
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In July, a flood ripped through Kerr County, Texas, killing at least 104 people and leaving the community devastated. Federal emergency assistance was nowhere to be seen and then feckless when it finally arrived, a small-scale replay of Katrina. The response was further hampered by a fragmented media environment that left communities scrambling for reliable information, and by the Trump administration’s politicization of the disaster. Local officials gave angry press conferences while F.E.M.A., weakened by budget cuts, wasn’t up to the task.
Given the twin pressures of climate change and political dysfunction, this is likely our future.
That is the impetus for this conversation about community-based natural hazard preparedness. Note that intentional language choice. As our guest, Dave Clark from Factal, points out, people in emergency management are increasingly pivoting to this framing. The idea is that incidents like these should no longer be treated as unforeseeable disasters, but as hazards we all need to prepare for.
And as a reminder for folks in Tacoma, our city sits on a fault line and in the shadow of a volcano.
Cast of Characters
Going Further & Related Episodes
Subscribe to my newsletter, Takes & Typos!
Consider supporting the podcast by joining Channel 253 as a member
4.8
8282 ratings
In July, a flood ripped through Kerr County, Texas, killing at least 104 people and leaving the community devastated. Federal emergency assistance was nowhere to be seen and then feckless when it finally arrived, a small-scale replay of Katrina. The response was further hampered by a fragmented media environment that left communities scrambling for reliable information, and by the Trump administration’s politicization of the disaster. Local officials gave angry press conferences while F.E.M.A., weakened by budget cuts, wasn’t up to the task.
Given the twin pressures of climate change and political dysfunction, this is likely our future.
That is the impetus for this conversation about community-based natural hazard preparedness. Note that intentional language choice. As our guest, Dave Clark from Factal, points out, people in emergency management are increasingly pivoting to this framing. The idea is that incidents like these should no longer be treated as unforeseeable disasters, but as hazards we all need to prepare for.
And as a reminder for folks in Tacoma, our city sits on a fault line and in the shadow of a volcano.
Cast of Characters
Going Further & Related Episodes
Subscribe to my newsletter, Takes & Typos!
Consider supporting the podcast by joining Channel 253 as a member
217 Listeners
37 Listeners
6,669 Listeners
25,888 Listeners
14,573 Listeners
87,554 Listeners
24,661 Listeners
10,232 Listeners
9,418 Listeners
5,747 Listeners
12,287 Listeners
628 Listeners
16,009 Listeners
10,753 Listeners
318 Listeners