994. She describes it as a "photo documentary of Hurricane Andrew's destruction whirling against a background of broken fabric roof trusses and window frames." It is dedicated to her friend Jackie Parker Koger who lost her life as a result of the storm, which was the costliest 22 natural disaster in U.S. history up until that time. After the hurricane, Lovett relocated to Marietta, Georgia, where she creates art quilts with architectural themes from her home studio. Human suffering and losses of lives and property in natural disasters can be reduced with appropriate planning for hazardous areas. Federal policies addressing these problems, however, have yet to recognize the importance of planning as the cornerstone of effective local hazard mitigation. In fact, federal programs make planning more difficult because they encourage the intensive use of hazardous land and shield local governments and private decision makers from financial losses in the disasters that inevitably follow. To unleash the power of planning for hazard mitigation, federal policies must be revised so that they help build local understanding of risk, commitment to hazard mitigation, and support for planning. A number of actions can be taken now to begin moving in this direction. In the long term, however, new legislation is needed to reduce subsidies that sustain and encourage development in hazardous areas and to increase assistance for planning.

Christoplos, I., Mitchell, J. and Liljelund, A. 2001. ―Re-framing risk: the changing context

of disaster mitigation and preparedness.‖ Disasters 25(3): 185-198. This issue of Disasters explores the roles of NGOs and other actors in disaster mitigation and preparedness and also reviews

broad international trends in risk assessment and disaster prevention. The need to address risk, and with that the motivation to improve disaster mitigation and preparedness, has tended to fall between the cracks of grander frameworks of development co-operation and humanitarian assistance. Despite the seemingly glaring need to reduce the horrific impact of floods, droughts and wars, disaster mitigation and preparedness have neither the allure of directly ‗saving lives‗, nor of providing an ‗escape from poverty‗. There are, however, signs that risk management is becoming a min stream concern. Factors such as the need to address factors that do not fit into traditional slots on the relief-development continuum, the rising economic costs of disasters and growing acknowledgement that aid will never cover more

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than a small fraction of the costs of disasters and are all leading to new approaches, priorities and institutional configurations. A realization that dealing with risk and insecurity is a central part of how poor people develop their livelihood strategies has begun to position disaster mitigation and preparedness within many poverty alleviation agendas. A number of long-standing challenges remain; most of all, the complexities of maintaining the political will that is needed to ensure that risk management becomes more than a passing fad.

Cutter, Susan L., Christopher G. Burtony and Christopher T. Emrichz. 2010. ―Disaster

Resilience Indicators for Benchmarking Baseline Conditions.‖ Journal of Homeland Security

and Emergency Management 7(1): 1-18. There is considerable federal interest in disaster resilience as a mechanism for mitigating the impacts to local communities, yet

the identification of metrics and standards for measuring resilience remain a challenge. This paper provides a methodology and a set of

indicators for measuring baseline characteristics of communities that foster resilience. By establishing baseline conditions, it becomes

possible to monitor changes in resilience over time in particular places and to compare one place to another. We apply our methodology

to counties within the Southeastern United States as a proof of concept. The results show that spatial variations in disaster resilience exist

and are especially evident in the rural/urban divide, where metropolitan areas have higher levels of resilience than rural counties.

However, the individual drivers of the disaster resilience (or lack thereof)—social, economic, institutional, infrastructure, and community

capacities—vary widely.

McEntire, D. A. & Myers, A. 2004. ―Preparing communities for disasters: issues and processes for government readiness.‖ Disaster prevention and management 13(2):140-152.

This paper discusses what local governments must do to prepare for various disasters, including terrorist attacks. It provides background information on preparedness and highlights lessons from prior research. It also identifies the process of establishing local ordinances, assessing risk, creating emergency operations plans, acquiring resources, instituting mutual aid agreements, training, exercising and educating the public. Finally, it concludes with recommendations to implement these preparedness measures.

Paton, D., Smith, L. and Violanti, J. 2000. ―Disaster response: risk, vulnerability and

resilience.‖ Disaster Prevention and management, 9(3):173-179. The assumption of an automatic link between disaster exposure and pathological outcomes is increasingly being questioned.

Recognition of the possibility of positive reactions and growth outcomes in this context necessitates the development of alternative models and, in particular, the accommodations of the resilience construct in research and intervention agenda. Reviews possible vulnerability and resilience factors and adopts a risk management framework to outline its potential for modeling the complex relationships between these variables and both growth and distress outcomes. Resilience and vulnerability is discussed at dispositional, cognitive and organizational levels. The paradigm developed here focuses attention on facilitating recovery and growth in professionals for whom disaster work and its consequences is an occupational reality.

Rubin, C. B. 1985. ―The community recovery process in the United States after a major natural disaster.‖ International journal of mass emergency and disasters 3: 9-28.

After studying first-hand how 14 U.S. communities recovered from a major natural disaster, an organizing framework recovery process was developed. That framework depicts the dynamic processes that contribute to an efficient local recovery, including the key elements of recovery and the relationships among those factors. The three key elements are personal leadership, ability to act, and knowledge of what t o do. Of paramount importance to an expeditious recovery are effective intergovernmental relations. In those communities where the speed and quality of recovery was greater, local officials had found ways to (a) ensure more productive intergovernmental relationships, (b) compete effectively for scarce resources, and (c) better manage community- level decision-making during the post-disaster period.

Tobin, Graham A. 1999. ―Sustainability and community resilience: the holy grail of hazards

planning?‖ Environmental Hazards 1: 13- 25. Recent hazard literature frequently refers to sustainability and resilience as the guiding principles behind e!ective hazard

planning. Certainly, structurally organizing communities to minimize e!ects of disasters and to recover quickly by restoring socio-

economic vitality are laudable goals. However, while anticipating such outcomes is relatively easy from a theoretical standpoint, practical

implementation of comprehensive plans is much more elusive. Indeed, relationships between community sustainability/resilience and

hazards are complex involving many social, economic, political and physical factors. A conceptual framework for analysis of

sustainability and resilience, then, is described based on three theoretical models, a mitigation model, a recovery model, and a structural-

cognitive model. This framework is examined using data from Florida, USA, where local context, social and political activities, and

economic concerns present difficulties in application. The question remains, therefore, to what extent can communities truly develop

sustainable and resilient characteristics?

