1

IIIIf*

Resiliency and Natural
Disaster Debris
Workshop
Final Summary Report

&EPA

United States
Environmental Protection
Agency

December 2021

EPA 530-R-22-001


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Acknowledgements

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is grateful for the invaluable assistance of the individuals and
organizations who developed and participated in the EPA Region 5 and Region 9 Resiliency and Natural
Disaster Debris Workshops. Workshop Planning Committee members included:

•	EPA Headquarters: Kristina Torres and Melissa Kaps-Office of Resource Conservation and Recovery

•	EPA Office of Resource Conservation and Recovery ORISE Interns: Kaylyn Miller and Ian Joyce

•	EPA Region 5: Dolly Tong, Susan Vescovi, David Morrison, and Jeffrey Kimble-EPA Region 5; Cadence
Peterson-FEMA

•	EPA Region 9: Timonie Hood and Richie Donahou-EPA Region 9; Nicole Haynes-Alameda County

•	Contractors: Brad Spangler-Meridian Institute; Jennifer Lam, Shanika Amarakoon-Eastern Research
Group, Inc.

Workshop participants and background interview experts represented:

Federal Agencies: FEMA, HUD, NOAA, GSA, USDA, Naval Facilities Engineering Systems Command Southwest,
National Renewable Energy Lab (NREL), U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Presidio Trust, EPA-Office of
Environmental Justice, Office of Research and Development and Pacific Islands Office

Tribal Governments: Mille Lacs Band ofOjibwe, Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe, Red Cliff Band of Superior
Chippewa, Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians

State Agencies: Arizona Department of Emergency and Military Affairs, Arizona Department of Environmental
Quality, CalEPA, CalRecycle, California Coastal Commission, California Department of Toxic Substances Control,
Hawaii Emergency, Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, Nevada Tribal Emergency Coordinating Council, Ohio
EPA, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources

Local Governments: Calumet County, Wl; Chippewa County, Wl; County of Alameda, CA; County of San Mateo,
CA; Kenosha County Sheriff's Division of Emergency Management, Wl; Indianapolis, IN; Los Angeles County
Public Works, CA; San Francisco Department of the Environment, CA; San Antonio, TX; San Francisco
Department of Emergency Management, CA; StopWaste, CA; Portland, OR; Saint Paul, MN; Toledo, OH;
Waushara County, Wl

Nongovernmental Organizations/Businesses: American Red Cross, Los Angeles Region; Bay Area
Deconstruction Workgroup; California Resiliency Alliance; Climate Xchange; Development Center for
Appropriate Technology; Enterprise Community Partners, Inc.; Green Advantage, Inc.; GreenLynx; Illinois State
Water Survey; International Code Council; Journey Disaster Response Team; Material Reuse; National Institute
of Building Sciences; Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions; Resilient Design Institute; Resource Recycling
Systems; Reuse Alliance; ReUse Hawai'i; San Francisco Federal Executive Board; Resilient Design Institute;
Virtual Plant Technologies, LLC; Zanker Recycling

Academic Institutions: Colorado State University, Middlebury Institute on International Studies, Rice
University, University of Louisiana at Lafayette

The workshops and summary report were developed by EPA with support from Eastern Research Group, Inc.,
and Meridian Institute (EPA Contract No. 68HERH19D0033).

Reference herein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark,
manufacturer, or otherwise, does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or
favoring by the United States Government. The views and opinions of expressed herein do not necessarily state
or reflect those of the United States Government and shall not be used for advertising or product endorsement
purposes.

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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris
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Executive Summary

Background

Between May and August 2021, EPA hosted virtual workshops for
Region 5 and Region 9 on resiliency and natural disaster debris
planning and management.

•	Region 5 serves Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota,

Ohio, Wisconsin and 35 Tribes

•	Region 9 serves Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada, Pacific
Islands, and 148Tribes

Each regional workshop comprised virtual sessions and breakout and plenary discussions.

The workshop goals included:

•	Align the federal family, working with their state and tribal partners, across the disaster
management and materials life cycles to increase resiliency and leverage resources;

•	Identify gaps that prevent the alignment of disaster debris management activities and sustainable
materials management practices; and

•	Bring about changes in behavior by identifying practical actions to bridge the gap between
current practices related to disaster debris and community resilience.

Participants represented federal, tribal, state, and local government; non-governmental organizations;
academic and research institutions; associations; and consulting firms. Overall feedback was positive, and
participants appreciated EPA's leadership and engagement on this issue and the opportunity to meet
workshop participants from other organizations.

Workshop Agenda Topics

The main topics discussed across the two regional workshops include:

•	Expansive discussion of cutting-edge view of the connection between resiliency practices and
disaster debris management

•	Opportunities and hurdles to advancing environmental justice and community engagement in
disaster debris planning, recovery, and resilient rebuilding

•	Impacts of the climate crisis on frequent and severe disasters and sea level rise

•	Innovative and resilient disaster debris management practices, including planning for sea level
rise; safe deconstruction, reuse, recycling, and composting; and resilient building design

•	Understanding of and connections between the roles, responsibilities, and capabilities among
various federal agencies in the disaster management cycle

•	Opportunities and hurdles to advancing innovative and resilient disaster debris management

•	Practical next steps to advance innovative and equitable disaster debris management and
resilience

•	Key workshop takeaways featured at an Executive Session

VISION

Where everyone lives in a resilient

world where less debris is
generated and fewer resources are
used to rebuild and recover.

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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Final Summary Report

RECYCLING/COMPOSTING

ENERGY RECOVERY

TREATMENT
t

DISPOSAL

LEAST
DESIRABLE
OPTION

During both Region 5 and
9 workshops, EPA shared
the Waste Management
Hierarchy to in an

introductory presentation
provide Sustainable
Materials Management
prioritization information
for workshop participants.

Follow-up Actions for Consideration

Workshop participants identified a variety of potential follow-up actions to address key gaps and advance
innovative and equitable natural disaster debris management and resilience. Currently, IT MA and other
federal and state agency disaster debris programs default, and in some cases require, landfill disposal of
disaster debris, including abandoned buildings and buildings threatened by sea level rise. The table below
highlights some key gaps and potential solutions to close them.

