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Published byJason Skinner Modified over 9 years ago
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Hazard, Risk, & Disaster Management
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Reading Smith Chapters 1-5
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Hazard Naturally-occurring/human-induced event with potential for loss
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Risk Exposure to a hazard
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Disaster Occurrence of hazard resulting in serious damage/loss of life
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Human-Centred Viewpoint People see hazards to environment as less important than risks to people or property
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Human-Centred Viewpoint People more impressed by rapid-onset events with big, visible, impacts than by slow-acting events with subtle impacts.
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Risk Assessment Assessing the risks which are probable –counting, probability –judgement –appears scientific
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Risk Assessment Done by “experts” –presented as “objective” Done by ordinary people –presented as “poorly-informed”
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Lay Risk Assessment People more prepared to tolerate voluntary risks than involuntary ones –by a factor of 1000 (pp. 57-9)
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Risk Assessment In reality, expert risk assessments are not objective –require judgements –tendency to use technical detail to hide the partisan judgements No “value-free” risk assessment
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Ralgreen Crescent, Kitchener 1960s suburban subdivision Built on old city dump Landfill-related explosion demolishes house in 1969 City hires Heath Consultants to measure methane
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1990s Houses cracking, tilting Basements leaking smelly liquids and vapours People getting sick –Leukemia cases Residents discover history of property
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1990s City gets Heath Consultants to do risk assessment –soil and other tests –uses industrial criteria –reports contaminants at acceptable levels Residents unimpressed
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1990s Residents seek their own risk assessment Hard to hire a consultant –costs money –consultants reluctant to offend the city Eventually succeeds: –uses new residential criteria for contamination –finds significant health risks in several properties
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2000s Residents sue City settles with residents –buys the worst affected houses –bulldozes them Other alarmed residents not bought out –risk assessment does not justify it
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Disaster Management Where should we spend whose money to undertake what programmes to save which lives with what probability? (Zeckhauser & Shepard 1984)
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Disaster Management Levels of intervention –Educate people to avoid disaster –Subsidise people to avoid disaster –Force people to avoid disaster
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Disaster Management Safety has a price People don’t want to pay Example: –TFD wants Ontario Building Code altered to require sprinklers in new residential construction –Emergency Measures Ontario given virtually no money pre- Sept 11
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Disaster Management Pre-Disaster Protection Post-Disaster Recovery
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Pre-Disaster Protection Risk assessment Mitigation Preparation
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Post-Disaster Recovery Relief & rescue Rehabilitation Reconstruction
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Plastimet Fire July 1997 Hamilton waterfront Plastics recycler burns –after multiple earlier fires, 39 previous fire-code violations
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Hamilton FD fails to evacuate/protect areas downwind –Hamilton General Hospital –Hamilton-Wenworth Detention Centre places fire-fighters in unnecessary danger –air supply runs out while above fire no disaster pre-planning inadequate hazardous materials equipment, training, planning
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Adjustment to Hazard Modify the loss burden Modify hazard events Modify human vulnerability
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Modify the loss burden Insurance Disaster relief Emergency aid
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Modify hazard events Engineering Hazard-resistant designs
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Modify human vulnerability Community preparedness Forecasting, warning & evacuation systems Land use planning
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