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<StrategicPlan xmlns="urn:ISO:std:iso:17469:tech:xsd:stratml_core" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="urn:ISO:std:iso:17469:tech:xsd:stratml_core http://xml.govwebs.net/stratml/references/StrategicPlanISOVersion20140401.xsd"><Name>2018-2022 Strategic Plan: Helping People. Together.</Name><Description>This Strategic Plan outlines the goals and objectives that FEMA must implement to strengthen the Agency and our mission. It will build upon the foundation established by FEMA’s previous two Strategic Plans. The 2011- 2014 plan focused on building a whole community inclusive approach to emergency management – enabling community leaders to act when needed. The 2014-2018 plan built on that idea by institutionalizing whole community efforts to position FEMA and its partners to improve outcomes for disaster survivors and communities. The 2018-2022 Strategic Plan will mobilize that whole community to build a culture of preparedness, ready the Nation for catastrophic disasters, and reduce the complexity of FEMA.</Description><OtherInformation>Whole community and shared responsibility, across all layers of government and down to the individual, is also a hallmark of this Strategic Plan. It is an essential premise of these Strategic Goals and Objectives that each will require the collaborative commitment of individuals and organizations outside of FEMA, and we invite all of our partners and stakeholders, both within and outside the Federal Government, to join us in adopting and embracing these priorities. In this sense, it is the continuation of the whole community concept introduced and formalized by the previous Strategic Plans. </OtherInformation><StrategicPlanCore><Organization><Name>Federal Emergency Management Agency</Name><Acronym>FEMA</Acronym><Identifier>_f3aea7da-0276-40be-8963-931fdd9d37af</Identifier><Description/><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Person"><Name>Brock Long</Name><Description>Administrator </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>FEMA Team</Name><Description>FEMA is part of a larger team of Federal agencies, SLTT governments, and non-governmental stakeholders that share responsibility for emergency management and National preparedness.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Federal Agencies</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>State Governments</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Local Governments</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Tribal Governments</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Territorial Governments</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Non-Governmental Stakeholders</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>First Responders</Name><Description>Those closest to impacted areas are the true first responders during any emergency or disaster – individuals, families, neighbors, and local communities. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Individuals</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Families</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Neighbors</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Local Communities</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Person"><Name>President of the United States</Name><Description>National Security and Department of Homeland Security Strategies --  The FEMA Strategic Plan advances and expands upon the first pillar of the president’s National Security Strategy, “Protecting the American People, the Homeland, and the American Way of Life.” Within this pillar is a focus on “Promoting American Resilience,” which speaks to the Nation’s ability to absorb the shock of a disaster and quickly recover. As the National Security Strategy notes, “a democracy is only as resilient as its people,” so as a diverse and united people, we must be prepared.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Organization"><Name>Department of Homeland Security</Name><Description>The President, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), and FEMA all recognize the importance of Building a Culture of Preparedness and reducing the Nation’s risk. This requires a dedicated effort by the whole community to ensure that we are working to educate the public regarding their risk, developing methods to mitigate the impact of those risks, and helping people understand how to prepare to meet disasters when they arrive. There is recognition at all levels that we must foster a National culture of preparedness that will reduce the impact of a catastrophic event and increase overall community resilience. </Description></Stakeholder></Organization><Vision><Description>A prepared and resilient Nation.</Description><Identifier>_4ae7dc10-a81c-11e8-ad3a-213bd8f816dd</Identifier></Vision><Mission><Description>Helping people before, during, and after disasters.</Description><Identifier>_4ae7de18-a81c-11e8-ad3a-213bd8f816dd</Identifier></Mission><Value><Name>Shared Responsibility</Name><Description>The most effective form of emergency management is one in which every member of the community understands his or her important and indispensable role. </Description></Value><Value><Name>Effectiveness</Name><Description>Likewise, the most effective strategies for emergency management are those that are Federally supported, state managed, and locally executed.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Coordination</Name><Description>FEMA’s role is to coordinate Federal Government resources to supplement SLTT capabilities. FEMA does this by coordinating through the hierarchical layers of government, meaning that states, tribes, and territories are our primary coordinating partners. It is through these sovereign layers that requests for assistance are made and through which FEMA coordinates the delivery of Federal assistance.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Relationships</Name><Description>FEMA’s role is to build relationships with our emergency management partners, ideally before disasters occur, so that the Agency can understand their unique conditions and needs.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Best Practices</Name><Description>FEMA is responsible for identifying best practices and working within the emergency management community to encourage proactive risk assessment, preparedness activities, and mitigation investments.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Preparedness</Name><Description/></Value><Value><Name>Assistance</Name><Description>Postdisaster, FEMA’s responsibilities primarily involve coordinating and assigning Federal assets to support SLTT partners and providing grant assistance to help SLTTs, individuals, and private non-profit organizations cope with disaster losses and recover. However, FEMA does not and cannot serve as the sole or primary responder.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Communication</Name><Description>To that end, pre-disaster coordination and communication among partners is critical to improving response and recovery outcomes.</Description></Value><Value><Name>Partnership</Name><Description/></Value><Value><Name>Resilience</Name><Description>Equally important are mitigation and actions that we can take to enhance the resilience of our communities before disasters occur. In order to be resilient, communities must make efforts to protect lives and property before disasters occurs. In every phase of emergency management, success requires the cooperative contributions of the whole community. </Description></Value><Value><Name>Cooperation</Name><Description/></Value><Goal><Name>Preparedness</Name><Description>Build a Culture of Preparedness</Description><Identifier>_4ae7df12-a81c-11e8-ad3a-213bd8f816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>1</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType=""><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Resilience is the backbone of emergency management. The Nation’s ability to weather storms and disasters without experiencing loss significantly reduces our risk. The most successful way to achieve disaster resiliency is through preparedness, including mitigation. Building a Culture of Preparedness within our communities and our governments will support a National effort to be ready for the worst disasters – at the individual, family, community, state, local, tribal, territorial (SLTT), and Federal levels. Strategic Goal 1 promotes the idea that everyone should be prepared when disaster strikes. To be prepared, however, we must all understand our local and community risks, reflect the diversity of those we serve, and foster partnerships that allow us to connect with a diverse Nation. People who are prepared will be able to act quickly and decisively in the face of disasters, thereby preventing death and injuries, minimizing loss of property, and allowing for a more rapid and efficient recovery.</OtherInformation><Objective><Name>Risk</Name><Description>Incentivize Investments that Reduce Risk, Including Pre-disaster Mitigation, and Reduce Disaster Costs at All Levels</Description><Identifier>_4ae7dfd0-a81c-11e8-ad3a-213bd8f816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>1.1</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>People in Coastal Areas</Name><Description>As the number of people that move to coastal areas increases, and natural and manmade hazards become increasingly complex and difficult to predict, the need for forward leaning action is greater than ever before.