Residential Structural Retrofit Program – A Collaborative Opportunity – California Earthquake Authority July 2010.

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Presentation transcript:

Residential Structural Retrofit Program – A Collaborative Opportunity – California Earthquake Authority July 2010

Challenge 1  California is home to 65% of the nation’s earthquake risk  The majority of Californians live within 20 miles of a major fault  USGS is forecasting a 99% chance for a major earthquake (M6.7) within next 30 years  About 1.5 million houses were built in California before 1960 when (some) jurisdictions began to require adequately braced walls and bolted foundations

Local efforts to-date... 2  Few jurisdictions have succeeded in positioning residential structural retrofit programs in their building departments  Building codes that cover residential structural retrofitting (where available) differ across active programs  Local programs are not positioned to succeed statewide

Solution 3  The CEA is a publicly managed, yet privately funded statewide organization that provides residential earthquake insurance and mitigation programs  By law, the CEA sets aside 5 percent of its annual investment income up to $5 million for mitigation  Total CEA funds available for statewide mitigation currently exceed $20 million  The high number of houses built before 1960, combined with the leveraged value of post-disaster benefits from each mitigation dollar, has led the CEA recently to tighten its focus on residential structural retrofitting

Hosting scoping sessions 4  Collected input in Sacramento (discussion facilitated by former FEMA Director James Lee Witt), Los Angeles and Oakland  Requested guidance in defining, advancing and sustaining a common sense approach to a first-ever statewide residential structural retrofitting program  Heard from structural engineers; building officials; residential retrofitting contractors; earth scientists; trade associations; as well as local, state and federal government officials

Scoping session input… 5  Provide financial incentives to help offset consumers’ structural retrofitting costs  Align programming with (local) building codes and standardized plan sets  Emphasize contractor training  Implement effective marketing to engage consumer participation  Be sustainable into the future

Incorporating State Hazard Mitigation Plan 6  CEA mitigation programming successfully incorporated into 2010 State Hazard Mitigation Plan (SHMP)  SHMP is official statement of state’s hazard identification, vulnerability analysis and hazard mitigation strategy  SHMP is the result of a collaborative, multi-agency planning process with multiple opportunities for public participation  CEA incorporation in the SHMP likely will qualify its residential structural retrofitting program for additional federal assistance funds

Adopting statewide building code 7  Without a statewide building code for residential structural retrofitting, just a few jurisdictions in California previously inspected and approved these projects  Statewide standardized plan set not feasible due to variations in regional requirements  CEA strategized with state departments / commissions to address challenges  CEA garnered a gubernatorial Finding of Emergency to fast-track adoption of first-ever California Building Code for residential structural retrofitting  California Department of Housing and Community Development is managing code-adoption process  California Seismic Safety Commission co-funded the code-adoption process  California Building Standards Commission will adopt code on August 16, 2010

Issuing industry partner RFQ 8  Seeking a program partner to co-administer financial incentives and contractor training; released RFQ July 1, 2010  Future partner currently must:  Oversee and existing home-building constituency  Be savvy on related building codes  Operate within statewide infrastructure  Demonstrate awareness for residential structural retrofitting needs  Have experiences with consumer incentives and contractor training

Forming Joint Powers Authority 9  Working with the California Emergency Management Agency (CalEMA) to form a Joint Powers Authority (JPA) to oversee a “California Earthquake Loss Mitigation Authority”  JPA designed to manage residential structural retrofitting program and related activities Creates legal entity separate from its members Separates JPA’S debts, liabilities, obligations from members Allows contracting with private-sector firms to do JPA’s work  Seeking CEA Governing Board approval on August 26, 2010

Delivering sustainable funding 10  Funding currently available ($20 million) would enable the CEA to offer ($1,000) financial incentives to seismically retrofit 20,000 of the approximately 1.5 million houses especially vulnerable to structural earthquake damage – reaching just over 1 percent of the houses built before sufficient (local) building codes were in place  The CEA’s $20 million pre-disaster investment to help finance the “bracing and bolting” of single-family houses (averaging $3,000 to $5,000 per house) will generate an estimated $60 million to $100 million in near-term economic activity  The CEA’s $20 million investment in pre-disaster dollars will leverage a minimum of $80 million in post-disaster benefits  Under existing law, the CEA Governing Board will continue to set aside up to $5 million of the CEA’s investment income annually – enough to structurally retrofit an additional 5,000 single-family houses

How the National Mitigation Collaborative Alliance can help 11  Guide the CEA’s mitigation programming results into a national repository Vulnerable housing inventories Residential building code challenges / opportunities  Educate the CEA about related programs Consumer incentives and contractor training Building inspectors Federal assistance