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NCSE Conference 2013

Disasters and Environment:

Science, Preparedness and Resilience

Symposium Summary

The symposia are in a general lecture format--the moderator will give introductory remarks

and introduce the speakers, then each speaker will have 10-15 minutes to present followed

by a discussion and question-and-answer session. These are general guidelines; the

organizers/moderators can conduct the session as they wish. We strongly suggest against

power points, especially since each speaker only has 10 minutes to present, but can supply if

you want. There are two rounds of symposia, each an hour and a half long.

Day: Tuesday, January 15

Time: 3:45 - 5:15pm EST

Symposium 15:

Coastal Cities: Planning for Resilience, Adaptation, and Sustainability - Lessons from

the Northeast and Superstorm Sandy

Moderator: Kent Portney, Tufts University Professor of Political Science

Panelists: Paul Kirshen, Research Professor of Civil Engineering, University of New Hampshire

(Interdisciplinary focus on hydrological change and human adaptation)

Jack Wiggin, Director, Urban Harbors Institute at UMass Boston (Coastal, Port and

harbor planning with multiple stakeholders)

Samuel Merrill, Director, New England Environmental Finance Center Associate

Research Professor, Edmund S. Muskie School of Public Service, University of

South Maine Margaret Davidson, NOAA Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management

Acting Director

In this symposium, we will consider resilience (disaster prevention and disaster response) from the perspective of vulnerable urban areas along coastal areas confronted with sea level

rise and more frequent and severe extreme weather events and other natural disasters.

First, we will consider the information needed by municipalities to plan for adequate

resilience; secondly, what should be accomplished toward proactive planning and investment in vulnerable communities; and lastly, identify the best practices that can be recommended to the rapidly growing coastal cities of developing countries.

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This symposium will focus on our insights from cities and communities in the Northeast of the United States. As Hurricane Sandy has just demonstrated, the current modus operandi

in most communities is to focus on risk analysis and subsequent disaster recovery rather than risk reduction and prevention. The symposium panel will bring the perspective of

science, city governance, civil engineering, planning, and economics to this topic. We will examine how decisions are made, what factors are important when addressing change, and

what we can learn from best practice approaches. The symposium will provide insights and context for Workshop 4, which will take a broader international perspective and develop strategies for effective responses.

http://www.environmentaldisasters.net/topics/view/81498/

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NCSE Conference 2013

Symposium 15

Coastal Cities: Planning for Resilience, Adaptation, and

Sustainability - Lessons from the Northeast and Superstorm Sandy

Panelist Profiles

Kent Portney (Moderator)

Professor, Political Science Department

Tufts University

[email protected]

Kent Portney teaches courses in methodology, judicial politics,

political behavior, public administration, survey research, and

environmental politics. He is the author of Taking Sustainable

Cities Seriously: Economic Development, the Environment, and

Quality of Life in American Cities (MIT Press, 2003), Approaching

Public Policy Analysis (Prentice-Hall, 1986), Siting Hazardous Waste Treatment Facilities:

The NIMBY Syndrome (Auburn House, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1991), and

Controversial Issues in Environmental Policy (Sage Publications, 1992). He is also the co-

author of Acting Civically, published in 2007 by Tufts University Press, and The Rebirth of

Urban Democracy (Brookings, 1993), which won the American Political Science

Association's 1994 Gladys Kammerer Award for the Best Book in American Politics, and

the American Political Science Association Organized Section on Urban Politics' 1994 Best

Book in Urban Politics Award; and he is the co-editor of The Distributional Impacts of Public

Policies (St. Martin's, 1988). He is also co-editor of Virtual Decisions: Digital Simulations for

Teaching Reasoning in the Social Sciences and Humanities published in 2006 by Lawrence

Erlbaum. He is currently a member of the OECD's Metropolitan Review Panel. Portney has

held grants from the Ford Foundation, the National Science Foundation, the Spencer

Foundation, and the Polaroid Foundation. Professor Portney was recipient of the American

Political Science Association's 1997 Rowman and Littlefield Award for innovative teaching

in Political Science. He also received the APSA section on Information Technology and

Politics Award for best instructional software.

-- Taken from Department of Political Science, Tufts University website

http://ase.tufts.edu/polsci/faculty/portney/

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Paul Kirshen Research Professor - Civil Engineering department

University of New Hampshire [email protected]

Paul Kirshen has 30 years of experience serving as Principal

Investigator/ Project Manager of complex, interdisciplinary,

participatory research related to water resources and coastal zone

management and climate variability and change. He is presently

Research Professor, Environmental Research Group of

Department of Civil Engineering, and Institute for the Study of

Earth, Oceans, and Space, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH. Previous to that he

served as Climate Change Adaptation Research Leader at Battelle Memorial Institute. From

1996 to 2009, he was Research Professor, Civil and Environmental Engineering

Department, Tufts University and Director and Co-founder of the Water: Systems, Science,

and Society (WSSS) Interdisciplinary Graduate Education Program. He is also a Lead

Author for the 2014 Fifth Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Assessment

and the 2013 US National Climate Assessment, is a member of ICLEI USA– Local

Governments for Sustainability‘s Climate Adaptation Steering Committee, and a member of

the Massachusetts Climate Change Adaptation Advisory Committee and its Coastal Zone

and Ocean Subcommittee. He is also part of teams conducting a national vulnerability

assessment of US Army Corps of Engineers projects and programs, investigating municipal

adaptation options to SLR in several New England municipalities using the COAST tool,

and developing a drainage and sewer masterplan for Boston Water and Sewer Commission.

He has also conducted water and climate management research in West Africa since 1974.

-- Taken from American Geophysical Union Science Policy Conference 2012 website

http://sites.agu.org/spconference/program/speakers-and-moderators/kirshen-bio/

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Jack Wiggin

Director, Urban Harbors Institute

University of Massachusetts, Boston

Jack Wiggin is the Director of the Urban Harbors Institute where

he is responsible for the Institute's interdisciplinary research and

public service projects on coastal area, port, and harbor issues. He

has almost 30 years experience in coastal management, port and

harbor planning and management, waterfront development,

community planning, and public participation. Jack has provided

technical assistance in these and related areas to local, state, and

national governments in the United States and abroad. Jack's work in coastal management

and planning includes work as an associate investigator in Bulgaria, responsible for training

national and local government officials in coastal management, local coastal plans,

assessing coastal issues, environmental impact assessment, GIS mapping, and strategies for

program implementation and public participation. He also worked on the coastal element of

the Environmental Capacity-Building Action Plan for the Murmansk region of Russia.