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Organization"><Name>National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)</Name><Description>The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) reports that from 1970 – 2010, shoreline counties increased in population by 40 percent, putting 39 percent of the American population in coastal areas. NOAA projects that an additional eight percent of Americans will live in coastal areas by 2020. Simultaneously, the average number of major disaster declarations has also steadily increased, rising from an average of 25 per year in the 1980s to nearly 90 per year since 2010.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Organization"><Name>National Institute of Building Sciences</Name><Description>Although the Nation must do more to assess and quantify these increasing risks, we do know that pre-disaster mitigation works. In 2018, an independent study by the National Institute of Building Sciences, co-funded by FEMA, found that for every $1 that the Federal Government invests in mitigation saves taxpayers an average of $6 in future spending. This return on investment justifies new opportunities for FEMA and our partners to reduce future disaster costs and accelerate recovery by investing now, before a disaster occurs.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Organization"><Name>Federal Insurance and Mitigation Administration</Name><Description>FEMA’s Federal Insurance and Mitigation Administration has adopted the findings of this study, and seeks to increase pre-disaster mitigation investments.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>FEMA Partners</Name><Description>Even as we strive to bring a greater share of Federal dollars to bear on pre-disaster risks, we will also educate and incentivize our partners to increase their investments in pre-disaster mitigation.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>The Public</Name><Description>However, additional financial resources is only a start. To make informed investment decisions, everyone must have access to current and accurate risk information. FEMA will improve our ability to assess and quantify risk from multiple hazards, expand our commitment to risk mapping, identify new partnerships that will help us understand risks and the value of mitigation investments, and develop a new strategy that clearly presents risk information to all members of the public. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>States</Name><Description>The entire Nation must work as a team to increase pre-disaster mitigation in communities. FEMA will continue to work directly with SLTT and non-governmental partners to advocate for the adoption and enforcement of modern building and property codes.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Tribal Governments</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Territorial Governments</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Local Governments</Name><Description>Disaster resilience starts with building codes, because they enhance public safety and property protection. Furthermore, FEMA will encourage robust code enforcement, providing education and training when needed to help convey the value of standardized, up-to-date building codes.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Organization"><Name>Congress</Name><Description>For investments to be attractive, the cost and options of investments must fit the unique needs of individuals and communities. FEMA will work with Congress to develop flexible and holistic approaches for more Federal funds to be spent on risk reduction and pre-disaster mitigation. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Jurisdictions</Name><Description>FEMA will also work with private and public stakeholders across the country to construct and develop strategies within state and local jurisdictions that encourage pre-disaster mitigation and investment, such as resilience bonds.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Mitigation Framework Leadership Group</Name><Description>Finally, FEMA, through the Mitigation Framework Leadership Group, is developing a National Mitigation Investment Strategy that encourages coordinated pre- and post-disaster mitigation investment toward the outcome of reducing future disaster risk. FEMA will continue to leverage these partnerships and our own disaster assistance programs to drive mitigation investments. </Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Objective 1.1 Performance Measure: Increase the Nation’s investment in mitigation... For our Nation to protect life and property and pull back the increasing cost of disasters, we must bring resilient mitigation investments forward. Buying down the risk prior to a disaster pays off – either by lowering the cost of the disaster or eliminating the need for a presidentially-declared disaster altogether because of the lessened impact. FEMA plays a critical role in enabling and incentivizing investments that reduce risk and increase pre-disaster mitigation. </OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Insurance</Name><Description>Close the Insurance Gap</Description><Identifier>_4ae7e08e-a81c-11e8-ad3a-213bd8f816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>1.2</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Risk Managers</Name><Description>Experience has shown repeatedly that individuals, communities, and businesses that manage risk through insurance recover faster and more fully after a disaster. If an individual does not have the value of their home and/or belongings in their savings, insurance will help them fill that gap when a disaster strikes.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Survivors</Name><Description>While the Disaster Relief Fund supports survivors in the immediate aftermath of a presidentially-declared disaster, this Federal support only serves as a temporary safety net for immediate needs and does not provide for complete financial recovery.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Families</Name><Description>Financial preparedness, including having an insurance policy on personal and public properties, is critical to helping rebuild a home, replace belongings, and restore order to a family and community.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Communities</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Organization"><Name>Congress</Name><Description>Further, resolving concerns about the affordability of Federal flood insurance requires a whole community solution, including Congressional action, to be able to close the insurance gap. Insurance not only benefits those directly affected by a disaster, it also reduces the need for Federal disaster assistance and lowers costs for American taxpayers.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>American Taxpayers</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Individuals</Name><Description>FEMA has a key role in promoting all-hazard insurance. This work includes helping individuals and businesses understand the amount of coverage needed to be adequately insured and make themselves financially prepared, which ultimately contributes to the Nation’s preparedness.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Businesses</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Communities</Name><Description>Similarly, that same financial preparedness discipline requires communities to understand and appreciate the risks to public buildings and facilities and to secure insurance to cover the cost of replacement. Beyond promoting whole community preparedness through appropriate insurance, FEMA provides flood hazard insurance through the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). The NFIP is the primary source of flood insurance in the United States for property owners and tenants. The United States needs to get back to basics and understand that almost any property could flood, and almost every property should carry flood insurance.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Property Owners</Name><Description>FEMA is focused on expanding the number of properties covered by flood insurance. FEMA wants Americans to protect their property from flood risk and will work closely with the insurance industry, realtors, mortgage lenders, community leaders, and Congress to drive insurance purchases. FEMA supports the advancement of flood coverage regardless of the provider – whether that is through a private insurance or an NFIP policy. To encourage participation in the program, FEMA must transform the NFIP into a simpler, customer-focused insurance program that policyholders value and trust. This will empower individuals, communities, and businesses to more effectively prepare for and recover from floods. Accurate risk communication is also vital to building public understanding of and support for a culture of preparedness. FEMA will provide products that clearly and accurately communicate flood risk to property owners and tenants.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>The Public</Name><Description>To be successful in closing the Nation’s insurance gap, FEMA must be a catalyst for increasing the public’s knowledge of risk and encouraging adequate insurance coverage so that individuals, communities, and businesses can reduce their losses from all hazards. </Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Objective 1.2 Performance Measure - Expand the number of properties covered by flood insurance...  