Resiliency and Disaster Debris: A Natural Connection

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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Final Summary Report

Identified Gaps Potential Solutions

•	Building Codes: In partnership with key non-governmental standard-setting organizations
(e.g., International Code Council, U.S. Green Building Council, ISO) explore federal policy
changes or guidance that could drive action on resilience building and/or deconstruction
practices at the local level

•	Federal guidance: Federal leadership and guidance is needed on:
o engaging with and reducing impacts of disaster debris in underserved communities
o methods and systems for material reuse

o integrating/aligning Hazard Mitigation Plans with Disaster Debris planning
o planningfor reducing waste from buildings impacted by sea level rise
o navigating historic preservation requirements

o accounting for the influence of climate change in disaster debris planning
o opportunities to leverage and align local planning processes with federal hazard

mitigation and disaster debris planning guidance
o proper/safe deconstruction methods

o certifications and how EPA can get involved in deconstruction certification, similar to

EPA's lead paint certification program
o resilient, affordable housing siting, design, and management to withstand disasters

•	Business case for planning and mitigation: Conduct cost-benefit studies to assess the return
on investment for resiliency planning and develop a business case for advance disaster debris
planning and mitigation measures

•	Pilot project: Facilitate investment in pilot or demonstration projects on deconstruction,
materials reuse, and creating markets for salvaged materials

•	Showcase examples and case studies: Publicize successful disaster debris management and
resiliency strategies and efforts

•	Prioritize underserved communities: Develop inclusive planning and outreach to support
those most vulnerable to disasters

•	Resource center: Develop a resource hub to capture and provide access to the full range of
relevant federal resources, guides, and funding opportunities pertinent to disaster debris
management and resilience

•	Trainings and technical assistance: Develop trainings and technical assistance to support
communities in planning for disaster debris management and resiliency

•	Webinar and trainings: Provide webinars and trainings that appeal to local governments to
encourage natural disaster resilience, including planning for natural disaster debris,
deconstruction, and reuse mandates

•	Interagency working group: Establish a federal interagency working group on disaster debris
and resiliency to identify synergies and opportunities to strengthen coordination

•	Cross-coordination: Increase coordination with tribal, state, and local partners across
jurisdictions to address similar issues together

•	Partner training: Provide training and engage with non-governmental partners

*Forafull list of gaps and potential solutions, see the meeting summaries below.

The two workshops generated a range of practical action steps the federal family can take to address
existing gaps and drive innovation around disaster debris management and resilience. One key idea that
clearly emerged and could be used to enhance coordination and spark action across a number of these
areas, is to establish a federal interagency working group on resilient disaster debris management.
Participants generally pointed to EPA and FEMA as potential joint hosts of such a group.

Technology,
Research, and
Development

Planning
Resources and
Information
Sharing

Partnerships
and

Coordination

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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Final Summary Report

Meeting Summary

Region 5

Common Great Lakes region disasters include flooding and extreme storms.

Background

The EPA Region 5 RNDD Workshop occurred over three 2- and 3-hour virtual sessions on May 4 and 6 and
May 20, 2021.1 The workshop goals included:

•	Align the federal family, working with their state and tribal partners, across the disaster
management and materials life cycles to increase resiliency and leverage resources;

•	Identify gaps that prevent the alignment of disaster debris management activities and sustainable
materials management practices; and

•	Bring about changes in behavior by identifying practical actions to bridge the gap between
current practices related to disaster debris and community resilience.

Participants

Across the three sessions, there was an average of 50 participants (session 1-67 participants, session 2-
45 participants, session 3-38 participants). Most participants represented the federal government,
followed by local, state, and tribal governments, and other key sectors (NGO, academia, private).

Discussion Highlights

Key topics of discussion during the Region 5 workshop
included:

•	Opportunities to enhance federal interagency
coordination around resiliency and disaster debris
management: This included a series of lightning talks
highlighting opportunities for greater governmental
coordination between the environmental and
disaster response communities around disaster
debris management before, during, and after
events, a long with information a bout releva nt tools
and resources.

1 Download all Region 5 meeting recordings (.mp4) and presentations (PDF) for all 3 sessions here:
https://drive.eooele.com/drive/folders/12GxOX-K3JOkuHluo95sANgNhlUbV9qEZPusp-sharing

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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Final Summary Report

•	Federal agencies disaster debris interactive exercise: Breakout-
groups worked through and discussed questions on where each
agency fits in - identifying gaps, obstacles, potential solutions,
and action steps. The discussion questions varied from high
policy-level concerns to basic tactical level problems.

•	Improving advance planning for natural disaster debris
management and resilience: Breakout groups identified potential
solutions to address key gaps associated with advance planning
for natural disaster debris management and increase community
resilience. Participants thought more broadly and creatively about
how to better leverage and coordinate federal programs for
resiliency, mitigation, and disaster debris planning.

•	Advancing more innovative and resilient disaster debris
management: Breakout group identified ways to drive and
enhance community implementation of measures to mitigate
disaster impacts and minimize disaster debris while building
resilience. Throughout the breakout sessions participants worked
together to think broadly and creatively about how to better
leverage and coordinate federal programs.

Key Takeaways

Key takeaways from the Region 5 workshops included:

•	Streamline processes, guidance, and incentives to help
communities develop comprehensive debris management
and resilience plans effectively and efficiently.

•	Conduct outreach and education and create a resource
website that spans across the Federal Agencies where all
available technical assistance, grants, guidance, and draft
resilience plans are available to state, local and tribal/tribal
agencies.

•	Engage all stakeholders and the community in the problem
identification, factfinding, research, and solution
development of disaster debris and resiliency challenges
and create interagency collaboration on mitigation
resources.

•	Give priority to funding pre-disaster debris planning and

provide communities with expert resources.

Mixed debris landfill.
(Photo: Susan Vescovi)

EPA's Guidance on Planning for Natural
Disaster for Debris
https://www.eDa. aov/homeland-
securitv-waste/auidance-about-
Dlannina-natural-disaster-debris

Table 1 below highlights key gaps and steps the federal family could
take to close those gaps and advance resilient disaster debris
management across the nation.

Table 1. Key gaps and potential solutions for resilient disaster debris management

Key Gaps

•	Lack of integration of disaster debris planning with other community planning processes (e.g., hazard
mitigation)

•	Lack of data and cost-benefit analyses around return on investments in waste management systems, resilient
building practices, infrastructure, and other measures necessary to minimize disaster debris and maximize
materials reuse

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PLANNING
FOR

NATURAL
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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Final Summary Report

Key Gaps

•	Limited coordination and streamlining of disaster debris planning processes

•	Lack of outreach and communication to local communities on available resources to leverage

•	Lack of financial resources and incentives for community disaster debris planning

•	Lack of understanding on what flexibility communities have regarding FEMA reimbursement rules (e.g.,
traditional disposal vs other reuse options)

•	Lack of national-scale building codes; varied local enforcement

•	Limited cultural competency for providing planning and response
assistance to Tribes

•	Lack of community-level awareness about strategies and services to
minimize generation of debris and waste

•	Limited investment in demonstration projects (e.g., research, pilots,
technologies for alternative debris management)	

Potential Solutions

•	Promote existing guidance and tools - Planning for Natural Disaster Debris Guidance (PNDD) and Disaster
Debris Recovery Tool (DDRT)

•	Complete research and publish results on assessing the return on investment for resiliency planning

•	Promote availability of funding resources - FEMA's Public Assistance Program, HUD's Community
Development Block Grant, USDA's Rural Development Water Environmental Programs

•	Develop interagency tool/curriculum to help agencies understand each other's programs and Identify
opportunities for collaboration and synergy, as well as include a visual flowchart for how agency programs
intersect to coordinate and streamline disaster debris planning and response

•	Forge partnerships and engage state and tribal agencies and local organizations in disaster debris and
resilience planning

•	Enhanced training for disaster debris planning and guidance re: integration with other community planning
processes; for example:

o How to pre-designate materials for reuse/recycling and separate materials from wastes
o How to identify and establish contracts with more diverse service providers and facilities

•	Develop debris plan templates and other tools to help communities with planning	

For specific details on 1) transformational actions the federal government could take to enhance
resilience around disaster debris management, as well as 2) quick wins the federal government should
pursue in the near-term to enhance resilience around disaster debris management, see the
downloadable full meeting summary notes.