Jack's extensive planning experience includes work on numerous coastal, harbor, and

resource management plans in the US. He is the chairman of the Advisory Council for the

Boston Harbor Islands National Park and serves on the Coastal Resources Advisory Board

of the Massachusetts Coastal Zone Management Program. Prior to joining the Institute,

Jack was senior environmental planner with the Connecticut Coastal Management Program

where he assisted the 36 coastal municipalities in preparing comprehensive plans and

regulations for their coastal areas. While there, he headed the research, writing, interagency

coordination, and initial implementation of Connecticut's Harbor Management Act. He was

also chief land use planner with the law firm Robinson & Cole, assisting private and public

sector clients with the planning and regulatory aspects of waterfront development and

coastal resource protection.

-- Taken from Urban Harbors Institute website http://www.uhi.umb.edu/staff_pages/wiggin.htm

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Sam Merrill

Director, New England Environmental Finance Center

Associate Research Professor, Edmund S. Muskie School of Public

Service, University of Southern Maine

Sam Merrill specifically aims to help land conservation be more cost

effective and strategic from a planning perspective. He conducts this

work through his role as Director of the New England

Environmental Finance Center, housed at the Muskie School. His

background is in applied conservation biology, wildlife management, and private land

protection initiatives. In the last several years he has also developed an applied policy focus

on local adaptation to global challenges of climate change - specifically in 1) land use

permitting issues around installation of new renewable energy generation capacity and 2)

fiscal preparations municipalities must undertake.

-- Taken from Muskie School of Public Service, University of Maine website

https://webapp.usm.maine.edu/MuskieWebDBfrontend/personView.action;jsessionid=12592006311

30229A709A31E41425398?personId=378

Margaret Davidson NOAA Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management

Acting Director

The director of the NOAA Coastal Services Center is no stranger

to the coast or its many challenges. Before joining NOAA,

Margaret A. Davidson was executive director of the South

Carolina Sea Grant Consortium from 1983 to 1995. She also

served as special counsel and assistant attorney general for the

Louisiana Department of Justice. An active participant in coastal

resource management issues since 1978, Davidson earned her juris

doctorate (J.D. degree) in natural resources law from Louisiana State University. She later

earned a master's degree in marine policy and resource economics from the University of

Rhode Island. Davidson holds a faculty appointment at the University of Charleston and

serves on the adjunct faculties of Clemson University and the University of South Carolina.

She has served on numerous local, state, and federal committees and has provided

leadership for national professional societies. She has focused her professional work on

environmentally sustainable aquaculture, mitigation of coastal hazards, and impacts of

climate variability on coastal resources. Davidson served as the acting assistant

administrator for NOAA's National Ocean Service from 2000 to 2002.

--- Taken from NOAA Coastal Services Staff Directory website

http://www.csc.noaa.gov/about/director.html

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NCSE Conference 2013

Symposium 15: Coastal Cities: Planning for Resilience, Adaptation, and Sustainability -

Lessons from the Northeast and Superstorm Sandy

Relevant Publications by Panelists

Kent Portney

Professor, Political Science Department

Tufts University

Portney, Kent E., and Jeffrey M. Berry. 2010. ―Participation and the Pursuit of

Sustainability in U.S. Cities.‖ Urban Affairs Review 46(1): 119-139. This article explores the relationship between political and civic participation and the pursuit of sustainability in American cities.

Some have argued that cities that exhibit more participation, engagement, and bridging social capital are more likely to pursue policies

and programs designed to achieve greater sustainability. Others have posited alternative explanations, especially explanations related to

resources, socioeconomic status, and economic growth. Using the Social Capital Benchmark Survey cities—10 of which have extensive

sustainability programs, 5 of which have modest programs, and 12 of which have virtually no sustainability programs at all—as the source

of comparison, this research finds that cities that are most committed to pursuing sustainability policies do tend to be more participatory

places with respect to signing petitions, participating in demonstrations, belonging to local reform groups, and joining neighborhood

associations, even controlling for personal income and other factors.

Portney, Kent E. and Cuttler, Zachary. 2010. ―The local nonprofit sector and the

pursuit of sustainability in American cities: a preliminary exploration.‖ Local

Environment 15(4): 323-339. This paper reports on the results of a study of the relationship between the nonprofit sector and the pursuit of sustainability in 13

moderate sized US cities with populations between 400,000 and 600,000. Dividing the cities into two groups – those that have been more

serious and less serious about adopting and implementing sustainability policies, analysis of a survey of local public officials examines

differences in the nonprofit landscape. Analysis shows that the cities that are more serious about sustainability have local public officials

who interact more with nonprofit organisations, and are more likely to report the presence of at least one nonprofit group that supports

city sustainability policies. Additionally, these reported groups are more likely to be ―local‖, or homegrown, and to be explicitly dedicated

to the environment or sustainability. While far from definitive, the results provide evidence that the nonprofit sector is different in cities

with sustainability policies, and suggest that the role of these nonprofit groups in the governance decisions of city leaders warrants more

in-depth study.

Portney, Kent E. 2008. ―Education and Smart Growth Policies in U.S. Cities: A

Response to Lenahan O'Connell.‖ Social Science Quarterly 89(5): 1378–1383. Objective. This response to Lenahan O‘Connell‘s article ‗‗Exploring the Social Roots of Smart Growth Policy Adoption by Cities‘‘

examines whether the relationship between education and the adoption of smart growth programs in U.S. cities is reflective of the new

political culture and rooted in postmaterial values or, perhaps, just reflective of a slightly different way of thinking about traditional

economic development. Methods. Using data for 45 U.S. cities that have articulated broad policies to try to become more sustainable, this

analysis includes a measure of the severity of air pollution as an indicator of the need for smart growth programs. Results. The measure of

need is more strongly related to the pursuit of smart growth than is either education or income. Conclusions. Since the level of air

pollution is frequently understood to make economic growth difficult or impossible, the results suggest that smart growth programs might

be just as likely motivated by traditional economic development as by postmaterial values, and there is a need to develop a deeper

understanding of the motivates for adopting such programs.