Building a culture of preparedness starts with individuals, communities, and businesses managing risks, in many cases through proper insurance coverage. FEMA’s role is to help people understand their risk and the available options to best manage those risks. Insurance is an effective tool to transfer risks away from disaster survivors and enable rapid recovery. However, a 2015 study by the Swiss Re Institute shows that annual expected uninsured losses from natural disasters total more than $30 billion. </OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Preparation</Name><Description>Help People Prepare for Disasters</Description><Identifier>_4ae7e160-a81c-11e8-ad3a-213bd8f816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>1.3</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>FEMA Stakeholders</Name><Description>FEMA must learn from and work with a broad and inclusive base of stakeholders to understand the circumstances and challenges different groups of people face, particularly those who may have the hardest time in the aftermath of a disaster, such as the aging population and those with access and functional needs. By engaging these stakeholders, FEMA can develop and promote a suite of well-targeted solutions for individuals and communities to adopt.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Elderly People</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Homeowners</Name><Description>Many people will experience a disaster or emergency at some point in life and find that they are in fact the true first responder. More severe disasters may render homes uninhabitable, destroy important documents and possessions, potentially lead to people leaving their communities permanently, or even lead to the loss of life. As the Federal agency charged with disaster preparedness, FEMA commands both significant resources and influence that can help improve how people prepare for disasters.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Diverse Communities</Name><Description>However, FEMA directly helps with only a small number of incidents – those that receive a presidential declaration. It’s time to rethink our National approach to preparedness and ensure that every segment of our diverse communities, down to each individual, is integrated into a broader culture of preparedness. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Individuals</Name><Description>Numerous factors affect individual resilience during a disaster, including the strength of social ties and community networks, awareness of the risks, available resources and knowledge of what to do when a situation arises. Access to financial resources has proven to be a strong predictor of how well someone can cope in the aftermath of a disaster. However, around 40 percent of Americans do not have enough cash savings to cover a sudden unexpected expense. Under such circumstances, relocating to a hotel for a few days, purchasing cleaning supplies, or replacing food and medications may be out of reach in the absence of external assistance, forcing individuals and families to take on debt loads that prove disastrous in their own right.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Families</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Experts</Name><Description>Connecting with a wide array of experts and stakeholders including academia, religious leaders, and representatives of all types of whole community partners is key to this effort. FEMA will focus on identifying ways to weave preparedness into people’s everyday lives, connecting with individuals at places they frequent, and incentivizing positive behavior change using tools like grants, training, and exercises</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Academia</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Religious Leaders</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Representatives</Name><Description>of all types of whole community partners</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Responders</Name><Description>Furthermore, the Agency will continue to encourage programs that train and empower responders. Accompanying policies and regulations further this goal, and FEMA will work with its Federal partners and Congress as appropriate.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Organization"><Name>Congress</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Financial Sector</Name><Description>Engaging with partners in the financial sector, the Department of Education, and local community-based organizations is critical to promoting financial wellness and giving people the information and motivation they need to make sound financial decisions and save for an uncertain future.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Department of Education</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Local Community-Based Organizations</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Financial Planners</Name><Description>However, social and economic factors undoubtedly will affect the ability of certain populations to fully prepare for disasters. For that reason, we must offer advice for scalable solutions that range from low- to no-cost options up to optimal levels of family preparedness. In doing so, FEMA aims to collaborate with public and private sector stakeholders to encourage increased personal financial preparedness across the Nation. The Agency will work with partners to identify financial insecurity within American communities — starting in highly disaster-prone areas — and deliver targeted messaging and training either directly or through trusted local leaders.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Local Leaders</Name><Description>Moving forward, FEMA will coordinate closely with National partners and local leaders to help people understand their risks, learn the impacts of specific threats and hazards, adequately prepare for likely events, and use the tools available to help.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>National Partners</Name><Description>FEMA will focus National initiatives including the Ready Campaign, PrepareAthon, Floodsmart, FEMA mobile app, and trainings to directly engage leaders of the whole community.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Local Networks</Name><Description>This includes promoting community-building initiatives to improve the strength of local networks and reinforce practical skills. These skills, like knowing CPR or how to shut off the gas lines in the home, can help individuals lead response efforts in their own communities, while ensuring more people are prepared to handle the real impacts of disasters in the future.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Americans</Name><Description>Even when Americans have an emergency plan, critical skills, strong community ties, and financial resources, this may not be enough to ensure preparedness. People must practice these skills so that when a stress-inducing event arises they can react in a timely manner. Therefore, FEMA’s preparedness messaging must encourage action beyond awareness, thereby laying the foundation of a culture of preparedness upon which individuals, families, and communities can build.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Federal agencies</Name><Description>We will coordinate preparedness initiatives with other Federal agencies, states, tribes and territories, and whole community partners to efficiently apply Federal government leadership to reach the goal of individual and community resilience.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>States</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Tribes</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Territories</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Objective 1.3 Performance Measures: * Increase the percentage of people with savings set aside for an emergency * Deliver training to community-based and non-profit organizations to help them continue service delivery following disasters. * Increase the percentage of people who have taken preparedness actions...  While FEMA has made significant progress working with faith and community partners to improve preparedness and mitigation, outcomes from the 2017 disaster season demonstrate that the Nation is still far from realizing individual and collective resilience. Developing solutions, campaigns, and educational opportunities to help more than 320 million unique individuals from more than 89,000 diverse local communities that make up the Nation prepare for disasters starts with including those individuals in the discussion.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Learning, Improvement &amp; Innovation</Name><Description>Better Learn from Past Disasters, Improve Continuously, and Innovate </Description><Identifier>_4ae7e23c-a81c-11e8-ad3a-213bd8f816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>1.4</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Emergency Managers</Name><Description>Emergency managers must acknowledge both successes and failures, as both provide opportunities to improve for the next disaster. This includes promoting transparency in sharing capability gaps and lessons from disasters and exercises, which will allow the community to prioritize investments and anticipate known challenges during disasters. The emergency management environment — from planning to exercises and assessment — must encourage risk-taking even if failure is possible, in order to stretch our capabilities and cultivate opportunities to improve. Emergency managers must build continuous improvement and innovation into day-to-day functions.