FloodSmart Canada: Communication that motivates and drives flood risk management in Canada

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FloodSmart Canada: Communication that motivates and drives flood risk management in Canada Shawna Peddle Director, Partners for Action Ontario Flood Risk Management Workshop Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Overview What is Partners for Action? Flooding in Canada National Survey on Flood Risk Awareness Communicating Flood Risk Questions

What is Partners for Action? An applied research and communication network in the Faculty of Environment, University of Waterloo. Our vision is a flood risk-aware Canada where residents take responsibility for protecting themselves and recovering from natural disasters, and decision-makers consider natural hazards in planning and preparing our communities. We inform Canadians about risk and what they can do to protect themselves through facilitating collaboration, undertaking innovative, practical research, and sharing results and best practices. Founding partners: The Co-operators Group Ltd. and Farm Mutual Re.

Our approach Partners, Action Put the issue at the centre Work for and within communities Connection governments, corporations, communities, academia Advisory Committee Stakeholder Group Outreach Information What we produce is actionable, shared, and broadcast We train our next leaders, our students

Flood Happens Our climate is changing Increasing precipitation Increasing snow and ice melt Our communities are changing Population growth/urbanization Increased development Development in less optimal locations 1.8 million Canadian households are at risk for flood. Across Canada, damage from extreme weather has cost taxpayers and insurers almost $10 billion since 1998. Over the next 5 years, federal assistance to flood victims could reach $3.4 billion.

National survey on flood risk awareness National (bilingual) online: 2,300 respondents in areas designated by the Flood Damage Reduction Program as high risk. Major themes: awareness of flood risk, degree of concern, flood experience responsibility to protect from flood and pay for damages governments, homeowners, relief organizations, insurers understanding of insurance and willingness to pay

Flood and the Canadian Public Risk Awareness o 94% unaware that they live in a designated flood risk area o 79% do not believe that the risk of flooding will increase over the next 25 years o Only about 30% were doing anything to prepare their homes Preparedness o 89% do not have a disaster safety kit in their homes o 53% say they are not planning to take any action to protect their homes from flooding in the next several months o 78% believe insurance should lead in personal recovery, but o o 50% have no intention to purchase flood insurance 45% of those with a ground-level home believe they have flood insurance as part of their regular coverage, and 26% are unsure o 63% do not feel confident in their level of knowledge about their home insurance policies

Flood and the Canadian Public 83% believe that homeowners are responsible for personal protection Over 90% believe: o Flood maps should be made publicly available o Sellers of property should be required to disclose flood risk o Property owners should be notified if their home is located in a flood risk area But most Canadians: o Don t know about or take advantage of municipal incentive programs o Don t report flooding to their municipalities o Don t participate in community consultations o Don t have flood insurance

Why don t we prepare? Canada (Public Safety, 2016) 1. Not in a flood zone/no risk 2. It won t happen to me 3. I rent/it s the landlord s responsibility 4. Don t know how 5. Cost US (FEMA, 2014) 1.Cost 2.Don t know how 3.Time 4.Getting information is too hard Contributing factors Information shortcuts Past experiences Level of risk tolerance Worldview and values Influence of friends and family Finite pool of worry Threat and coping appraisal

What? versus Why? We focus on the what: o You need home protection. o You need a 72-hour kit. o You need an emergency plan. We don t focus on the why: o You are not immune - floods can happen anywhere, at any time, to anyone. o You are not our first priority - first responders have more pressing matters. o You will be inconvenienced - floods are extremely disruptive. o You will lose money, your house and your possessions o Insurance may not cover you o Disaster assistance may not cover you o You. Could. Die.

What does this mean for us? People aren t thinking about risk, aren t protecting their homes or families, aren t purchasing insurance, and won t support flood risk management policies. Until residents understand and personalize risk and impact, they won t prepare, they won t listen, and they won t support our work to make them safe. Photo courtesy CTV News (BC) Photo courtesy CBC News (NB)

Canadian Red Cross We have materials, but know they are not effective. Survey of flood survivors o 420 in Windsor, ON, and 104 in Dufferin County, ON o Does experiencing a flood influence your perception of risk and your desire to prepare? and What advice would you give others? Interviews and focus groups o What do you need to know? How do you need to hear it? o We ve heard you what do you think? Develop model for CRC volunteers to become community flood champions o Similar to Pathfinder in UK o Volunteers train communities on risk and community resilience o Games, workshops, mapping

FloodSmart Canada Communicate flood risk and preparedness - empower to take action We are: Researching wise practices on flood risk communication Partnering with diverse stakeholders to co-develop messages Using focus groups and surveys to identify the most effective messages Pilot testing methods for communicating risk Phase 1 Strategy and Message Development Feb May 2018 Guide to Effective Flood Risk Communication Develop national strategy Survey of flood survivors Develop messages and materials with partners Focus group testing National pilot Phase 2 Material Development and Evaluation May Dec 2018 National workshop on flood communication Community events School materials Evaluate and rework materials and messages National survey of flood preparedness Phase 3 - National Deployment Jan Sept 2019 Roll out national campaign School programs and materials Community group programs and materials Evaluate effectiveness Strategy update, partner discussions

Partners

Outreach www.floodsmartcanada.ca/toolkit Next Steps: National workshop on flood risk communication/ consumer awareness Materials: kids (RCGS), realtors (CREA), brokers (IBAC) Expansion to national - materials and methods Training for emergency managers

Where do we go from here? Engagement is fundamental, but we need time and space to do it right won t be a simple or quick fix. Can t simply be a campaign need to identify goals, audiences, messages and messengers. Develop, pilot, evaluate, launch. Need to build trust and relationships roles and responsibilities in flood risk management need to be explained, connected, and explained again. Need to connect the what with the why risk without action leads to despair. Need to bring partners together one voice, amplify reach. Raise awareness, build understanding, drive action.

Shawna Peddle Director, Partners for Action Faculty of Environment, University of Waterloo 519-888-4567, ext. 38938 shawna.peddle@uwaterloo.ca @Partners4Action https://uwaterloo.ca/partners-for-action/ http://www.floodsmartcanada.ca