FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell discusses the agency’s strategic priorities at CU Boulder’s Institute of Behavioral Science. Photo by Patrick Campbell/CU Boulder
As disasters affect more people across the United States, emergency managers need evidence-based information more than ever. While research can help in making key decisions, it can sometimes be hard to find and access.
Last week, Deanne Criswell, the administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), visited CU Boulder research leaders, faculty, and staff to discuss how to ensure research finds its way to those who need it most. Criswell was the guest of the Natural Hazards Center at CU’s Institute of Behavioral Science (IBS) with support from the CU System Office of Government Relations. She was welcomed by Massimo Ruzzene, who leads CU’s Research & Innovation Office.
“One of the things I’m trying to help establish is creating better connections between the academic research that is out there and our operators,” Criswell told the group. “A lot of the conversations I have with our operators is that they don’t know where to go to get some of the research, but even when I talk to the researchers, they don’t know how to get it in the hands of the operators.”
Criswell joins Natural Hazards Center Director Lori Peek in visiting the Gilbert White Memorial Flood Marker on Boulder Creek. White, who founded the Center in 1976, was at the forefront of championing responsible floodplain managment. Photo by Patrick Campbell/CU Boulder.
Criswell noted that expanding research partnerships, especially with behavioral scientists, would benefit several aspects of her administration’s strategic plan, including the areas of equity, climate resilience, and preparedness. With the knowledge to make more informed decisions, Criswell said that FEMA could become more proactive in serving the increasing number of Americans experiencing disasters.
“People recognize us as the agency that comes in and supports the response and recovery and the rebuilding,” she said. “I want to turn that around. I want people to think of FEMA as the agency that builds resilience.”
Among the research topics that could support the agency’s resilience goals are work related to climate migration, risk communication, and refining social vulnerability indices. These are issues that are central to the work of CU researchers in IBS and across the university, including in engineering and the physical sciences. For nearly 50 years, the Natural Hazards Center has played an especially important role in both advancing new disaster research and translating it for practitioners and policy makers.
“Since 1976, we’ve had one central goal, which is to move research into the hands of the people who need it most,” stated Director Lori Peek. “We focus on building connections so we can reduce the harm and suffering from disasters. Over the years, we have always remained true to that mission.”
FEMA has long been a supporter of the Center through supplemental funding to its National Science Foundation clearinghouse award. The agency’s contribution has made numerous projects possible including the Research Counts series, Making Mitigation Work webinars, Mitigation Matters Research Awards, and other research programs.
Criswell said that solidifying partnerships such these are necessary to advance efforts to prepare to the nation to withstand future disaster impacts—especially considering the force multiplier of climate change.
“I think as we continue to build these relationships and bring in academia, it’s going to make a big difference,” she said. “The things were seeing today from a severe weather standpoint are way different than what we saw ten years ago and they’re going to be even more different ten years from now. We have to continue to have these deliberate, integrated, interdisciplinary conversations all the time to really have a true impact across the U.S.”
This article originally appeared in CU Boulder Today on November 30, 2023.