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Federal Emergency Managers</Name><Description>As part of this effort, the Agency will support Federal and SLTT emergency managers in building the capacity to self-evaluate, continuously improve, monitor the completion of improvement actions, and share insights, both within FEMA and throughout the emergency management community. To do this, we must improve the aggregation and sharing of successes and challenges. We can gain insights from observations in after-action reports, social science or analytical studies, and through feedback from stakeholders. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>SLTT Emergency Managers</Name><Description>FEMA can improve our organizational commitment to growth by making all of these products more accessible, including improving how we share findings, analyze trends, and translate the key issues into easily relatable formats for a wider audience. Through these efforts, insights from past disasters will be readily available to emergency managers across the Nation.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>FEMA Employees</Name><Description>To expand how we identify challenges and potential solutions, FEMA will encourage employees to promote innovation and submit ideas for improvements. FEMA will also expand leadership engagement with employees and create opportunities for teams to work across components. This will empower employees to conduct iterative process improvements as part of their standard business operations.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>FEMA Grantees</Name><Description>For changes that require investments, we will develop methods to prioritize improvements based on their projected impact on the Nation’s preparedness. To that end, some of the primary ways FEMA supports the Nation is through the delivery of grant funding, technical assistance, training programs, and exercises. FEMA will evaluate the effectiveness of investments that reduce risk, increase preparedness, build resilience, and speed recovery.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>FEMA Trainees</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Public Sector Partners</Name><Description>Externally, the Agency will collaborate with our public and private sector partners to share insights on critical issues facing emergency management, promote best practices in change management, and discuss ways in which FEMA itself can improve. Meeting the emerging challenges of 21st century disasters and the changing nature of the risks we face requires innovation and engagement with the whole community, including academia, emergency management professional organizations, and the private sector, to harness the collective creativity to solve our toughest challenges.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Private Sector Partners</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Objective 1.4 Performance Measures: * Increase the number of FEMA employees who report feeling encouraged to come up with new and better ways of doing things. * Increase SLTT capabilities as reported in the annual Stakeholder Preparedness Review...  Building a culture of preparedness requires continuous learning, improvement, and innovative ideas. As a whole community, we share responsibility to leverage the collective knowledge and diverse experiences of members of the Agency, Federal partners, first responders, and fellow emergency management professionals to form collaborative, creative, and inclusive solutions to disaster challenges, and to improve outcomes for survivors.</OtherInformation></Objective></Goal><Goal><Name>Readiness</Name><Description>Ready the Nation for Catastrophic Disasters</Description><Identifier>_4ae7e32c-a81c-11e8-ad3a-213bd8f816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>2</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Catastrophic disasters, including low- and no-notice incidents, can overwhelm the government at all levels and threaten National security. They are life-altering incidents for those impacted, causing a high number of fatalities and widespread destruction. Catastrophic disasters disrupt lives and hurt our communities – economically and socially. Readiness is critical for FEMA and our partners to ensure that the response and recovery missions are appropriately executed and successful. Strategic Goal 2 builds on the preparedness through Strategic Goal 1 and focuses us on enhancing our collective readiness. The Nation’s readiness depends on emergency management professionals who execute the mission on behalf of Federal and SLTT governments. This requires a scalable and capable National incident workforce that can adapt and deploy to a changing risk landscape, greater integration with our partners at all levels, and the ability to communicate and coordinate effectively in every situation.</OtherInformation><Objective><Name>Workforce</Name><Description>Organize the “BEST” (Build, Empower, Sustain, and Train) Scalable and Capable Incident Workforce</Description><Identifier>_4ae7e412-a81c-11e8-ad3a-213bd8f816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>2.1</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>BEST Incident Workforce</Name><Description>This “BEST” national incident workforce consists of a network of incident positions that allow every emergency manager and responder to contribute to incident operations regardless of their home agency, jurisdiction, or community. During the historic disasters of 2017, over 15,000 state and local personnel supported disaster operations through state-to-state mutual aid. Renewed focus on a standardized and qualified national incident workforce can build on this success, maximize the existing workforce, and better prepare the Nation for future catastrophic disasters. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Emergency Managers</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Responders</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>FEMA Employees</Name><Description>FEMA’s success begins with the readiness of its own incident workforce. FEMA employees must be prepared to deploy in support of disaster operations and be knowledgeable in multiple disciplines and programs. This involves determining the necessary size and nature of the incident workforce based on sound operating concepts and planning assumptions. Enhancing the FQS will help ensure our workforce is prepared to perform their disaster responsibilities. This includes guaranteeing that the FQS maximizes the ability of FEMA staff to use their skills and talents to deliver the best outcomes possible. It also requires the implementation of new hiring and training approaches that focus on developing diverse leaders with a broad scope of knowledge about FEMA’s programs to better support disaster survivors. FEMA employees will receive core competency training and the opportunity to work and gain experience in various roles, allowing progression to supervisory and management positions across disaster cadres and offices. To achieve this goal, employees must receive training and practical experience through frequent disaster deployments and exercises. These steps encourage leadership development at every stage of an employee’s career. They also help develop FEMA employees into the next generation of field leaders and offer new career advancement opportunities for FEMA’s most capable employees.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Surge Capacity Force</Name><Description>FEMA also supplements our internal capabilities by calling on our Federal partners through the Surge Capacity Force when in need. The Surge Capacity Force affords FEMA the unique opportunity to infuse personnel from across DHS and other Federal agencies to augment our incident workforce cadres. During the challenging disasters of 2017, FEMA deployed 4,063 Surge Capacity Force volunteers – a record number of these deployments. These volunteers were invaluable to delivering FEMA’s mission and demonstrated the Federal Government’s cooperative and cohesive approach to supporting those we serve.  Providing new training for Surge Capacity Force volunteers in the future will further integrate the Federal Government’s resources into the nationwide incident workforce and offer additional capacity to support future disasters. When incidents do occur, everyone must work together to seamlessly integrate across Federal, SLTT, non-profit, and private sector lines. FEMA must build on our inherent capabilities and strengthen our partners to support the nationwide incident workforce to form a more complete, interoperable incident workforce capability.</Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Objective 2.1 Performance Measures: * Increase the number of fully qualified personnel in the National Qualification System. * Improve the readiness of FEMA’s incident workforce cadres. * Seamlessly integrate non-FEMA personnel into FEMA incident workforce positions to create a Unified National Incident Workforce...  