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Paul Kirshen

Research Professor - Civil Engineering department

University of New Hampshire

Kirshen, Paul, William P. Anderson and Matthias Ruth. 2005. Report: Climate’s Long-

Term Impacts on Metro Boston (CLIMB). ―CLIMB is a multi-sector analysis of how global warming will affect some of the key socioeconomic activities typical in major urban

centers. CLIMB demonstrates how global warming could fundamentally affect the Boston region over the next century, requiring tens of

billions of dollars to adapt to changes and to repair climate-related damages.‖

Kirshen, Paul et al. 2012. ―Simplified method for scenario-based risk assessment

adaptation planning in the coastal zone.‖ Climatic Change 113(3): 919-931. The development of successful coastal adaptation strategies for both the built and natural environments requires combining scenarios

of climate change and socio-economic conditions, and risk assessment. Such planning needs to consider the adaptation costs and residual

damages over time that may occur given a range of possible storm conditions for any given sea level rise scenario. Using the metric of the

expected value of annual adaptation costs and residual damages, or another metric that can be related to the elevation of flooding, a

simplified method to carry this out is presented. The approach relies upon developing damage flooding depth probability exceedance

curves for various scenarios over a given planning period and determining the areas under the curves. While the approach does have

limitations, it is less complex to implement than using Monte Carlo simulation approaches and may be more intuitive to decision makers.

A case study in Maine, USA is carried out to illustrate the method.

Kirshen, Paul, Kelly Knee, and Gary Yohe. 2011. "On the economics of coastal

adaptation solutions in an uncertain world." Climatic Change 106(1): 71+. ...It follows that estimates of the economic value of mitigation, and therefore potentially the level of mitigation that some decision-makers

might find palatable, also depend critically on the specification of the adaptation baseline. This, of course, is one of the reasons why it is

so important to incorporate adaptation into large scale integrated assessment models. The current exercise paper reinforces this point in an

environment that superimposes stochastic coastal storm events on two alternative sea level rise scenarios. It reports estimates of the value

of adaptation to rising sea and associated changes in the character of major coastal storms against two baselines. In the first, decisions are

made under assumptions of perfect economic efficiency that are supported by the availability of actuarially fair insurance. Indeed,

providing this insurance will proposed as a policy response to potential increases in damages associated with coastal storms that can be

associated with sea level rise, and its value with and without other adaptations will be evaluated. In the second, perhaps more realistic

assumptions about how fundamental market imperfections might significantly impair society‘s ability to spread risk sustain an exploration

of comparable valuations in a ―second-best‖ world in which the policy response has not been implemented.

Kirshen, Paul et al. 2008. ―Coastal Flooding in the Northeastern USA due to

Climate Change, Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global

Change.‖Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 13(5-6): 437 - 451. With dense population and development along its coastline, the northeastern United States is, at present, highly vulnerable to coastal

flooding. At five sea level stations in the United States, from Massachusetts to New Jersey, sea level rise (SLR) trends and tidal effects

were removed from the hourly sea level time series and then frequency analysis was performed on the positive remaining anomalies that

represent storm surge heights. Then using eustatic SLR estimates for lower and higher greenhouse gas emissions scenarios and assumed

trends in local sea level rise, new recurrence intervals were determined for future storm surges. Under the higher emissions scenario, by

2050, the elevation of the 2005 100-year event may be equaled or exceeded at least every 30 years at all sites. In more exposed US cities

such as Boston, Massachusetts and Atlantic City, New Jersey, this could occur at the considerably higher frequency of every 8 years or

less. Under the lower emissions scenario, by 2050, the elevation of the 2005 100-year event may be equaled or exceeded at least every 70

years at all sites. In Boston and Atlantic City, this could occur every 30 years or less.

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Jack Wiggin

Director, Urban Harbors Institute

University of Massachusetts, Boston

Poitras, Jean, Robert Bowen and Jack Wiggin. 2003. ―Challenges to the use of

consensus building in integrated coastal management.‖ Ocean & Coastal Management

46(5): 391-405. An electronic forum involving 15 coastal managers was conducted in order to identify and explain the challenges involved in using

consensus-building methods to resolve coastal management issues. The forum's participants generated a list of ten challenges. Getting

participants committed to the consensus-building process was identified as the major problem. Participants reported four factors that may

affect negatively the willingness of participants to commit to the process. These factors are the novelty of consensus building, the lack of

incentive to seek a compromise, the apprehension of having to negotiate and the uncertainty of the outcome. The paper concludes with

proposed strategies to overcome these factors.

The University of Massachusetts Boston Planning Frameworks Team and The

Massachusetts Ocean Partnership. 2009. ―Planning Framework Options for the

Massachusetts Ocean Plan.‖ The Massachusetts Oceans Act (Chapter 114 of the Acts of 2008) places the ocean waters and ocean-based development within the ocean management planning area (Ch. 114, Sec. 4C(b)) under the oversight, coordination, and planning authority of the Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs (Secretary) (Ch. 114, Sec. 4C(a)). Ch. 114, Sec. 4C(a) requires the Secretary to develop an integrated ocean management plan (plan) for the ocean management planning area. Upon adoption of the plan, all certificated, licenses, permits and approvals for any proposed structure, uses, or activities in the area subject to the ocean management plan shall be consistent, to the maximum extent practicable, with the plan (Ch. 114, Sec 4C(e)). The plan does not supersede existing general or special laws or confer rights and remedies in addition to those of existing or special laws (Ch. 114, Sec. 4C(j)).

The University of Massachusetts Boston Planning Frameworks Team and The

Massachusetts Ocean Partnership. 2009. ―Compatibility Determination:

Considerations for Siting Coastal and Ocean Uses.‖ This draft report is one of several prepared under contract to the Massachusetts Ocean Partnership (MOP) to support the

Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EEA) in its development of the integrated coastal ocean management plan mandated by the MA Oceans Act of 2008. Among other requirements, the Oceans Act states that the plan shall ―identify

appropriate locations and performance standards for activities, uses and facilities allowed under sections 15 and 16 of chapter 132A1.‖ To fulfill this requirement, the EEA planning team wanted to utilize compatibility determinations as a tool for considering the appropriate locations for activities, uses and facilities relative to one another. This report was prepared for Massachusetts ocean planning purposes but contains information that may be useful to coastal ocean resource managers in other locations.

The University of Massachusetts Boston Planning Frameworks Team and The

Massachusetts Ocean Partnership. 2009. ―A Review of Ocean Management and

Integrated Resource Management Programs from Around the World.‖ The purpose of this report was to inventory and review ocean management and integrated resource management programs from

around the world, including the United States, Europe, Australia, and elsewhere, and ultimately to inform the development of a

framework for integrated ocean planning and management suitable for Massachusetts. Drawing from these reviews, this report identifies

applicable approaches to ocean management planning and examines their relevance to Massachusetts.

