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The Future of Disaster Resilience: Spotlight on Parametric Insurance with Alex Kaplan
Summary of ISD and StateBook April 15 webinar presentation by Alex Kaplan Executive Vice President for Alternative Risk, AmWINS Parametric Insurance: A New Tool for Disaster Recovery and Community Resilience According to NOAA, the natural disasters of 2023 and 2024 caused over $400 billion in economic damages. As extreme events continue to impact communities across the United States, economic development officials are searching for innovative financial tools to enhance disast
May 15
The FEMA Review Council Has Issued Their Final Report. Are States Ready For It?
By Lynn Knight, CEcD, and Stephen Jordan — Institute for Sustainable Development The Final Report of the President’s Council to Assess the Federal Emergency Management Agency , released on May 7, confirms what many disaster recovery practitioners have recognized for years: states and local governments will increasingly be expected to lead disaster recovery, with the federal government serving in a more supporting role. The Council’s doctrine — “locally executed, state managed
May 15
Insurance is the New Diversification
By Nidia Martinez, Ph.D People and businesses often believe that if they can renew their insurance program year after year, they have “climate change coverage.” That is a misconception. Insurance covers losses from specific events—e.g., hurricanes, floods, wildfires—under defined terms and conditions. It does not cover the underlying trend driving those events. And it has no obligation to renew contracts year after year. While climate change is often described in terms of ris
May 7


Community Continuity: Building a Playbook Between Emergency Response and Long-Term Recovery
More than two weeks after Winter Storm Fern swept across the South, many communities remain in a difficult in-between phase: the immediate crisis has passed, but thousands of residents—particularly the elderly, rural, low-income, and medically vulnerable—are still without reliable heat, power, communications, or water. President Trump issued Presidential Disaster Declarations for twelve states , but in many places FEMA Individual Assistance has not yet been activated. This cr
Feb 6


Moving Communities from Reactive Response to Continuity by Design
Check out our next webinar on February 11, 2026 if you are interested in learning more! Disasters are not random acts of fate. The storms, hurricanes, fires, and other extreme events that naturally occur are not disasters in themselves. What causes the disasters are the failures of power, water, communications, logistics, and finance. Communities that prepare for those failures recover faster, cheaper, and with far less human cost. As we see now in the aftermath of Winter Sto
Feb 5
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