Just as the Nation’s greatest asset to confront disasters is the prepared population that we seek to promote in Strategic Goal 1, the people serving in the Nation’s incident workforce are the Government’s greatest assets. These personnel supplement the work of individuals, neighbors, and communities – our true first responders. To be effective together, we must be able to quickly mobilize, scale, and integrate this workforce to meet the needs of impacted communities. FEMA will strengthen the incident workforce through a “BEST” (Build, Empower, Sustain, and Train) model by focusing on:</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Capabilities &amp; Capacities</Name><Description>Build the capabilities and capacities to fulfill our responsibility to effectively respond to a catastrophic event</Description><Identifier>_8cd04858-a8c9-11e8-b07c-c2cecef816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>2.1.1</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType=""><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Through collaborative implementation of the National Qualification System (NQS), FEMA will increase the Nation’s ability to meet evolving needs, fill critical gaps, and ensure that the whole community shares the responsibility for response and recovery. This institutionalization requires FEMA to further promote interoperability by establishing a common language for defining emergency management titles and enabling jurisdictions and organizations to plan for, request, and have confidence in the capabilities of personnel deployed from any location or agency. The FEMA Qualification System (FQS) must also align and be fully compatible with the NQS. This focus on deeper integration involves thinking beyond existing state-to-state mutual aid to building the ability of non-Federal resources to take on a greater amount of state and locally managed incidents nationwide and directly plug into FEMA operations when required.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Empowerment</Name><Description>Empower organizations and individuals to act decisively through leadership intent</Description><Identifier>_8cd04dda-a8c9-11e8-b07c-c2cecef816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>2.1.2</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType=""><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>To ensure interoperability when disaster strikes, all levels of government, private sector entities, and nongovernmental organizations, must have access to guidance, tools, and other programmatic support to help them develop processes for qualifying, certifying, and credentialing deployable emergency management personnel within the NQS.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Proficiency</Name><Description>Sustain proficiency as emergency management professionals</Description><Identifier>_8cd0501e-a8c9-11e8-b07c-c2cecef816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>2.1.3</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType=""><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation/></Objective><Objective><Name>Training, Education &amp; Exercises</Name><Description>Train, educate, and exercise in an open-minded, creative manner when not actively engaged in disaster operations</Description><Identifier>_8cd051f4-a8c9-11e8-b07c-c2cecef816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>2.1.4</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType=""><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Additionally, FEMA will continue to conduct exercises at all levels to test whether capabilities will perform as planned, whether plans are sufficient to meet incident response and recovery requirements, and to maintain a skilled, knowledgeable, efficient, and survivor-focused incident workforce.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Coordination</Name><Description>Enhance Intergovernmental Coordination through FEMA Integration Teams</Description><Identifier>_8cd05582-a8c9-11e8-b07c-c2cecef816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>2.2</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>FEMA Regions</Name><Description>The Agency demonstrates its commitment to whole community collaboration through regional operations led by FEMA’s ten regions. To build even closer relationships and strengthen readiness across the Nation, we must go even further.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>FEMA Integration Teams</Name><Description>Through FEMA Integration Teams, we will provide SLTT organizations with enhanced assistance by integrating Federal staff with the emergency management offices of participating partners. The purpose of FEMA Integration Teams is to ensure that FEMA is planning, training, exercising, and executing together every day. This level of integration will provide us with an opportunity to learn from our partners and more effectively meet their needs. It will also help our partners overcome gaps as we identify tailored solutions outside our traditional structures and organizations.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>SLTT Partners</Name><Description>The 2017 disaster season demonstrated that FEMA must help SLTT partners further develop their capabilities and resilience prior to an incident to ensure a more effective response and recovery. Addressing capabilities such as logistics, financial cost recovery, housing, and interoperable communications are just a few areas that stand to benefit from strategically co-locating FEMA staff with our SLTT partners. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Tribal Nations</Name><Description>FEMA is also committing to improving our engagement and creating new opportunities for closer coordination with tribal nations. Specifically, FEMA will use the FEMA Integration Teams to build upon our successful regional and tribal liaison programs and seek to identify new ways to expand partnerships and enhance tribal communications and support before, during, and after disasters. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Emergency Management Partners</Name><Description>Better integrating FEMA operations with emergency management partners will yield best practices and lessons-learned. It will also help build shared capabilities and capacity, resulting in more effective disaster response and recovery operations and a more prepared and resilient Nation.</Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Objective 2.2 Performance Measures: * Increase the number of partners participating in the FEMA Integration Teams program. * Decrease the amount and percent of time the Federal incident workforce supports federally-declared disasters.  The success of FEMA’s mission depends on the quality of the relationships we foster and our ability to understand and support the needs of emergency management partners and the communities we serve. By working alongside our partners through FEMA Integration Teams, we can assist them in navigating our programs and policies to deliver quicker, more tailored assistance directly where it is needed. Increasing direct engagement strengthens our understanding of capabilities and gaps and bolsters the connections, cooperation, and communication necessary to improve the Nation’s overall readiness. Increased engagement and presence will also allow us to understand the needs and readiness of our partners while improving the coordination of the assistance we provide. </OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Commodities, Equipment &amp;Personnel</Name><Description>Posture FEMA and the Whole Community to Provide Life-Saving and Life-Sustaining Commodities, Equipment, and Personnel from all Available Sources</Description><Identifier>_8cd057da-a8c9-11e8-b07c-c2cecef816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>2.3</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>SLTT Partners</Name><Description>FEMA can support SLTTs in analyzing risks, anticipating needs, and coordinating plans among stakeholder groups but, ultimately, it is up to those organizations to ensure they have adequate access to supplies through an appropriate balance of maintained stock and pre-disaster contracts.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Disaster Survivors</Name><Description>Obtaining what is needed in a disaster is only the first step. To be useful, the resource must also be physically delivered when and where it is needed. While FEMA has significantly increased its logistics capabilities since 2015, the 2017 hurricane season and wildfires demonstrated that additional people, processes, doctrine, and contracted services are needed to effectively move resources from point of origin to disaster survivors during large-scale incidents.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Disaster Relief Network</Name><Description>This includes a particular focus on the “last mile,” where a complex network of National, local, voluntary, and commercial organizations integrate their capabilities to put food, water, or other items into the hands of survivors.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>National Organizations</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Local Organizations</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Voluntary Organizations</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Commercial Organizations</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Pre-Disaster Supply Chains</Name><Description>No plan can perfectly predict the resource needs stemming from a catastrophic incident. However, the analyses, relationships, organizational discipline, and logistics options that result from the planning process improve our collective ability to adapt to emerging logistics and supply chain challenges and deliver resources from across the Nation to impacted communities. The most effective way to deliver the needed supplies to a disaster-impacted area, is by re-establishing pre-disaster supply chains. Building resilience within these systems and providing for their rapid restoration is key to responding to any catastrophic incident.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Private Sector Partners</Name><Description>FEMA will work with the private sector and Federal partners to build a shared understanding of supply chain vulnerabilities and the ways FEMA can work with its partners to rapidly restore these critical flows. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Federal Partners</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Objective 2.3 Performance Measures: * Achieve and maintain the logistics readiness rate for moving, staging, and delivering commodities and equipment for catastrophic disasters. * Integrate the FEMA Private Sector Supply Chain Management Plan into all Regional and National Plans. * Establish and maintain effective distribution management plans in all states and territories.  No one agency or organization is able to store enough equipment, supplies, and commodities, or marshal enough internal teams to quickly and fully meet all the needs of a catastrophic incident. These devastating incidents necessitate the collective assets and contributions of many supporting organizations aligned through a coordinated structure. FEMA’s role is to strategically stock the essential items needed to jumpstart a response, but effectively delivering resources in the face of a major disaster requires the continued development of robust partnerships and reliable  capabilities among all stakeholders. Consequently, FEMA must consider the appropriate balance of what it keeps on hand in warehouses, what it can quickly acquire through contracts, and what can be provided by volunteer organizations, other Federal agencies, SLTTs, and the private sector. Likewise, other layers of Government must also position themselves to meet the immediate supply requirements of a catastrophic disaster.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Communications</Name><Description>Improve Continuity and Resilient Communications Capabilities</Description><Identifier>_8cd059ba-a8c9-11e8-b07c-c2cecef816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>2.4</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>FEMA Partners</Name><Description>FEMA must work with our partners to assess the mission impacts of losing the ability to reliably communicate and prioritize meeting all-hazards communications needs.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Government Agencies</Name><Description>Continuity planning efforts across levels of government must also address vulnerabilities to ensure uninterrupted communications capabilities in all response operations. Resilient and redundant all-hazards communications capabilities are an indispensable element of emergency management and must be built into catastrophic preparedness efforts. If we cannot effectively and reliably communicate with our partners, we cannot coordinate with them and we cannot direct Federal support to where it is needed most.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Government Leaders</Name><Description>Communications enable operational success by supporting connectivity among key government leadership, internal elements, other organizations, and the public under all conditions. The inability to communicate hinders operational coordination, creating information gaps and increasing the likelihood of overutilization or misallocation of limited resources.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Cybersecurity Service Providers</Name><Description>Additionally, we face an evolving threat environment that spans from low-tech dangers to more complex hybrid incidents such as nation-state threats and sophisticated cyber-attacks. This adds urgency to developing more resilient communication capabilities. Overreliance on networked systems and vulnerable critical infrastructure could broaden the impact of an incident, potentially allowing even a small weakness to cause cascading effects with far-reaching consequences.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Communication Service Providers</Name><Description>To ensure effective communication and coordination capabilities, FEMA develops, maintains, and employs the capability to provide integrated tactical  voice, data, and video communications systems and services before, during, and after an incident. These deployable communications assets utilize state-of-the-art, resilient, and redundant communications equipment and architecture to organize a successful response in the most austere environments. Planning coordination is also critical to ensure that FEMA is well-integrated with key government leaders and emergency managers during response and recovery efforts nationwide. Communications resilience requires establishing and integrating robust continuity doctrine, plans, programs, and operations within and across government and non-government organizations at all levels. Beginning with threat assessments, plans must address stakeholder needs and gaps to ensure that information is shared and decisions are made quickly when lives and property are at stake.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>SLTT Partners</Name><Description>Federal and SLTT engagement is a critical factor in developing and maintaining effective continuity planning and response operations. The continued integration of continuity subject matter expertise and coordination into response and recovery operations enables informed decision-making, improves responder safety, and increases mission resilience. FEMA will refine and resource Agency continuity, devolution, response, and recovery plans to ensure mission resiliency and promote continuity of operations and government when faced with a catastrophic disaster. Finally, FEMA and other Federal and SLTT partners will leverage industry innovation and best practices to provide our Nation with an accessible, modern, reliable, and resilient communications infrastructure during disasters and National emergencies.</Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Objective 2.4 Performance Measures: * Increase the percent of states and territories with comprehensive continuity plans and programs for state agencies and emergency operations centers that align with the Continuity Guidance Circular (CGC). * Increase the percent of critical communication nodes of operational coordination identified in the New Madrid Seismic Zone catastrophic plans. * Update all state and territory communications plans to include a section addressing continuity communication and resilience...  We live in a technologically connected world. Every day, individuals, organizations, and government institutions provide critical services and conduct essential functions that are wholly or highly dependent on the availability of and access to communications systems. There are inherent risks to relying heavily on these communications systems. We must understand their interdependencies and the potential cascading impacts that a failure could cause...  FEMA is responsible for coordinating implementation, execution, and assessment of continuity – including continuity of operations, continuity of government, and enduring constitutional government. To meet this responsibility, FEMA must ensure our mission essential functions and those of other Federal and non-Federal organizations are executable in times of crisis. FEMA will continue to incorporate continuity principles and considerations into programs, planning, tests, training, and exercises, emphasizing continuity as a critical characteristic of preparedness and operations. These principles must be continuously reinforced to be effective. FEMA and its partners must also leverage industry innovation and best practices to provide the Nation with an accessible, modern, reliable, and resilient communications infrastructure during disasters and National emergencies.</OtherInformation></Objective></Goal><Goal><Name>Complexity</Name><Description>Reduce the Complexity of FEMA </Description><Identifier>_4ae7e4ee-a81c-11e8-ad3a-213bd8f816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>3</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType=""><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Nation faces an evolving threat and hazard environment. FEMA must be flexible and adaptable to meet the needs of individuals and communities, and it must deliver assistance and support in as simple a manner as possible. We must innovate and leverage new technology to reduce complexity, increase efficiency, and improve outcomes. Strategic Goal 3 promotes simpler, less complex processes to streamline our Agency and the support we provide to individuals and communities. By making it easier for employees to do their work, the Agency can better care for those we support. A simplified FEMA – one that streamlines survivor and grantee experiences and provides straightforward processes and policies for staff – will decrease administrative burdens, improve the stewardship of Federal taxpayer dollars, and allow for a more efficient and effective execution of our mission.</OtherInformation><Objective><Name>Survivors &amp; Grantees</Name><Description>Streamline the Disaster Survivor and Grantee Experience</Description><Identifier>_4ae7e5f2-a81c-11e8-ad3a-213bd8f816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>3.1</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Disaster Survivors</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Disaster Grantees</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Disaster Assistance Providers</Name><Description>For those impacted, the aftermath of a disaster is a challenging time and
it can be difficult to meet essential immediate needs while beginning the
longer process of recovery. Survivors access disaster assistance through a
range of programs administered by government and non-government entities.
