Wildfires. Floods. Extreme heat. Severe storms. Infrastructure failures. Today's local governments aren't preparing for a single disaster season. They're preparing for an era of constant disruption.
Emergency preparedness has changed dramatically over the past decade. Climate-related hazards are becoming more frequent, more complex, and more costly, while residents expect faster communication, better coordination, and quicker recovery. At the same time, many local governments face staffing shortages, aging infrastructure, and limited budgets.
The good news is that resilience is not built during a disaster. It is built long before one occurs.
During Polco's recent webinar, Emergency Preparedness and Climate Resilience: What Every Local Government Should Be Doing Before Disaster Season, Executive Strategist Michelle Kobayashi, MSPH, and Dr. Christa Daniels, lecturer at Dartmouth's Guarini School of Graduate and Advanced Studies, shared practical strategies that communities can implement today to become more resilient tomorrow. Their message was clear: the communities that recover best are the ones that prepare together.
Here are five of the biggest takeaways from the discussion.
For many communities, disaster preparedness can no longer revolve around responding to isolated events.
As Michelle Kobayashi explained, local governments are operating in an environment defined by longer disaster seasons, greater uncertainty, and rising public expectations. Communities face more frequent extreme weather events, aging infrastructure, development in hazard-prone areas, rising recovery costs, and increasing pressure to communicate clearly before, during, and after emergencies.
These challenges require a shift from reactive emergency management to proactive resilience planning.
Instead of asking, "How do we respond when disaster strikes?" city leaders should be asking:
Preparedness is no longer simply an emergency management responsibility. It is becoming a whole-of-government strategy.
One of the strongest themes throughout the webinar was that resilience begins with understanding what your community depends on most.
Dr. Christa Daniels encouraged communities to begin by identifying their critical assets before investing in projects. Roads, hospitals, utilities, schools, emergency services, supply chains, and communication networks all work together. If one system fails, many others may be affected.
She also emphasized that communities should evaluate vulnerability through three lenses:
Perhaps most importantly, Daniels reminded attendees that residents themselves are among a community's greatest assets.
"Residents understand a lot of vulnerabilities that never appear on maps. Community knowledge is just as valuable as engineering data when prioritizing resilience investments."
The most effective resilience strategies combine technical analysis with lived experience.
Emergency communication begins long before an emergency.
Michelle Kobayashi stressed that trust cannot be built in the middle of a crisis. Communities that have invested in relationships before disaster strikes are far more likely to see residents follow evacuation orders, conserve resources, or seek assistance when needed.
Today's emergency communication also needs to be more interactive.
Rather than relying solely on one-way alerts, local governments increasingly benefit from two-way communication that allows residents to report road closures, identify vulnerable neighbors, share local conditions, and contribute real-time information during an event.
The presenters also highlighted the growing importance of:
When residents trust local government before disaster strikes, they are more likely to act quickly and confidently when it matters most.
Many emergency plans focus on restoring operations after a disaster. Dr. Daniels challenged attendees to think differently.
Traditional engineering resilience emphasizes returning to normal as quickly as possible. Community resilience goes further by asking how communities can adapt and improve because of what they have learned. The goal is not simply to recover. It is to emerge stronger than before.
She described resilience as three stages:
Examples shared during the webinar illustrated how communities are already putting this philosophy into practice:
These projects solve today's problems while making communities better prepared for tomorrow's.
One of the webinar's most compelling messages was that resilience is fundamentally about people. Infrastructure matters. Emergency plans matter. Data matters. But communities recover faster when residents understand risks, participate in planning, and help shape solutions.
Dr. Daniels introduced the concept of community co-design, where residents, planners, emergency managers, and community organizations work together to develop resilience strategies. Residents contribute local knowledge that models and hazard maps often miss, creating solutions that are more equitable, practical, and widely supported.
She also discussed the idea of multi-solving, designing projects that address several community priorities simultaneously.
For example:
Rather than funding isolated projects, communities can maximize every investment by creating multiple benefits across resilience, equity, health, and economic development.
As disaster seasons become longer and more unpredictable, every local government should periodically revisit a few fundamental questions:
Answering these questions before disaster strikes is far easier than trying to answer them during a crisis.
Emergency preparedness is no longer just about responding to disasters.
It is about understanding community vulnerabilities, strengthening infrastructure, engaging residents, building trust, and making smarter investments that improve quality of life long before an emergency occurs.
As the webinar demonstrated, resilience is not owned by one department or one emergency manager. It is a shared responsibility across local government, community organizations, businesses, and residents.
Communities that prepare together are ultimately the communities that recover together.
Polco helps local governments combine resident engagement, community data, advanced analytics, and AI-powered tools to better understand risks, prioritize investments, strengthen public trust, and build more resilient communities.
Request more information today to learn how Polco can help your community prepare for whatever comes next.