Wiggin, Jack, et al. 2009. ―Compatibility Determination: Considerations for Siting

Coastal and Ocean Uses‖. UMass Boston Planning Frameworks Team and The

Massachusetts Ocean Partnership. This draft report is one of several prepared under contract to the Massachusetts Ocean Partnership (MOP) to support the

Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EEA) in its development of the integrated coastal ocean

management plan mandated by the MA Oceans Act of 2008.

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Sam Merrill

Director, New England Environmental Finance Center

Associate Research Professor, Edmund S. Muskie School of Public Service, University of

Southern Maine

New England Environmental Finance Center. 2011. A Financial Impact Assessment of

LD 1725: Stream Crossings. Portland, ME: University of Southern Maine, Muskie

School of Public Service, New England Environmental Finance Center. This document presents a financial impact analysis of LD 1725 for stream crossing replacements in the state of Maine. This analysis

was conducted by the New England Environmental Finance Center (EFC), in coordination with the Maine Department of Transportation

(MaineDOT), DEP, and state, nongovernmental, and local stakeholders. All documentation supporting this analysis is publicly available

and located on the EFC website (http://efc.muskie.usm.maine.edu/index.html)

Merrill, S., Yakovleff, D., Holman, D., Cooper, J., & Kirshen, P. 2010. Valuing

mitigation strategies; A GIS-based approach for climate adaption analysis. ARCUser,

online, 28-29. As more municipalities engage in climate change adaptation planning, better tools to quantify risks to vulnerable assets are needed

to facilitate this process. The New England Environmental Finance Center (NE/EFC), with the support of Battelle Memorial Institute,

has developed an approach that assesses the costs and benefits of adapting to sea level rise scenarios.

New England Environmental Finance Center. 2009. Preserving assets in at-risk

municipalities: Financial strategies for climate change adaptation. ICLEI Supplemental

Brief. Portland, ME: New England Environmental Finance Center. A large share of America's population, businesses and economic activity now occurs in coastal areas. At the same time, during this

century many coastal communities are likely to be severely impacted by sea level rise and increased storm surge and tidal flooding. "What

to do" about this vulnerability is the subject of this brief. It is intended to help municipalities identify courses of action and steps they

might take toward increasing their resilience, especially regarding financial resources that will need to be allocated toward the various

strategies identified.

Colgan, C.S., & Merrill, S.B. 2008. ―The effects of climate change on economic

activity in Maine: Coastal York County case study.‖ Maine Policy Review 17(2): 66-

79. Climate change can have significant ramifications for Maine's economy. If short-term projections for the next century are accurate, at

minimum sea level rise will become increasingly noticeable in association with more severe and destructive coastal storms. The authors

evaluate risk estimates by presenting a case study of the projected consequences of sea level rise and coastal storm damage on the economy

of the state's most vulnerable area, York County's coastal communities.

Merrill, S.B., Sanford, R.M., & Lapping, M.B. 2008. ―Planners and climate change

action: An approach for communities.‖ Maine Policy Review 17(2): 149-152. The authors discuss the role of planners in helping local communities prepare for the near-term effects of climate change, especially

the impact of rising sea levels and increased storm severity.

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Margaret Davidson

Director, NOAA Coastal Services Center

Davidson, Margaret et al. 2012. ―Incorporating Sea Level Change Scenarios at the

Local Level.‖ NOAA Coastal Services Center. Incorporating sea level change into planning processes involves more than selecting a number. That is why this document advocates

the scenario approach. Using the information provided here, communities can develop a process that incorporates a range of possibilities

and factors. With this information various scenarios can be developed, both in terms of projections and responses, to meet the specific

circumstances of a community. Moreover, working through the scenario development process provides the data and information that

officials will need to make communities readily adaptable to changing circumstances.

Culver, M.E., J. R. Schubel, M.A. Davidson, J. Haines, and K.C. Texeira (editors).

2010. Proceedings from the Sea Level Rise and Inundation Community Workshop,

Lansdowne, MD, Dec 3-5, 2009. Sponsored by the National Oceanic and

Atmospheric Administration and U.S. Geological Survey. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in partnership with other

federal agencies and the Ocean Research and Resources Advisory Panel, are supporting a coordinated effort to develop a Community Framework for Responding to Sea Level Rise and Inundation. This effort to build a community of practice began with an assessment of the current understanding of coastal inundation impacts on coastal communities, of the requirements to assess and respond to changing coastal vulnerability, and of the status of prototype tools to identify critical risk factors and develop effective responses. Building on this shared sense of urgency, and the substantial efforts to develop effective responses, the first workshop (reported here) brought together leaders in the academic, federal, and nonfederal governmental, nongovernmental, and private sectors to initiate a framework for a more coordinated and effective response to sea-level rise and coastal inundation. This report details the framework, discussions on priority data, tools, and information, and recommendations for progress. The information gathered in preparation for this workshop, including a review of needs assessments for inundation information and three case studies of regions working on adaptation to sea level rise, also are included in this report.

Edwing, Richard, Margaret Davidson, Juliana Blackwell and John Lowell. 2010.

―Technical Considerations for Use of Geospatial Data in Sea Level Change Mapping

and Assessment.‖ NOAA Technical Report NOS 2010-01. This document is intended to provide technical guidance to agencies, practitioners, and coastal decision-makers seeking to use

and/or collect geospatial data to assist with sea level change assessments and mapping products. There is a lot of information available

today regarding sea level change and navigating this information can be challenging. This document seeks to clarify existing data and

information and provide guidance on how to understand and apply this information to analysis and planning applications by directing

readers to specific resources for various applications.

Davidson, Margaret. 2008. Hearing on Planning for a Changing Climate and its

Impacts on Wildlife, Coasts, and Oceans: State and Federal Needs Before the

Committee on Natural Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries, Wildlife and Oceans,

United States House of Representatives. Personal Testimony.