This can make identifying the available opportunities and selecting the best
options for a survivor’s or community’s specific circumstances confusing and
time-consuming. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Disaster Assistance Programs</Name><Description>Navigating complex Federal programs is an unnecessary added burden
in times of disaster. FEMA must streamline and integrate existing disaster
assistance programs and processes, creating innovative and efficient solutions
to provide the most effective survivor support. This starts with a review of
the available forms of assistance and how survivors access the various
programs. Furthermore, understanding barriers that limit or prevent access
to programs, especially for vulnerable populations, remains essential to our
mission.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Communities</Name><Description>FEMA also needs to reduce the number of duplicative interactions
that survivors and communities experience when accessing services. While
all disaster assistance must have controls necessary to protect taxpayer
investments, documentation and eligibility requirements must also account
for the challenging circumstances that disaster survivors face.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Disaster Inspectors</Name><Description>One of the critical ways that FEMA assists disaster survivors is by coordinating
the damage assessment process and informing how partners use those
assessments to determine eligibility across the full spectrum of disaster
programs. Current housing inspection processes are slow and rely on outdated, resource-intensive methods. In many cases, survivors must also undergo
multiple inspections. FEMA must re-design the way the Federal government
assesses disaster impacts to reduce the number of required inspections and
deliver the needed assistance faster.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Homeowners</Name><Description>For survivors whose homes are damaged to the point of being uninhabitable,
post-disaster housing is an important element of recovery. SLTT governments
must be empowered to develop housing solutions that work for their citizens
and complement the overall housing market in the area. To do that, FEMA
must work with SLTT governments to develop flexible housing options targeted
to the community need. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>SLTT Governments</Name><Description>Impacted SLTT governments must also have greater ability to drive their
own recovery. Communities can adapt and design approaches specific
for their recovery needs when they have greater control over the recovery
process. FEMA must do more to incentivize and enhance state and
local incident management, and provide partners with tools to identify
and track the recovery process. This requires clear and understandable
grant eligibility criteria, along with greater certainty and flexibility in the
use of funds. Recovery grant management systems must also be userfriendly,
making it easy to track grant status and upload documentation.</Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Objective 3.1 Performance Measures:
* Decrease the number of Federal in-person inspections.
* Raise applicant satisfaction with simplicity of the Individuals and
Households Program and the Public Assistance Process.
* Increase the timeliness of financial assistance awards of the Individuals
and Households Program and Public Assistance Program.
* Improve the accuracy of financial assistance of the Individuals and
Households Program and Public Assistance Program.

Providing assistance to disaster survivors and impacted communities following
a disaster is at the core of FEMA’s mission. Whether it is supporting the
sheltering operations of our SLTT partners, providing assistance for temporary
housing, or supporting community recovery through grants for infrastructure
restoration and increasing community resilience, FEMA helps survivors and
communities when they need it most, allowing them to start on the road to
recovery.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Recovery</Name><Description>Mature the National Disaster Recovery Framework</Description><Identifier>_8cd05c08-a8c9-11e8-b07c-c2cecef816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>3.2</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Person"><Name>Federal Disaster Recovery Coordinator</Name><Description>The Federal Disaster Recovery Coordinator organizes the Federal
Government’s recovery assistance from multiple departments and agencies
into an integrated, community-focused support system adapted to the unique
circumstances of each community and disaster.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Federal Agencies</Name><Description>There is growing investment in building and sustaining recovery capabilities
across all levels of government. However, resources remain constrained, particularly for pre-disaster recovery planning, hazard mitigation, and
preparedness activities. Additionally, the NDRF remains a relatively new
concept. Some Federal, SLTT partners, and non-governmental organizations
and private sector partners have limited exposure to and understanding of
how the NDRF can be used to greatest effect.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>SLTT Partners</Name><Description>To take full advantage of the NDRF, SLTTs should incorporate its principles
into their preparedness efforts and pre-disaster planning activities to ensure
recovery partners are positioned to support impacted communities following
an incident of any scale.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>States</Name><Description>Not all states have adopted pre-disaster recovery
plans that align with the NDRF, demonstrating a need for greater awareness of
the value of pre-disaster recovery planning. Improved education and outreach
regarding the value of pre-disaster planning for recovery management, cost
recovery, recovery coordination, hazard mitigation, and unique Federal and
non-Federal partner capabilities will increase SLTT appreciation of the NDRF’s
benefits. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Private Sector</Name><Description>Outreach presents an opportunity to learn from stakeholders with NDRF
experience, better understand past challenges, and make improvements to
how the NDRF is implemented moving forward. Both Federal and SLTT partners
can improve partnerships with the private sector and non-governmental
organizations to better integrate their local networks, knowledge, and
resources into recovery planning and post-disaster support through the
NDRF.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Non-Governmental Organizations</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>NDRF Leaders</Name><Description>Federal capability to support short and especially long-term recovery varies
across departments and agencies, and Federal capability gaps can cause
fragmented assistance following incidents. Federal agencies with NDRF
leadership and support roles must adequately plan and prepare for recovery
responsibilities before a disaster. SLTT, non-governmental organizations,
and private partners can benefit from interacting with regional recovery
partners before disasters arrive. This requires a renewed commitment
from agencies and cooperation across the Federal Government to manage
expectations and integrate efforts. Individual programs operating in
isolation can fracture the overall recovery effort rather than creating
unified solutions that align the best recovery and resilience resources
available to offer seamless solutions to communities to build back stronger</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Person"><Name>Federal Disaster Recovery Coordinator</Name><Description>Further, roles and responsibilities identified in the NDRF need to be clarified
in practice. This includes maturing our understanding of the distinct roles
of the Federal Disaster Recovery Coordinator, the Federal Coordinating
Officer, and SLTT leadership, including Long-Term Recovery Managers.
It is critical for leadership responsibilities and authorities to be clearly
defined during active response and recovery operations and when multiple
Federal agencies are involved. Clarity helps ensure integrated operations
and coordination of Federal partner resources to support community
recovery. It also enhances understanding of disaster complexities,
community impacts, and opportunities for collaborative problem solving.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Person"><Name>Federal Coordinating Officer</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>SLTT Leadership</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Long-Term Recovery Managers</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Objective 3.2 Performance Measures
* Improve the recovery capability of states and territories with pre-designated
State Disaster Recovery Coordinators and plans based upon the National
Disaster Recovery Framework principles.
* Strengthen Federal department and agency recovery capability...

The National Disaster Recovery Framework (NDRF) is one of the five National
Planning Frameworks. It provides the coordinating structure for collaborating
among stakeholders to help communities rebuild stronger, reduce future
risk, and decrease disaster costs. The NDRF also defines leadership
roles and responsibilities, including that of the Federal Disaster Recovery
Coordinator. </OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Mission Delivery</Name><Description>Develop Innovative Systems and Business Processes that Enable FEMA’s Employees to Rapidly and Effectively Deliver the Agency’s Mission</Description><Identifier>_8cd05e56-a8c9-11e8-b07c-c2cecef816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>3.3</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>FEMA Partners</Name><Description>FEMA employees and partners have identified complexity in operations as a
barrier to success. While this challenge is not unique to FEMA, it requires
our attention and effort. The Agency must evaluate the way we operate and
simplify our business processes and systems, taking a strategic approach to
identify short and long-term opportunities to improve the capabilities of our
people, efficiency of our processes, security of our systems, and utility of our
technology. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>FEMA Employees</Name><Description>FEMA’s employees are the most important drivers of our performance and
our most effective agents of innovation and change. FEMA is the public face
of a Federal response during a disaster, and employees in the field know
what process improvements are critical to meeting survivor needs better than
anyone.
