North Carolina Establishes Resilient Communities Program
Published on October 7, 2020The N.C. Office of Recovery and Resiliency, or NCORR, in the Department of Public Safety, N.C. Division of Coastal Management, or DCM, in the Department of Environmental Quality and the N.C. Rural Center have established the N.C. Resilient Communities Program to help local governments build capacity for resiliency, provide technical assistance and fund planning and implementation of strategic resilience projects. The goal is to prepare for the effects of climate change while reducing damages from future disasters such as hurricanes and flooding.
NCORR and DCM staff will lead the new N.C. Resilient Communities Program announced at the N.C. Climate Change Interagency Council will work with partners across state agencies and community organizations.
Public input collected during development of the Resilience Plan emphasized that building local resilience required access to resilience expertise, support for analysis planning and funding to implement measures that advance long-term resilience. To address these needs, the state established the North Carolina Resilient Communities Program.
The program is a priority in the state’s Climate Risk Assessment and Resilience Plan and underscores Gov. Roy Cooper’s commitment to building climate change resiliency statewide while promoting economic growth and stability, according to the state.
NCORR, DCM and the N.C. Rural Center secured $3.4 million in state and federal grant funding to implement the program, which will begin with coordinated efforts targeting multiple regions.
The DCM Resilient Coastal Communities Program will focus on the state’s coastal zone, funding up to 20 coastal communities to conduct risk and vulnerability assessments of their populations and critical assets, to prioritize and design resilience-building projects, and position themselves to compete successfully for construction funding.
The Resilient Communities Program managed by NCORR and the N.C. Rural Center will produce for phase one a statewide resilience framework and guidebook for local communities. Phase two of that program will focus on regional training and technical assistance for eastern North Carolina counties. With additional funding and staff secured over time, the N.C. Resilient Communities Program will expand to provide opportunities to communities statewide.
Information on the Building on Higher Ground: Community Resilience Strategies for the Storms to Come series is available on the N.C. Rural Center website. To learn more about the state agency partnership, visit the NCORR Resiliency Program and DCM Resilient Coastal Communities Program websites.
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