Proposed Actions and Next Steps to Reach Identified Goals

As part of a workshop evaluation, participants ranked the following "quick win" priorities identified during
the workshop. These were ideas that emerged regarding ways in which the federal family could make
progress toward the vision and goals of the workshop in the near-term. Each item includes a possible
timeline for implementation.

1.	Interagency Working Group: Establish a federal interagency working group on disaster debris and
resiliency.

•	2022: Establish steering committee for interagency working group, develop goals and
objectives for working group, invite representatives to join working group.

•	2023 - ongoing: Set quarterly meetings for interagency working group.

2.	Resource Center: Develop a resource hub to capture and provide access to the full range of
relevant federal resources, guides, and funding opportunities pertinent to disaster debris
management and resilience. (Also see Trainings and Technical Assistance below.)

•	2022: Identify lead agency and contact, develop plan to establish resource center,
compile relevant resources and contacts for updating resources

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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Final Summary Report

•	2023 - ongoing: Update resource center on annual (or more frequent) basis, share news
regarding resource center to wide audience.

3.	Trainings and Technical Assistance: EPA and FEMA to develop joint trainings and technical
assistance mechanisms to support communities in planning for disaster debris management and
resiliency. (Also see Resource Center above.)

•	2022: Identify lead agency and contact, develop training and technical assistance plans

•	2023-ongoing: Implement training and technical assistance

4.	Business Case for Planning and Mitigation: Conduct cost-benefit studies to assess the return on
investment for resiliency planning and develop business case for disaster debris planning and
mitigation.

•	2022-2024: Identify contractor and conduct cost-benefit assessment on the economic,
social, and environmental costs associated with natural disaster debris and the benefits
of planning for its management and implementing resiliency strategies and measures.
2022-2024: Develop business case for disaster debris planning and mitigation

5.	Pilot Project: Facilitate investment in pilot/demonstration projects on deconstruction, materials
reuse, and creating markets for salvaged materials.

•	2023-2024: Identify potential pilot projects for investment

•	2025-ongoing: Invest in pilot projects

Deconstruction job training pilot projects were conducted on various types of buildings by Mercy Corps and other nonprofit

organizations after Hurricane Katrina. (Photos: Brad Guy)

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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Final Summary Report

Region 9

Sea level rise, tropical storms, earthquakes, and wildfires impact the Pacific Southwest and Pacific Islands region. (Fire Photo:

Jana Baidwin/FEMA)

Background

The EPA Region 9 RNDD Workshop occurred over three 2- and 2.25-hour virtual sessions on July 20 and
22 and August 17, 2021.2 The workshop goals included:

•	Align the federal family, state, and tribal partners to advance disaster debris planning,
management, and policy innovation to support environmental justice and climate resilience;

•	Identify opportunities to advance planning and policies for safe building and building materials
reuse in disaster response, recovery, and other innovative policies; and

•	Change behavior by identifying practical actions to bridge the gap between current practices
related to disaster debris planning and management, environmental justice, and community
resilience.

Participants

Across the three sessions, there was an average of 66 participants (session 1-67 participants, session 2-
62 participants, session 3-68 participants). Most participants represented the federal government,
followed by state and local government, and other key sectors (NGO, academia, private). An additional 24
executive session attendees joined to watch and listen to key takeaways from the Region 9 workshop.

Discussion Highlights

Key topics of discussion during the Region 9 workshops included:

•	Expanding our view of disaster debris management: The panel of session 1 speakers helped
connect shared priorities of equity, environmental justice and climate resilience to disaster debris
and sea level rise planning. The session 2 panel highlighted opportunities for government
agencies and communities to develop resilient, affordable housing, as well as innovative local
government policies and plans advancing disaster debris deconstruction, reuse, and recycling
opportunities.

2 Download all Region 9 meeting recordings (.mp4) and presentations (PDF) for all 3 sessions here:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/lYxmOo LeJ5blUqixBWqzCUdaPZDLWx3?usp=sharing

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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Final Summary Report

Virtual Reality visualization of sea level rise and storm impacts on Santa Cruz, California's low-income Beach Flats neighborhood.

(Photo: Virtual Reality Technologies LLC.)

• Envisioning innovative and resilient disaster debris management: Breakout groups discussed
building blocks needed at the federal, state, and local level to push innovation in disaster debris
management, as well as how the federal family can help disseminate best practices and lessons
learned from disaster debris resiliency life cycle experts.

Panelized deconstruction was used to deconstruction a home in afloodplain buyout in Alachua County, Florida, and the lumber
was used to build new Section 8 affordable housing inland. (Photos: Brad Guy)

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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Final Summary Report

• Opportunities and hurdles to advancing innovative and resilient disaster debris management:

Workshop speakers and participants focused on the highest and best use of materials -through
deconstruction and reuse, as well as advancing recycling, composting, and mulching. Breakout
groups discussed how to best advance more sustainable disaster debris management, including
specific best practices that should be amplified, policy opportunities available to enable
innovation, priority research needs that should be tackled, and key hurdles.

Clean green waste was mulched and given to residents and corrugated metal roofing was separated for recycling after Typhoon

Soudelor in Saipan.

•	Practical next steps to advance innovative and equitable disaster debris management and
resilience: Breakout groups discussed ways to advance priority opportunities for innovative and
equitable disaster debris management and resilience in five key areas: funding and incentives;
policy and guidance; technology, research, and development; planning resources and knowledge
sharing; and partnerships and coordination.

•	Executive session: An executive session with opening remarks by Deputy Assistant Administrator
Carlton Waterhouse and EPA Region 9 Division Director Jeff Scott, shared video highlights and key
takeaways from the Region 9 workshops.

