CAPIToL CONNECTIONS > The Princeville Community Floodprint plan was developed in September 2020 for projects to execute in and around Princeville, North Carolina, related to flood water management.
Engaging New Federal Partners for Climate Resilient Communities
By CHELSEA W ELCH
IN A RARE MOVE, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) recently solicited input from the public on how to increase climate resilience and environmental justice within the agency’s programs. The Alliance’s government relations team seized this opportunity to submit comments that highlight the important role land trusts play in disaster mitigation, including recommendations for how FEMA could strengthen partnerships with land trusts. Many in the land trust community are familiar with FEMA programs, from the Pre-Disaster Mitigation Grant Program— now revamped as the Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) program—to its various public assistance programs for disaster response and recovery. These grant programs assist states and municipalities, often in partnership with nonprofits like land trusts, to prepare for, mitigate and respond to natural disasters. The BRIC program received a major boost this summer from President Biden, who announced that FEMA would double the funds available through BRIC next year, making $1 billion available for disaster mitigation projects. He also pledged to funnel at least 40% of the program’s funds to socially disadvantaged communities, a task that will require FEMA to meaningfully address sustained inequities in the implementation of many of its disaster response and mitigation programs. Land trusts are not currently eligible to 10
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S AV I NG L A ND M A G A ZIN E FALL 2021
be primary applicants for FEMA grants, yet in every corner of the country they are already working to mitigate and respond to natural disasters in their communities: • In New England, the Maine Coast Heritage Trust provided technical assistance to the small town of Machias as it prepared an application for FEMA’s Pre-Disaster Mitigation Grant Program. • The Conservation Trust for North Carolina has been working with the town of Princeville—which has experienced repeated flooding after recent hurricanes—to prepare and implement a land use plan for a FEMA-funded floodplain buyout project in the historic municipality. • Out West, land trusts are working with towns devastated by wildfires to secure recovery funds from state and federal emergency management agencies to restore watersheds and rebuild more resiliently. • And in Texas, the Galveston Bay Foundation helped to establish the
Exploration Green stormwater park as part of a flood-risk reduction project with the local water authority. There are myriad other examples of land trusts stepping up to help communities prepare for natural disasters, and often it’s done without FEMA funding despite an alignment of missions. Land trusts are well integrated with communities, have expertise in land transactions and stewardship, and can often mobilize resources faster and with more flexibility than the federal government, making them ideal organizations to assist in natural disaster planning and response. Their community-centered model of conservation also allows for interventions that are highly localized and can help begin to address some of the systemic inequities that plague FEMA programs. Much of the work land trusts do falls into the category of natural or green infrastructure, such as wetlands and living shorelines. With an estimated $7 saved for every $1 invested, natural