The town of Hull has just passed an innovative incentive program to encourage builders to elevate new and renovated structures above predicted floodwaters. The program offers applicants a $500 credit to be used towards building department permit fees if the builder elevates the structure at least two feet above the highest federal or state requirement. […]
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Alabama and Texas are now StormSmart!
It’s with great pleasure that we welcome two more states into the StormSmart Coasts Network family: Texas and Alabama. Getting the state sites up and running takes some work at the state level, so we’re incredibly thankful for our state partners, including our friends in the Texas General Land Office, and in the Alabama Geological […]
The Costs of Not Preparing for Climate Change
Even the most conservative project puts sea level rise at 0.5 meter (1.6 feet) higher than current levels. The HRI Socio-Economics Group was asked by the Environmental Defense Fund, with support from the British Consulate General in Houston, to assess what the socio-economic impact might be for the Galveston Bay region of Texas. HRI Endowed […]
Improved Hazard Mitigation Assistance Guidance Released
FEMA has released a re-formatted version of the Fiscal Year (FY) 2010 Hazard Mitigation Assistance (HMA) Guidance with internal links throughout the document. It is now possible to jump between sections in the document based on the internal links. The substance of the guidance remains the same, only the format has been changed. Kudos to […]
New Course: Adapting to Climate Change, a Consensus Approach
On October 29-30, a hands-on professional development course for leaders interested in learning how to manage the risks posed by climate change will take place in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The course will focus on how local, regional and state governments are already feeling the effects of climate change and face greater risks down the road – […]
Incredible Photos: One Year After Ike
If you have a moment, take a look at this amazing series of photos published in the Boston Globe. The images are split into pairs, with one taken during or immediately after Ike, the other a year later, with the second being revealed after clicking on the first. Hopeful and sobering at the same time. […]
What if Historic Storm Hit Today? New Site Shows
It’s time to take a break and play with one of the latest hurricane damage prediction tools to ascend from a darkened computer lab to your desktop: the iCAT Damage Estimator. iCAT (a company providing catastrophe insurance) built this web-application to provide easy access to historical hurricane damage information. If you’d like a 10-minute introduction, […]
Five Things We Should Learn from Ike [EDITORIAL]
The Houston Chronicle published an editorial on Sunday sharing the five lessons they think we can learn from Texas’s experience with Hurricane Ike. The article is short and well worth a quick read. We particularly liked number four: Better and smarter building makes sense Hurricanes may not discriminate, but the damage they inflict on buildings […]
Smart Growth Guide for Coastal and Waterfront Communities Released
Today the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the International City/County Management Association, and Rhode Island Sea Grant released Smart Growth for Coastal and Waterfront Communities. Developed in consultation with the national Smart Growth Network, the interagency guide builds on the network’s ten smart growth principles to create coastal and waterfront-specific strategies […]
North Carolina Amends Innovative Beach Plan
The latest newsletter from the Institute for Business and Home Safety reports on some of the more forward-thinking innovations in the recently passed amendments North Carolina Beach Plan, including some interesting building code and insurance revisions: Legislation that amends North Carolina’s state-funded coastal insurance plan, known as the Beach Plan, was recently signed by Gov. […]