Key Takeaways

Key takeaways from the Region 9 workshop included:

•	Federal leadership is needed to mitigate the disaster debris impacts driven by climate change.
Example actions include:

o Targeting funding and resources to those with greatest need (e.g., environmental justice,
Tribes, islands)

o Identifying buildings that have not been damaged and have high reuse potential so that
they may be repaired/fortified or deconstructed for reusable materials Visualizing future
impacts and sharing those through virtual reality can motivate local community and
government action now
o Updating sea level rise retreat guidance around removal conditions for development in
potentially hazardous areas which currently requires demolition and landfill disposal to
include requirements for deconstruction and reuse

•	Develop engagement and siting guidance to prevent "dumping on" disadvantaged communities.

•	Deconstruction policies are growing across the nation and post-disaster potential for safe
deconstruction and reuse is proven (e.g., Hurricanes Katrina and Irene). There is opportunity to
build and adapt on these examples in R9.

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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Final Summary Report

Nonprofit organizations built disaster recovery sheds after
Hurricane Katrina to store recovery workers' belongings. The
sheds were built entirely from reclaimed materials with the
exception of the metal roofing. (Photos: Brad Guy)

"I loved that national attention
is finally being brought to the
reuse and deconstruction
arena. Construction and
demolition waste should be
minimized, and design should
consider deconstruction in
planning phases."

- Region 9 Workshop
Participant

A home flooded during Hurricane Irene in New Jersey was deconstructed by Rutgers University Students and recycled concrete
base and wood were used on-site to build a resilient floodplain pocket park. (Photos: Tobiah Horton)

• Federal guidance and investment to reimburse and provide incentives for equitable
deconstruction and reuse is needed. Example needs include:

o Policy updates to reduce waste and conserve embodied carbon (e.g., circular economy)
o Infrastructure investments in reuse facilities (warehouses, storage yards)
o Local and state deconstruction ordinances/infrastructure so the region is prepared to
salvage materials post disaster (e.g., One home ~5 tons lumber & 7.6 MTC02 equivalent-
Portland.)

Examples of reuse infrastructure: reclaimed building materials storage yards, processing centers, and warehouses.

(Photos: Brad Guy)

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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Final Summary Report

Quick win for updating grant guidance: Explicitly list
deconstruction and reuse as eligible activities for grants
- infrastructure, mitigation, job training, etc.

State and local advance planning builds resilience in
communities. Examples include:

o Having federal guidance, advance planning and
exercises, model plans and scopes of work,
(e.g., Forest Service Zero Waste Fire Camps) can
increase capacity for communities to develop
plans

o Supporting federal reimbursement for landfill
diversion (reuse, recycling, composting, mulching)
and developing disaster debris management plans
that builds on LA County Northridge Earthquake
precedent requiring FEMA reimbursement of higher
cost debris recovery
Support deconstruction job training/certification.
Deconstruction creates 6 times more jobs than mechanical
demolition

• Expand markets: Federal purchasing requirements (e.g., EPA
Comprehensive Procurement Guidelines) can drive reuse
and low embodied carbon materials

Portland, Oregon developed a
Deconstruction Job Training Program.

The Forest Service's Zero Waste

Incident Recycling Blanket
Purchase Agreement provides
recycling services, signage, and
measurement at Fire Camps.
https://www.fs. usda.aov/manaai
n a-land/fire/s ustain able-
ops/incident-recvcling

(Left): The Federal Center South U.S. Army Corps
Seattle District Headquarters Building is a LEED
Gold building completed by the U.S. General
Services Administration in 2012 using 300,000
board feet of structural and nonstructural lumber
from an adjacent warehouse that was
deconstructed.

https://www.asa.aov/cdnstatic/GSA FCS Press Bo
ok emaii.pdf

Figure 1 below presents the results of real time polling that captured workshop participants' views of key
opportunities for the federal family to advance equitable and resilient disaster debris management.3

® Note, there is no gaps and solutions table for R9 (as there is in R5 section above) due to the altered structure and for the R9
sessions. Framing of the R9 sessions focused more on innovation and actionable opportunity areas.

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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Final Summary Report

Figure 1. Gauging priority opportunity areas (poll results)

What are the most important opportunities for federal agencies
to advance more resilient disaster debris management?

(Vote for two)

45%

40%

35%

30%

25%

20%

15%

10%

5%

0%























41%











34%



13%















11%















1%



JT

s





v*S



if

¥>°'







How should the federal government prioritize equity and
environmental justice in resilient disaster debris management?

(Vote for up to three)

How should the federal government advance deconstruction and
safe reuse in resilient disaster planning and actions?

(Vote for up to three)

DD = Disaster Debris

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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Final Summary Report

For specific details and examples on opportunity areas for the federal family to advance equity,
innovation, and resilience in disaster debris management, see the full downloadable meeting summary
notes.

Proposed Actions and Next Steps to Reach Identified Goals

As part of a workshop evaluation, participants ranked the following "quick win" priorities identified during
the workshop. These were ideas that emerged regarding ways in which the federal family could make
progress toward the vision and goals of the workshop in the near-term. Each item includes a possible
timeline for implementation.

•	Organize the ideas generated from the workshops into
broader categories, then ask workshop participants which
categories they would like to work on as a group or pursue
on their own (see Box 1 for potential topical areas for
working groups).

o 2022: Establish 1-3 priority working groups, identify
leads, develop goals and objectives for working
groups, invite representatives to join working
groups, initiate quarterly meetings
o 2023-ongoing: Quarterly meetings for working
groups; share deliverables

•	Develop and deliver webinars and trainings on key entry
points to incorporate deconstruction and reuse into local
policy mandates, environmental justice and disaster
resilience, and other priority topics.

o 2022: Identify lead agency and contact, develop,

and conduct trainings
o 2023-2024-ongoing: Conduct trainings

•	Showcase examples, case studies, pilot projects of successful disaster debris management and
resiliency strategies and efforts. (This is like next steps from R5 workshop.)

o 2022-2023: Identify lead agency and contact, identify website and approved template,

develop, and compile relevant examples, case studies, and pilot projects
o 2024 - ongoing: Update resources annual (or more frequent) basis, share resources to
wide audience

•	Change federal (especially FEMA & HUD) grant eligible activities lists to include disaster debris
planning and infrastructure.

o 2022: Meet with smaller groups (i.e., working groups mentioned above) to move

guidance forward on specific topics (environmental justice engagement/siting, and FEMA
policy supporting reimbursement for deconstruction, reuse, recycling and composting,
sea level rise policy focus on environmental justice and materials)
o 2023-2004 - ongoing: Advise and consult with federal agency decision-makers to update
their grant eligibility guidelines

Box 1. Potential Working Group
Topics

•	Equity/environmental justice

•	Infrastructure development

•	Deconstruction and safe reuse

•	Job training and certification

•	Funding opportunities

•	Policy development

•	Recycling and/or composting

•	Embodied carbon and
government purchasing

•	Resilient affordable housing

•	Disaster debris planning &
communications

•	Sea level rise

•	Stakeholder engagement/
communications

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Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Final Summary Report

Common Themes and Participant Mix

Common Themes

Common themes that arose in both regional workshops include:

•	Leverage existing funding resources: There are a variety of federal funding programs that are not
directly related to disaster mitigation, response, or recovery that communities can tap into to
secure funds for activities relevant to debris management; the federal family needs to better
understand how these programs intersect with disaster debris management and make this
information visible to community leaders.