Coastal Services Center and NOAA. 2007. ―No Adverse Impact in the Coastal

Zone.‖ No Adverse Impact as outlined by the Association of State Floodplain Managers (ASFPM) provides a new and effective coastal

management philosophy, and also identifies its legal underpinnings. No Adverse Impact (NAI) floodplain management is essentially a ―do-no-harm‖ policy based on the concept that everyone benefits when the actions of every community or property owner does not adversely affect others. NAI calls for anticipating the potential negative effects of any development or floodcontrol action on other people, their property and on the coastal environment itself. Such negative effects could be direct, such as causing shoreline erosion on the adjacent property. Or negative effects could be indirect, such as undermining the economic value of a fishery or altering the filtration capacity of an estuary.

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NCSE Conference 2013

Disasters and Environment:

Science, Preparedness and Resilience

Breakout Workshop Summary

The breakout workshops are the core of the conference, and are intended to be an

opportunity for participants to play a role in generating science-based solutions within the topic area of the session. The session will involve a combination of very brief opening

comments (5-10 minutes) from the presenters, followed by a facilitated participant discussion to develop a set of 6-10 outcomes--a new initiative, a new partnership or collaboration, recommendations for action, or a "follow-up" activity. The opening

comments should set the stage to get people thinking about the final recommendations.

There is no "audience;" the participants are partners in developing ideas and potential

partners in advancing the ideas and recommendations from the session. If you want an idea of what the outcomes are, the final recommendations from last year are posted on our

website at http://www.environmentandsecurity.org/. We strongly suggest that you have no PowerPoint presentations. We have found that

PowerPoints drag out the presentations, and people enjoy the session much more and participate more when they are not used. But, we also understand that some people would

rather lose a limb than present without a PowerPoint, so if you need one please let me know as soon as possible and we will get that together.

Date: Wednesday, January 16

Time: 2:00 – 5:15 PM

Workshop 4:

Coastal Communities: Planning for Resilience, Adaptation and Sustainability - Building

Resilience in Coastal Communities: An International Agenda

Moderator: Antje Danielson, Tufts Institute of the Environment, Tufts University and

Emily Geosling, Program Coordinator, Tufts Institute of the Environment, Water: Systems, Society and the Environment

Confirmed Discussants: Thomas Loster, Chairman, Munich Re Foundation

Kjell Larsson, Chair, Advisory Group on Environmental Emergencies (AGEE)

Ninian Stein, Director of Earthos and Visiting Professor, Environmental Science and

Policy Program, Smith College

Joanne Potter, Principal, ICF International

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In this workshop, we will consider resilience from the perspective of disaster prevention in

addition to disaster response. While extreme weather events are predicted to increase

dramatically in our lifetime, both in frequency and in severity, more careful and prescient

planning can prevent communities from the worst of harm caused by such changes, and

other natural disasters, and create more sustainable cities for the long-term. With an

abiding view to resilience and adaptation, rapidly growing coastal cities, especially those in

developing countries, can better prepare for extreme weather events. This workshop will

highlight the opportunity costs and potential cost savings for a resilience strategy that

emphasizes prevention over response and consider the information needed by municipalities

to plan for adequate resilience

The session will:

· Collect suggestions on best practices from around the world and develop

recommendations for what can be done for proactive planning and investment in vulnerable

communities.

· Collect list of databases from federal and international agencies and organizations that can

provide forecasting data and transmitting information that will prepare municipal

institutions to create more defined resilience plans.

· List effective policies around ports, levees, pollution control, and industrial zoning in US

cities, as well as countries in Northern Europe, which have effectively managed extreme

water events for hundreds of years.

http://www.environmentaldisasters.net/topics/view/81500/

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NCSE Conference 2013

Breakout Workshop 4

Coastal Communities: Planning for Resilience, Adaptation and

Sustainability - Building Resilience in Coastal Communities:

An International Agenda

Discussant Profiles

Ninian Stein

Director of Earthos

Visiting Professor

Environmental Science and Policy Program

Smith College

[email protected]

With a Doctorate in Anthropology-Archaeology from

Brown University as well as masters degrees in Environmental Science and Anthropology

from Yale School of Forestry and Harvard University respectively, Ninian Stein taught at

the University of Massachusetts Boston for two years before moving to her post-doctoral

fellowship at Wheaton College in Norton MA. Teaching in both Environmental Sciences

and Anthropology gives Ninian a broad perspective on interdisciplinaity and environmental

issues. From her environmental and anthropological background Ninian has contributed

materially to Earthos projects. Having taught a course in Environmental Policy with an

emphasis on communication between policy and science, she is familiar with some of the

disciplinary barriers to creating change at local, regional and national levels—and strategies

for getting beyond them. Ninian's collaboration with paleo-ecologists, ecologists,

geochemists, geophysicists, geologists, and marine scientists on previous projects brings

perspectives on interdisciplinary scientific inquiry and disciplinary conventions to Earthos.

Through teaching, research and her work with Earthos, Ninian is committed to using

interdisciplinary tools to address the environmental challenges of our times.

-- Taken from Eartos Institute website http://www.earthos-institute.us/ABOUT_earthos-

institute/Board_of_Directors.html

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Joanne Potter

Principal

ICF International

Joanne Potter has more than 15 years of experience in climate

change and sustainability analysis and policy development. She

has particular expertise in transportation, addressing climate

change impacts, vulnerability, adaptation, and mitigation and

sustainability. Ms. Potter has served as project manager for several projects, reports, and

analyses, including vulnerability and risk assessments and major national studies addressing

greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from mobile sources. She is currently supporting the

Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program of the U.S. Department of

Defense (DoD) in its examination of climate change impacts on coastal installations. Prior

to joining ICF, Ms. Potter was a lead and editing author of The Impacts of Climate Change and

Variability on Transportation Systems and Infrastructure: Gulf Coast Study Phase I, released in

March 2008. This study assessed the risks of climate change to transportation infrastructure

and services and developed a framework for adaptation decision making. Ms. Potter was

project manager for the U.S. Department of Transportation‘s (DOT) "Report to Congress

on Transportation's Impact on Climate Change and Solutions." In this role, she led a

multimodal technical and policy team that addressed technology, fuel, and behavioral

approaches to address climate change. She also managed Moving Cooler: An Analysis of

Transportation Strategies for Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions (July 2009), a national

multisponsor study assessing the effectiveness of transportation activity strategies to reduce

GHG emissions. At the regional level, she managed a climate change vulnerability and risk

assessment of transportation infrastructure in New Jersey. Ms. Potter received a master's

degree in City Planning from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a B.A. from the

University of Massachusetts at Amherst.