The Agency must empower employees and increase their capability to identify
and implement process improvements that enhance our mission delivery.
This includes building organic process improvement capabilities among our
staff, recruiting and retaining a diverse workforce, providing communication
channels for employees to propose innovative ideas to leaders, and
establishing a culture that reinforces that employees at all levels are expected
to lead, collaborate, and innovate.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>FEMA Programs</Name><Description>Once good ideas emerge, we must also enhance the standardization of FEMA’s
processes across programs to increase operational performance. Innovations
and process improvements should be transparent and accessible. Strong
governance will also help capture the level of effort and resources required to
standardize and maintain new processes, so the Agency is a good steward of
taxpayer dollars. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Data Managers</Name><Description>Finally, FEMA continues to face unnecessary complexity with technology. The
Agency has made strides in consolidating information technology (IT) systems
and remains focused on streamlining our grants, insurance, and financial IT
systems. However, unless we also adopt robust data management standards
and technology that enables enterprise-wide analytics, we will not be able
to provide the level of service that survivors need during and after disasters
or the level of transparency our stakeholders require.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Person"><Name>DHS Office of the Chief Information Officer</Name><Description>We will continue to
coordinate with the DHS Office of the Chief Information Officer and other DHS
components to ensure that we are aligned on our efforts to facilitate consistent
data management and information sharing within the Department. We must
also double-down on our efforts to decommission outdated or underutilized
legacy IT systems to increase our cybersecurity and reserve resources for
needed technology modernization efforts.</Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Objective 3.3 Performance Measures:
* Decrease the number of repeat audit findings related to efficient and
effective program delivery.
* Increase scores on the Global Satisfaction, Employee Engagement, and
Diversity Indices of the Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey.
* Achieve and maintain Federal Information Security Modernization Act
metrics to enhance cybersecurity across the Agency...

Emergency management is a shared responsibility across the whole community
and the Nation depends on FEMA’s capabilities and readiness on its worst
days. Whether it is a hurricane or a no-notice event from an emerging threat,
FEMA must be ready when America calls. To deliver our no-fail mission in an
ever-changing environment, FEMA must continuously improve our business
processes and systems. FEMA must meet the needs of today and prepare for
the challenges of tomorrow. 
Many FEMA programs and systems have become more complex over time
as FEMA has matured and new policies and programs have emerged.
Technological change has also contributed to this complexity. New processes
and systems are layered over old ones, making it more difficult and timeconsuming
for survivors and employees to navigate our programs. </OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Management, Transparency &amp; Analytics</Name><Description>Strengthen Grants Management, Increase Transparency, and Improve Data Analytics</Description><Identifier>_8cd06068-a8c9-11e8-b07c-c2cecef816dd</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>3.4</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>SLTT Partners</Name><Description>In support of FEMA’s mission, the Agency delivers numerous types of financial
assistance programs through annually recurring and incident-specific grant
agreements with SLTT partners. FEMA administers more than 40 financial
assistance programs, issuing thousands of grant awards each year. These
grants are critical to supporting our partners, first responders, survivors,
and communities. Between fiscal years 2008 and 2017, FEMA provided
nearly $100 billion in financial assistance. FEMA and our partners share a
critical responsibility to serve as good stewards of this substantial taxpayer
investment.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>First Responders</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Disaster Survivors</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Communities</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Grant Recipients</Name><Description>As programs have grown over time, the process of applying for, receiving,
and administering these grants has become increasingly complex. FEMA
must simplify the application process for grant recipients, enhance the ability
to monitor funds, and ensure stewardship of public dollars. This requires
increased consistency and integration across FEMA, improved support to
grantees, reliable data about grant performance, modern information systems,
and robust data analytics capabilities to strengthen internal oversight and
increase public transparency and accountability.</Description></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Objective 3.4 Performance Measures: 
* Reduce the percentage of questioned costs by the
Office of Inspector General.
* Remediate repeat grants-related financial statement audit
findings and recommendations.
* Reduce the number of grants overdue for closeout.
* Make datasets on the amount and purpose of all funds provided to SLTT
and other Federal agencies publicly available and machine readable...

Establishing consistent and standardized business practices throughout
the grant life-cycle demonstrates the Agency’s commitment to reducing the
complexity and increasing the effectiveness of grants management. FEMA
must continue our ongoing efforts to implement consistent policy, internal
controls, accountability, and financial management of recipients — including
sub-recipients — to improve oversight and promote integration across the
Agency’s multiple grant programs. In parallel, FEMA must also continue our
multi-year effort to establish a single, holistic grants management information
technology platform through the Grants Management Modernization initiative
and the accompanying Financial System Modernization initiative to modernize
our outdated legacy financial system.
FEMA requires consistent, reliable, and high-quality data analytics to inform
decision-making and risk management before, during, and after disasters.
Consistent data management and improved infrastructure can reduce delays
and decrease costs in mission delivery. FEMA’s continued investment in the
Enterprise Data &amp; Analytics Modernization Initiative (EDAMI) positions the
Agency to provide consistent data management and an integrated, modern,
and cost-effective enterprise data analysis and reporting environment.
Improving FEMA’s analytics capabilities will enable the use of data-driven
approaches to identify and address Agency-wide inefficiencies and risks in
our grants program delivery and monitor trends in audit findings, informing the
technical assistance and training we provide to recipients and sub-recipients.
This will allow Federal dollars to have the most impact possible by reducing
adverse audit findings and eliminating deobligation and recoupment of
funding. Enhanced data management and analytics capabilities will also
enable greater transparency about where, when, and why grant dollars are
being spent, allowing FEMA to cultivate greater accountability, consistency,
and trust — not only within the Agency, but also throughout the emergency management community and with the general public.
FEMA’s commitment to reduce complexity, uniformly administer grants, and
ensure the proper controls for its grant programs will improve the Agency’s
ability to support survivors and communities. By increasing transparency and
prioritizing analytics, FEMA is taking the steps necessary to keep pace with a
rapidly changing world, streamline its processes to stay ahead of emergencies,
and deliver swift, effective assistance in times of greatest need.</OtherInformation></Objective></Goal></StrategicPlanCore><AdministrativeInformation><StartDate>2017-10-01</StartDate><EndDate>2022-09-30</EndDate><PublicationDate>2018-08-25</PublicationDate><Source>https://www.fema.gov/media-library-data/1533052524696-b5137201a4614ade5e0129ef01cbf661/strat_plan.pdf</Source><Submitter><GivenName>Owen</GivenName><Surname>Ambur</Surname><PhoneNumber/><EmailAddress>Owen.Ambur@verizon.net</EmailAddress></Submitter></AdministrativeInformation></StrategicPlan>