•	Build a community of practice: Participants emphasized the importance and value of engaging in
small group discussions with other practitioners and experts focused on improving disaster debris
management and resilience to learn about best practices, existing resources, and build their
professional networks.

•	Establish ongoing forums for knowledge exchange: A key next step is to establish ongoing forums
(e.g., working groups) for further information sharing and collaboration.

•	Develop resource center with technical assistance: Developing, promoting, and maintaining a
resource hub and offering technical assistance to support communities in planning for disaster
debris management and resiliency is critical.

•	Develop case studies and pilot projects: Document and disseminate key case studies and invest in
pilot projects that help build the business case and demonstrate the resilience benefits of
improved disaster debris planning and mitigation.

Participant Mix

The participant mix may have affected overall engagement, participation, problem identification,

solutions, and outcomes., including:

•	Majority federal representatives (mostly EPA, including EPA observers): Given the intention of
these workshops to help align the federal family, having most federal representatives at the
workshops was expected. However, most federal agency participants were EPA representatives
and observers. Nevertheless, participants from other agencies expressed enthusiasm for the
topic and generally an openness to engaging in further dialogue and collaboration. Both Region 5
and 9 Workshops included representatives from 8 federal agencies; however, there was limited
continuation of their participation across all three sessions. Additional federal participants from
USACE, FEMA, USDA, and BIA would be valued in future workshops.

•	Need for additional local, state, tribal, and islands level agency representatives: Participants from
both regional workshops identified the need to enlist more representation from local and state
agencies to better understand specific needs and problems facing communities, and how the
federal family can help address them.

•	Need for additional environmental justice/underserved community representatives: Additional
representation from underserved community groups would be helpful for understanding
priorities for equitable disaster debris planning and management.

•	Need for additional academic and NGO representatives: The workshops benefitted from
academic and NGO participation and including more non-governmental participants could
broaden perspectives and capacity-building.

•	Explore opportunities to engage private sector representatives: While the focus of these
workshops was on government participants, EPA planners heard that engagement with
businesses working on resilient design, insurance, and waste management may be beneficial in
future workshops.

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Appendix. Region 9 Summary

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Region 9
Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Series

July 20, 22 and August 19, 2021

This appendix summarizes input provided by U.S. EPA Region 9 Workshop presenters and
participants. Links have been added and the input was sorted, but the comments provide direct
input received at the workshop.

1. Funding & Incentives

Support Underserved and Disaster-Impacted Communities

•	Funding/resources prioritized for low-income communities

(Note: The federal government is focusing on this through the Justice40 Initiative)

•	More funding should be allocated to communities that are frequently and historically
impacted by natural disasters

•	Integrate with pre- and post-disaster support services and training for community
members

•	Ensure low-income and historically excluded communities receive adequate resources

•	Work on equity of federal buyout programs

•	Materials management infrastructure investments should prioritize marginalized
communities

•	Jobs and job training equity/justice issue - paying "outsiders" to do the work but relying
on local volunteers (e.g., Hurricane Irma, FL)

High Level Funding Ideas

•	Incentives -THINK BIG -Tax Credits, Opportunity Zones, etc.

•	LOCAL funding for capacity building/education

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•	Currently communities have limited resources, funding, and capacity to plan for and
response to disasters

•	More funding should be provided for local communities to hire consultants to develop
their pre and post disaster plans

•	Think through how to contract - key element was allowing contractors to find market
solutions for the trees - incentives to get people to do this

•	Federal mitigation planning and grant funding

•	Federal funding programs such as FEMA are not long enough (only 18 months) and
should be extended

•	Seed funding for infrastructure

•	Federal mitigation planning and grant funding

•	Research & development tax credits, research funding

•	Need to get standards for deconstruction and salvage into business-as-usual tools,
especially cost estimators

•	Mimic state and federal financial tax credit and tax deferment incentives such as stream
mitigation, nutrient credits, conservation easement credits, R&D credits, opportunity
zone, IRS 1031 property exchanges

•	Incentives for equity, innovation, and resilience to be used as public cost matches of
federal grants

•	Investments in affordable housing using non-toxic materials is critical, especially with
climate change and increasing disasters

•	Idea for disaster debris prevention - Fund research to determine the amounts and
characteristics of superfluous building materials on existing buildings and determine
feasibility of removing these materials and sending to reuse/recycling markets

Funding for Materials Recovery: Deconstruction, Reuse,

Recycling, Composting and Infrastructure

•	Explicitly establish and incentivize safe reuse, recycling, and composting over disposal in
federal guidance

•	Significant reuse benefits to recovery/local economy include local jobs to support
transition into construction and retail, low-cost building materials, maker/
fabrication/artist industries, property, sales, and payroll taxes

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DECONSTRUCTION

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economic, community, and
environmental benefits

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landAI costs
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economic, community, and
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City of San Antonio, Treasure in the Walls Reclaiming Value Through Material Reuse in San Antonio, February
2021

•	Establishing grants that prioritize deconstruction and reuse programs, policies,
infrastructure, and workforce development programs

•	Leverage deconstruction tax donation deductions to incentivize deconstruction and
reuse in buyouts

•	Funding for pre-disaster deconstruction to relocate buildings away from hazards

•	Fund deconstruction and redistribution efforts

•	Add deconstruction and reuse infrastructure into eligible activity lists for appropriate
grants

•	Warehouse/retail space is a hurdle. Need help from the state and local government for
warehousing. We can handle the redistribution of the material but can't afford the cost
of commercial space

•	Revise or establish federal tax credits that incentivize/reward the use of reclaimed
materials in retrofit projects (specifically the Historic Tax Credit Program administered
by the National Park Service)

•	Conservation tax credits and conservation easements incentives could encourage
people to deconstruct their buildings, barns, etc., and salvage wood and other materials
before the land is converted back into a wetland

•	Providing funding for research projects that focus on materials innovation, specifically
reusing salvaged materials to produce new building materials (Circular Economy
approach)

•	Incentivizing or supporting large-scale, public reuse or salvage centers in local
communities - shifting from a recycling model to a reuse model

•	Public investment/public benefits space for reuse infrastructure including storage and
processing

•	Strategically local reuse facilities including warehouses, de-nailing yards in regions to
prepare for disasters

•	Creating an incentive for congested communities with older buildings to think now
about deconstruction