-- Taken from ICF International website http://www.icfi.com/about/our-people/icf/p/potter-joanne

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Thomas Loster

Chairman, Munich Re Foundation

[email protected]

Thomas R. Loster, a geographer, was a member of the GeoRisk

Research Group at Munich Reinsurance Company, Munich, the

world‘s leading reinsurance company, for 16 years. He was in charge

of issues relating to weather perils, climate change and climate

policy. His responsibilities also included the statistical analyses of

worldwide natural catastrophes and trends.Mr. Loster was

appointed chairman of the Munich Re Foundation in July 2004. The foundation addresses

major global challenges including environmental and climate change as well as disaster

prevention. True to its motto ―From Knowledge To Action,‖ the foundation aims to

prepare people to deal with risks and to improve their living conditions - with a special focus

on developing countries. Providing knowledge in the field of microinsurance is a key pillar

of the work of the foundation. Thomas R. Loster is board member of the Munich Climate

Insurance Initiative (MCII), which tries to establish insurance mechanisms for the poor as

one climate change coping mechanism. He is also a member of the German National

Committee of the United Nations Decade of Education for Sustainable Development.

-- Taken from http://www.munichre-foundation.org/dms/MRS/Documents/CVThomasLoster.pdf

Kjell Larsson

Chair, Advisory Group on Environmental Emergencies (AGEE)

[email protected]

Kjell Larsson has spent most of his life dedicated to emergency

response. Since the mid 90-ies he is Head of Overseas Operations at

MSB in Sweden (former SRSA). Before reaching management level

at HQ he served in humanitarian agencies, including the UN, in

Turkey (Gulf War), Bosnia, Great Lakes and many other humanitarian emergencies in the

1990-ies. It has been his responsibility as a manager in SRSA/MSB to lead the agency in the

response to all major humanitarian catastrophes since 1999. He has also been responsible

for SRSA/MSB's response to EU/MIC related operations and to ESDP operations.

SRSA/MSB's have supported EU in Aceh (peace treaty), Georgia, Kosovo and Afghanistan

among others and have long supported EU-ENV in training issues. Mr. Larsson personally

believes in international response and thus practically demonstrating solidarity without

borders. The major players in our part of the world, UN and EU, are the two key players

and it is a pleasure to see them walking together.

-- Taken from http://ec.europa.eu/echo/civil_protection/civil/forum2009/pdf/bio/larsson.pdf

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Kent Portney

Professor, Political Science Department

Tufts University

[email protected]

Profile on page 13.

Antje Danielson (Session Chair)

Administrative Director

Tufts Institute of the Environment

[email protected]

Antje Danielson is the Administrative Director at TIE as well as

the graduate interdisciplinary Water: Systems, Science and

Society (WSSS) program. She came to Tufts from Durham

University (UK), where she served as the Deputy Director for

Sustainability, in May 2008. Previously, she worked with the

Harvard Green Campus Initiative. A long-time resident of

Cambridge, Mass, Antje also co-founded the innovative

carsharing company Zipcar. She holds a Ph.D. in Geology from Free University, Berlin.

Emily Geosling (Moderator)

Program Coordinator

Tufts Institute of the Environment

Water: Systems, Science & Society

[email protected]

Libby Mahaffy

(Moderator)

Communications Specialist

Tufts Institute of the Environment

[email protected]

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NCSE Conference 2013

Coastal Cities: Planning for Resilience, Adaptation, and Sustainability

Additional Readings

1. Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management, NOAA Ocean Service. 2005.

Report to Congress On National Coastal Management Performance Measurement System. The report summarizes the process for developing coastal management indicators, identifies suggested coastal management

indicators, and outlines an implementation plan for the National Coastal Management Performance Measurement System.

2. Bowen, Robert E. and Cory Riley. 2003. ―Socio-economic indicators and integrated

coastal management.‖ Ocean & Coastal Management 46 (3–4): 299-312. The need to better understand the linkages and interdependencies of socio-economic and coastal environmental dynamics has

taken on a more deliberate role in the development and assessment of Integrated Coastal Management world-wide. The analysis and

establishment of indicator-driven programs to assess change in coastal and watershed systems have increasinglymoved to stress socio-

economic forcings and impacts. This article serves to review the need for and provide an assessment of important frameworks designed to

foster such integration. It argues that the evolution of the Driver–Pressure–State–Impact–Response (DPSIR) framework, now in broad

use, provides an essential contribution.

3. Turner, R. Kerry. 2000. ―Integrating natural and socio-economic science in coastal

management.‖ Journal of Marine Systems 25(3–4): 447-460. The future more sustainable management of coastal resources is an important policy goal for all governments of countries with

coastlines. Coastal areas are under intense environmental change pressure with extensive feedback effects between the natural systems

and the human systems. It could be argued that there is just one jointly determined and coevolving system that needs to be studied and

managed. Understanding the interactions between the coastal zone and environmental change cannot be achieved by observational studies

alone. Modelling of key environmental and socio-economic processes is a vital tool, required to buttress coastal management institutions

and practice. Three overlapping procedural stages can be identified in the coastal resource assessment process. The scoping and auditing

stage, implemented via a ‗pressure–state–impact–response‘ framework, details, among other thing, problems, system boundaries and value

conflicts. The framework is itself based on a conceptual model, which lays stress on functional value diversity and the links between

ecosystem processes, functions and outputs of goods and services which are deemed ‗valuable‘ by society. The two subsequent stages are

integrated modelling, combining natural and social science methodologies, and evaluation of management options and related gains and

losses. An overview of a research project, which utilised the pressure–state–impacts–response. P–S–I–R framework and supporting

concepts and methods, is presented in the last section of the paper, together with some generic ‗lessons‘ for interdisciplinary research.

4. Mee, Laurence. 2012. ―Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea: The coastal zone in an

Era of globalisation.‖ Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 96: 1-8. Human pressure has changed the physical and ecological characteristics of coastal zones for centuries. ‗Boom and bust‘

development of coastal zones is a historically recurrent problem. For nearly 40 years, there have been concerted efforts to improve

management of the diverse human pressures that have led to deterioration of coastal environments. Since 1992, Integrated Coastal Zone

Management (ICZM) has been a dominant policy paradigm for bringing together relevant sectors of society to overcome conflicts of

resource use and to pursue sustainable development. There is growing evidence that, with some exceptions, these efforts have not reversed

environmental degradation. A major reason for this is that the economic and social changes leading to this decline operate increasingly at

temporal and spatial scales greater than the scope of management regimes established through ICZM. Alternative approaches such as

Adaptive Management are needed to deal with this mismatch of scales. Cross-scale tools including information technology and social

networking may also provide vehicles for innovation. As part of a broader range of tools, ICZM helps respond to locally driven problems

and adapt to global change. Effective future management must work across scales and benefit from the ‗long view‘ of how coupled social

and ecological systems operate.