•	FEMA incentive to reuse and deconstruction similar to FEMA recycling pilot

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Funding for Jobs and Job Training

•	Add deconstruction and reuse job training activities into eligible activity lists for
appropriate grants

•	Financial assistance for workforce development

•	Provide funding support for job training in the traditional construction trades
(restoration/repair of older & existing housing stock + deconstruction) to increase
contractors locally, which makes these services more affordable and accessible to all

•	Job training and creation opportunities matter (example: Hurricane Katrina
deconstruction and rebuilding)

•	EPA deconstruction job training certification like Lead Based Paint Certification (3rd
party trainers)

Procurement Requirements for Salvaged Materials

•	Federal procurements that specify salvaged material (e.g., Comprehensive
Procurement Guidelines, low embodied carbon purchasing requirements)

•	Procurement requirements - federal or post-disaster for reused/low embodied carbon
materials

•	Focus on green procurement

Other Ideas

•	Give priority funding and engagement to debris management groups that are employee
owned and employee managed (Examples of employee owned/employee managed
groups are the Mondragon community in Spain and Cooperative Home Care Associates
in NY)

•	Allowing more room for mitigation projects to upscale culverts and drainage structures
that run through communities

Federal Funding Resources

•	Search all federal grants at Grants.gov

•	Federal Disaster Resilience Funding - nearly $5 billion this year

FEMA Building Resilient Infrastructure in Communities (BRIC) Program and Flood
Mitigation Assistance (both close Jan. 28, 2022, 3 p.m. Eastern Time): Fiscal Year 2021
Notices of Funding Opportunities for Hazard Mitigation Assistance Grants I FEMA.gov

•	National Park Service Tax Incentive Program

•	Department of Labor National Dislocated Worker Grants support disaster debris
management & could be used for reuse and disaster debris recovery

•	EPA Sustainable Materials Management Grants (search all federal grants at Grants.gov)
for solicitations

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2. Policy/Guidance

Equity/Environmental Justice/Affordable Housing

•	Address equity/justice concerns with disparity in disaster debris siting decisions and the
use of waivers

•	Invest in high-quality affordable housing in areas not at increased climate/disaster risk

•	Equity/justice of site oversight and management, in light of additional post-disaster
storms

•	Establishing guidelines for a pipeline for reclaimed materials to build affordable housing,
like a Salvage-to-Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) program with pattern books

•	Avoid presumptions about access to reduce inequities (e.g., digital divide, poor
transportation infrastructure)

•	Immediate needs are not always environmental (emergency shelter, food,
transportation, etc.)

•	Shelter-in-place orders are not the answer for some homes not built to breathe/limited
ventilation

•	Ownership of materials and equity - communities that were pushed out and then
someone else is benefiting for those materials

o When dealing with private homeowners, materials are owned by

owner. Deconstruction companies either buy them (credit) or tax credit for their
donation to a non-profit
o In case of imminent domain, the government agency is justified to take property

to pay fair market value
o This is gets even more complicated when the structure is above/on newly public
trust land (below mean high tide)

•	Equitable decision-making has multiple benefits (example - community blocked with no
exit route/blocked by railroad had major community and economic benefits when
additional access route was added)

•	Develop guidance on designing/upgrading buildings for passive survivability situations
when electricity and water are cut off by disasters

General Policy Comments

•	Create political will at the top to move forward to investigate and implement priorities

•	Need political will, policy, procedure, awareness, and access

•	Need interagency workgroup to align work - US Army Corps of Engineers Silver Jackets
Program. EPA, FEMA, HUD

•	Provide more disaster guidance to different kinds of disasters (e.g., wildfire)

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Deconstruction, Reuse, Recycling and Composting
Broad Comments

•	Legislation to put more emphasis on material reuse and recycling. Also, help with the
need for warehousing and yard space

•	Develop certifications - Recycling and waste facilities are certified, but reuse facilities
are not certified

•	Connect Zero Waste actions (green purchasing, reuse, recycling, composting programs)
to disaster debris planning, response, and recovery

•	Set goal for percentage of buildings or waste to be deconstructed/reused in disasters
and establish infrastructure

•	Create deconstruction policies to help before and after a disaster

•	Delineate between deconstruction before vs after a disaster

•	Deconstruction buyouts can convert to resilient floodplain parks to protect
neighborhoods against future storms/floods

•	Develop standards for reuse of material

•	Reused materials can be used to build temporary shelters (materials or roof/wall
assemblies) after disasters

•	Supply and demand of deconstruction:

1)	Who makes the decisions about materials in rebuilding? Seems to be the developers.
What are the leverage points there?

2)	Don't forget about fixtures and furniture

•	No demolition - every building has something that can be recovered

Multiple Levels of Government

•	Sea level rise - current state guidance states all debris to be taken to a landfill - state &
FEMA guidance on demo/acquisition projects could be updated with deconstruction
guidance and streamlining from cost-benefit aspect

•	Support development of state and local deconstruction ordinances/infrastructure so the
region is prepared to salvage materials post disaster

•	Deconstruction buyouts can convert to resilient flood plain parks to protect
neighborhoods against future storms/floods

•	Develop standards for reuse of material

•	Reused materials can be used to build temporary shelters (materials or roof/wall
assemblies) after disasters

•	Set federal post-disaster deconstruction/reuse goals after disasters (percentage debris
or number of buildings)

•	State and local planning templates (FEMA, HUD), model policies/ordinances to support
disaster debris recovery & FEMA reimbursement & scopes of work

•	Federal/State policy guidance prioritizing safe deconstruction/reuse, recycling &
composting (policy, FEMA Benefit-Cost Tool, etc.) & providing guidance/tools

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•	Establish government reuse storage for disaster recovery away from areas at greatest
risk of disaster (coast, fault lines, etc.) so materials can be brought in to support
recovery

•	Panelized deconstruction to remove the roof, walls, can save time and increase
safety/can reuse whole walls

•	Develop model plans for reclaimed material disaster recovery sheds, post-disaster
repair, and infrastructure (reuse warehouse)

Federal Government

•	Federal policy supporting deconstruction/reuse, recycling policy would be more efficient
and effective than having every local jurisdiction have to justify

•	Federal guidance on material reuse

•	Update FEMA Benefit Cost Analysis to support reuse, recycling, composting (currently
only covers demolition and landfill disposal)

•	Set federal post-disaster deconstruction/reuse goals after disasters (percentage debris
or number of buildings)

•	Encourage in FEMA disaster debris management recovery program, the deconstruction
of buildings and encourage the hiring of local contractors and/or training of local labor
to conduct such appropriate buildings

•	EPA Sustainable Materials Grants can emphasize deconstruction and encourage local
government to instill these policies in their requirements

State Government

•	California climate legislation SB 1383 to keep organic materials (including wood) out of
landfills to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from landfill methane, a powerful climate
polluta nt

Local Government

•	Mandatory local government deconstruction ordinances

can help communities prepare by building infrastructure and expertise to manage
disaster debris

•	Local governments operate a large Houston-area building materials reuse warehouse.
and many materials were taken there and cleaned off after Hurricane Harvey

•	Mandatory local deconstruction - in Portland average home deconstruction reuses 5
tons of wood and conserves 7.6 metric tons net CQ2 equivalent

•	Support adoption of local government deconstruction policies which are rapidly growing
rapidly in U.S. communities through executive orders, ordinances, incentives, plans, or
Deconstruction Advisory Groups

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Building Codes

•	Under current International Construction Code (ICC) building code alternative materials
and methods with code official support, homes (including structural) can be built with
reclaimed lumber under (FL Section 8 Housing from floodplain buyout deconstruction)

•	Building codes (resilient design guidance and use of reclaimed materials, see Oregon
and Washington codes allowing reuse of undamaged lumber without regrading)

Procurement Policy

•	Add reclaimed lumber to EPA & USDA federal procurement guidelines

•	Buy local and reclaimed by Federal government

•	New federal focus on embodied carbon in materials, can reduce through local reuse
because there's no mining, manufacturing, transportation

•	Supply and demand of deconstruction: feds incentivize use of recycled materials

3. Technology, Research & Development

Equity/Underserved Communities

•	Connect virtual reality to other data sources on underserved communities (EPA
EJSCREEN example)

•	Establish a holistic, equity-based survey methodology for assessing existing buildings
and assigning value to buildings that may be impacted by natural disaster

Broad Comments

•	Design for deconstruction

•	Consider opportunities to connect virtual reality sea level rise visualization to
communicate (Sea Level Rise Explorer / Research Paper)

•	Build out virtual reality to connect Building Information Modeling (BIM), waste facility
data

•	Consider how infrastructure and system interdependences post disaster will affect
debris management (e.g., lack of reliable access to utilities for possibly weeks or
months, fuel shortages, workforce disruptions, etc.)

•	Need to innovate emergency/short term composting strategies for human waste

•	More research needs to be conducted on how to best relocate people after a disaster
occurs

•	Need some sort of final accounting on what went wrong and what went right after a
disaster to allow communities to better understand how they can improve their
response and recover efforts

•	More research on value of wholistic benefits/external factors of reuse on environment,
public health, climate, etc.

Research on existing buildings and find ways/strategies to expand their lifecycle

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(expand the lives of homes), this could be potentially a great opportunity for job
training/job source

•	Surveying locations for resource deployments

•	Research and develop benefits for communication to State and local government

•	Online marketplaces

Embodied Carbon/Energy

•	Embodied carbon - add reuse factors to EPA Waste Reduction Model (WARM)
and Recycled Content (ReCon) Tools

•	Analyze the carbon and energy benefits (net) between business as usual (landfill) and
alternative (deconstruction/reuse). Have a base case disaster with X number of square
feet and compare each scenario

•	Carbon neutral building

Materials Recovery Research

•	Research and track effective goals/targets for reuse

•	Deconstruction is not just for old growth lumber, examples

of 1970s home and reuse of plywood and Oriented Strand Board (OSB)

•	Deconstruction times - the general estimate is 1 week/10,000 square feet, could so
more research

•	Deconstruction economic impacts/job creation often estimated at 6x more than
landfilling and incineration, more disaster job creation research would be helpful / also
jobs in retail, rebuilding, etc.

•	Research types of existing local ordinances that may support or hinder disaster debris
management activities

•	Research guidance highlighting easy ways to determine what buildings can be safely
deconstructed and how (perhaps a typology)

•	Research how to determine termite damage quickly

•	Research guidance on what can and can't be reused for different purposes

•	Need tool to assess time labor, cost, value of home, to help encourage buy-in. Include
an initial assessment with tiered approach

•	Research on existing buildings and find ways/strategies to expand their lifecycle
(expand the lives of homes), this could be potentially a great opportunity for job
training/job source

•	Need more research to see what unneeded materials are on homes and find ways to
incentivize the removal of these unneeded materials

•	Support automation innovation for de-nailing lumber

•	Online marketplaces

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•	Post-disaster/Buyout - Simple building recovery potential assessment of:

-	move, raise

-	deconstruction (major)

-	deconstruct (minor "cherry pick")

-	demolish (due to damage level/lack of safe to recover
materials)

•	Support automation innovation for de-nailing lumber

Support Entrepreneurs

•	Facilitate innovation and entrepreneurship (lots of opportunities for new small business
too)

•	Incubator programs to help get entrepreneurs in deconstruction started

4. Planning Resources & Knowledge Sharing

Equity, Environmental Justice, and Underserved Communities

•	Ensure that all communities have access to federal and states services to address
environmental justice concerns and help communities

•	Develop guidelines for environmental justice engagement specific to disaster debris

•	Environmental Justice principles relevant to emergency response (key principles
summarized)

2 - Public policy based on mutual respect and just for all peoples

6	- Education of present and future generations which emphasizes social and
environmental issues based on experience and appreciation of diverse cultural
perspectives

7	- Right to participate as equal partners at every level of decision making

8	- Safe and healthy work environment

12 - Urban and rural ecological policies to clean up and rebuild or cities and rural areas
to provide fair access to resources

•	Common EJ community concern - Community is 'dumped on" all of the time, especially
during disasters (debris fields without regard to transportation congestion, mixed
waste, debris not "contained," illegal dumping common after disasters, multiple pre-
disaster sources of pollution, etc.)

•	Develop equitable debris removal site best practices

•	Environmental justice initiatives, including better practices around communities where
English is a second language and resources, and information is not disseminated enough
- more funding is needed

•	Locating mixed debris (hazardous) near places where people are living should not be
allowed except in short-term urgent circumstances (Katrina)

•	Develop guidelines for environmental justice engagement specific to disaster debris

•	Provide awareness for tribal communities making sure they aren't the dumping grounds
for materials but allowing them to benefit from the reuse of the materials

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•	Develop and share island-specific disaster resilience resources and best practices (e.g.,
concrete power poles)

•	Sense of invisibility, being ignored, and/or forgotten in decisions about cleanup,
evacuation make without community input or concern about limited resources

•	Building codes reduce disaster impacts, but codes do not apply to tribes and islands
unless they adopt them - significant gap that needs to be addressed

•	Inclusion of marginalized communities

•	Online reuse marketplaces can prioritize access to disadvantaged communities

High Level Opportunities

•	Develop guide to debris removal sites and debris management plans to create equitable
outcomes from debris removal sites

•	Need directory, guidance in the planning stage with resource or directory to provide
easy access to resources and expertise in debris management

•	National Disaster Recovery planning and guidance is under development in Arizona and
Nevada and should include disaster debris guidance

•	Education literacy (e.g., FEMA public assistance program - each community is assigned a
key program manager to bring them along process)

•	Other FEMA Resources:

o Ecosystems Service Benefits Policy 2020
o Hazard Mitigation Assistance Guidance
o Public Assistance Program and Policy Guidance (PAPPG)
o FEMA Benefit-Cost Analysis (BCA) Toolkit

•	Need to consider how best practices and strategies may need to differ depending on the
scale of the natural disaster

•	Plan beyond building materials - sewage, industrial waste, agricultural waste, green
waste, food waste, etc.