5. Wongbusarakum, Supin and Christy Loper. Pacific Environment Programme through

the Coral Reef InitiativeS for the Pacific (CRISP) and International Union for Conservation

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of Nature. 2011. Indicators to assess community‐level social vulnerability to climate change: An

addendum to SocMon and SEM‐Pasifika regional socioeconomic monitoring guidelines. ―The purpose of this addendum is to provide a minimum set of socioeconomic indicators related to climate change. These can

be included in a socioeconomic assessment of any site for which climate change impacts are an important issue. The resulting information

can then inform coastal management needs and adaptive management.‖

6. Agrawal, Arun. 2009. ―The Role of Local Institutions in Adaptation to Climate Change.‖

International Forestry Resources and Institutions. Church St, MI: U of Michigan. ―This review focuses on the role of local institutions in adaptation to climate change. It does so under the belief that climate

impacts will affect disadvantaged social groups more disproportionately, and that local institutions centrally influence how different social

groups gain access to and are able to use assets and resources. It suggests that adaptation to climate change is inevitably local and that

institutions influence adaptation and climate vulnerability in three critical ways: a) they structure impacts and vulnerability, b) they

mediate between individual and collective responses to climate impacts and thereby shape outcomes of adaptation, and c) they act as the

means of delivery of external resources to facilitate adaptation, and thus govern access to such resources.‖

7. Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. 2005. ―Ecosystems and Human Well-being: General

Synthesis.‖ Ecosystems and Human Well-being: Synthesis. Washington, DC: Island Press. Retrieved

September 24, 2012 http://millenniumassessment.org/documents/document.356.aspx.pdf Four main findings pg 1-2

Examples of Promising and Effective Responses for Specific Sectors pg 21 Box 2

How might ecosystems and their services change in the

future under various plausible scenarios? pg 71-73

8. ---. ―Ecosystem Services and Human Well-being: Wetlands and Water Synthesis.‖

Ecosystems and Human Well-being: Synthesis. Washington, DC: Island Press. Retrieved September 24,

2012. http://millenniumassessment.org/documents/document.358.aspx.pdf

9. United Nations Human Settlements Program. 2011. Cities and Climate Change: Global Report on

Human Settlements. Earthscan, Washington DC. ―Cities and Climate Change: Global Report on Human Settlements 2011 seeks to improve knowledge, among governments and

all those interested in urban development and in climate change, on the contribution of cities to climate change, the impacts of climate

change on cities, and how cities are mitigating and adapting to climate change. More importantly, the Report identifies promising

mitigation and adaptation measures that are supportive of more sustainable and resilient urban development paths.

10. Federal Emergency Management Agency. 2000. Disaster Mitigation Act of 2000. DMA 2000 (Public Law 106-390) provides the legal basis for FEMA mitigation planning requirements for State, local and

Indian Tribal governments as a condition of mitigation grant assistance. DMA 2000 amended the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and

Emergency Assistance Act by repealing the previous mitigation planning provisions and replacing them with a new set of requirements

that emphasize the need for State, local, and Indian Tribal entities to closely coordinate mitigation planning and implementation efforts.

The requirement for a State mitigation plan is continued as a condition of disaster assistance, adding incentives for increased coordination

and integration of mitigation activities at the State level through the establishment of requirements for two different levels of state plans.

DMA 2000 also established a new requirement for local mitigation plans and authorized up to 7 percent of HMGP funds available to a

State for development of State, local, and Indian Tribal mitigation plans.

11. Metropolitan Area Planning Council. 2008. City of Boston 2008 Hazard Mitigation Plan. The Federal Disaster Mitigation Act, passed in 2000, required that after November 1, 2004, all municipalities that wish to

continue to be eligible to receive Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) funding for hazard mitigation grants must adopt a

local multi-hazard mitigation plan. This planning requirement does not affect disaster assistance funding. Massachusetts has taken a

regional approach and has encouraged the regional planning agencies to apply for grants to prepare plans for groups of communities. The

Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC) received a grant from FEMA under the Pre-Disaster Mitigation (PDM) Program to assist

the City of Boston and eight other communities with developing a regional multiple-hazard mitigation plan. The regional plan and this

local annex meet the requirements of the Disaster Mitigation Act.

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12. Longstaff, PH. 2008. Security, Resilience, and Communication in Unpredictable Environments Such as

Terrorism, Natural Disasters, and Complex Technology. Center for Information Policy Research, Harvard

University. In many systems with high uncertainty, resistance against all possible surprises is futile and a resilience strategy will be

appropriate. But there is a tradeoff. Resilience will often have a price in the form of lower efficiency. The paper explores successful

resilience strategies for many systems as well as what makes a resilience strategy fail. One of the major assets of any resilient system is a

trusted source of information. One of the major internal threats to resilience is the Blame Game.

13. Longstaff, Patricia H. et. al. 2010. ―Building Resilient Communities: A Preliminary Framework

for Assessment.‖ Homeland Security Affairs 6(3). This article moves beyond debating definitions of resilience, towards the development of a preliminary conceptual framework for

assessing community resilience. We recognize that not all frameworks are created equal, nor do they satisfy all constituent audiences. The

proposed framework presented herein is consistent with Nobel Laureate Elinor Ostrom‘s stated purpose of a framework: to ―identify the

elements (and the relationships among these elements)...to consider for analysis...organize diagnostic and prescriptive inquiry...[and]

provide the most general set of variables that should be used to analyze all types of settings relevant for the framework.‖ It does not outline

a cookie-cutter solution for all communities to apply, but rather an approach that allows community leaders and policymakers to begin to

think about resilience as it pertains to their own community‘s unique circumstances. While sacrificing operational specifics in the interim,

it summarizes the core attributes of resilient systems (resource performance, resource diversity, resource redundancy, institutional

memory, innovative learning, and connectedness) in the context of five key community subsystems (ecological, economic, physical

infrastructure, civil society, and governance). Through the examination of each community subsystem, a preliminary, community-based,

resilience assessment framework is proposed for continued development and refinement.