•	COVID Disaster Impacts - Plans for office furniture reuse and use of vacant commercial
space

•	Government-coordinated volunteer Climate Corps for disaster response/recovery with
disaster debris recovery training (German example - Technisches Hilfswerk with 80,000
volunteers)

•	Help local and state governments identify strategies

•	Certification and training for workforce development

•	Standardizing processes for scale/clarity/consistency

•	Still need to be flexible, what works for one city might not work for another

•	Pre-disaster planning at the building and community scale

•	Need to realize the importance and implications of distinction between slow vs. fast
paced disasters

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•	Cross-federal agency training to stakeholders on how to build preparedness and mutual
agreements to triage how to reuse debris

•	Share success of multiple non-profits doing deconstruction/reuse projects post-Katrina
(research on cost-benefits, amounts of materials salvaged, new reuse businesses, and
value of local job creation/psychological impacts)

•	Use multi-agency disaster debris planning exercises to prepare for disaster debris
management (San Francisco example)

•	Climate change mitigation examples

•	Knowledge sharing and best practice dissemination

•	Following up with community progress and outreach

•	Establish R9 newsletter focused on disaster debris management (model FEMA
R2 community recovery newsletter)

Specific Suggestions and Tools

•	Planning

o Share best local debris management plans and activities through webinars/
training/online

o Templates for local and state planning would be very useful to help FEMA and

others interact and help in a disaster context
o Develop a streamlined and proactive debris management process to help
communities be prepared before a disaster occurs ~ checklists, outreach, and
visual models could be helpful tools
o Linking disaster debris management plans to long term recovery plans
o Communities share lessons learned to help with future planning

•	Resilient Design

o Share FEMA, insurance industry, code best practices for designing buildings to

withstand disasters
o Design for deconstruction
o Carbon neutral building

o Passive survivability - designing buildings and services to maintain life-support
conditions during/after disasters when utilities may be shut off. Resilient design
best practice for rebuilding.

•	Deconstruction and Reuse, Recycling and Composting

o Get the word out to potential HUD grantees to know that they can use HUD

funding to plan for deconstruction
o Precedent (Northridge Earthquake. Los Angeles) that FEMA reimbursement for
diversion from landfills has been supported even when more expensive than

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landfill disposal if supported by community policies/approved in state and
federal disaster debris plans
o Local Disaster Debris Plans with strong local government Zero Waste

goals/policies, can be incorporated/approved by states and FEMA
o Share embodied carbon calculators and conversion factors to support climate
outreach of reuse, recycling and composting (EPA WARM Model. California Air
Resources Board Wood Reuse Calculator - Search Reuse)
o Make deconstruction building materials available to local disaster victims post

disaster through a FEMA program
o Make more explicit linkages between disaster recovery and reuse/revitalization
o Emphasize cultural aspect of reuse

o Focus on historic preservation and don't forget to engage these groups because

they have boots on the ground and cultural heritage connections to reuse
o Develop an EPA or federal deconstruction certification
o Make it easier to integrate supply chain issues, add in more warehouses and
storage, and have materials be available in stores, maybe an online exchange
o Increased championing of the triple-bottom-line aspects to deconstruction and
reuse: people, planet, profit

Sea Level Rise

•	Sea level rise - need planning to move/deconstruct & reuse large quantities of
undamaged building materials

•	Sea level rise guidance is under development in California and could incorporate
disaster debris recovery

•	Virtual reality can be more effective than maps to support sea level rise actions
(evacuation, buying flood insurance, etc.)

•	Connect this work to managed retreat

•	Climate change retreat/sea level rise planning to move/deconstruct buildings

5. Partnerships & Coordination

Diversity, Environmental Justice

•	Coordinate, plan and communicate early (before disasters) with non-traditional
stakeholders and focus on underserved and tribal communities

•	Develop guidelines for EJ engagement on disaster debris issues

•	Critical to prioritize environmental justice

•	Identifying and coordinating with non-traditional disaster recovery stakeholders

•	Mapping is not enough to advance equity, ground-truthing is critical Environmental
justice

•	Community concerns - lack of trust in all levels of government based on history, past
actions

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High Level Ideas

•	Focus on how in-place programs can incorporate debris management in their standards
to further incentives for new programs to incorporate debris management

Government

•	Expand who federal agencies are working with - need to think more outside the box
about productive collaborations across agencies, non-profits, etc. Can potentially
address multiple issues (i.e., housing, jobs, etc.)

•	Establish partnership with the National Park Service or GSA as a federal property
management leader to develop guidelines and best practices for using reclaimed
materials from deconstructed buildings to repair other buildings (organ donor
approach)

•	Bring more local partners to the table early on

•	Share government scopes of work for deconstruction (pre- and post-disaster)

o Example: Share Forest Service Zero Waste Fire Camp Blanket Purchase
Agreement contract model for disaster response and recovery work

Other Stakeholders

•	Partner with external organizations: e.g., American Institute of Architects, American
Planning Association, American Society of Civil Engineers, American Society of
Landscape Architects, National Trust for Historic Preservation (Good Samaritan Laws)

•	How to best set up partnerships with different entities (art groups, schools, job
trainings) to reuse materials?

•	Work with International Code Council to align Model Residential and other building
codes for the use of salvage materials where appropriate

•	Partner with local non-profits that work with post incarcerated populations for
workforce development/opportunities

•	Zero waste experts and organizations

•	Climate mitigation planners

•	External partnerships - schools, architects, planners, historic preservation, etc.

•	NGOs - everyone. Artie, hotels and resorts.

•	Partner with external organizations: e.g., American Institute of Architects, American
Planning Association, American Society of Civil Engineers, American Society of
Landscape Architects, National Trust for Historic Preservation (Good Samaritan Laws)

Communications/Outreach

•	Need to increase communication to determine who can help remove/manage debris
and to learn more about what resources are available out there

•	Need to increase transparency and access to best practices so stakeholders can utilize
this information

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•	Share state and federal approved Disaster Debris Management Plans featuring waste
reduction, reuse, recycling, and composting

•	The EPA Region 9 Bay Area Deconstruction Workgroup including government, industry
and NGOs interested in deconstruction is a great model for colla boration that could be
used in other parts of the country

•	External partnerships - schools, architects, planners, historic preservation, etc.

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