+ All Categories
Transcript
Page 1: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

National Emergency Relief Summit

March 2014

Noel Clement Head of Australian Services

Page 2: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Overview

1. Context

• Red Cross in emergency management

2. Relief & Recovery

• Disaster impacts/human needs

• National Principles for Disaster Recovery

• Emergency Appeals

3. Lessons/challenges

• Overarching

• Appeals related

Page 3: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

• Auxiliary to government

• Partnerships at all levels of government

• Responsibilities under State/ Territory

EM arrangements

• Other Partnerships • Australian Psychological Society

• Save the Children

• Corporate support

Red Cross response – the framework Red Cross role in Emergency Management

Page 4: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Emergency Services Strategy 2010-2015

The aim:

To mobilise the power of humanity to build resilience in communities before, during and after emergencies.

Page 5: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Red Cross Strategy - Outcomes Focus

1. Preparedness

2. Response

3. Recovery

4. Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander communities

Page 6: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Relief & Recovery

• Disaster impacts/human needs

• National Principles for Disaster Recovery

• Emergency Appeals

Where does Emergency Relief fit in?

Page 7: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

• Disasters impacts upon, individuals, families, places, networks, businesses,

livelihoods

• People may lose a lifetime of memories, belongings, treasured pets,

irreplaceable possessions and years of hard work

• No two people experience

the same disaster

• The consequences are long,

complex and disruptive

Disaster impacts

Page 8: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Scenario

• What do I need?

• Who can provide it?

• Who’s in charge?

Page 9: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Counseling/rebuilding/’getting over it’ • Public interest and perception

• Time to rebuild

• Counseling v. practical assistance/effort

Practical matters • Decision making

• Housing/living arrangements

• Children’s schools

Sustaining the effort in a continually changing environment • Work

• Clearing/rebuilding

• Living arrangements (caravans/relocation?)

• Family stresses

Managing role tensions, stress & fatigue • Balancing the community role with family and personal recovery

• Cumulative Stress

• Fatigue

The challenges – individual and community

Page 10: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

• Range of community recovery services

• Information

• Community and personal support

• Emergency Relief/ Financial assistance

• Mental health support

• Community development and resources

• Type, range and quantum of services dependent on impact of

disaster and needs of individuals and communities

Services – individual and community

Page 11: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Disaster recovery in Australia

• Supporting communities to work together during adversity

• Recognising and contributing to individual and community resilience

• Working with and empowering communities physical, environmental & economic elements, together with psychosocial wellbeing

• Enhancing social and natural environments, infrastructure and economies

Page 12: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

National principles for disaster recovery

A joint approach to disaster recovery:

• whole of government

• whole of community

A national collaboration owned and shared by many:

• governments at all levels

• not for profit sector

• the many individuals working in emergency management and recovery

A strong focus on community led recovery:

• applicable to all aspects of recovery

• promote self-reliance, shared responsibility and mutual obligation

Developed and revised by the Disaster Recovery Sub Committee (DRSC) of the Community and

Disability Services Ministers’ Advisory Council (CDSMAC)

Page 13: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

National principles for disaster recovery

Six key interrelated concepts:

1. Understanding the context

2. Recognising the complexity

3. Using community led approaches

4. Ensuring coordination of all activities

5. Employing effective communication

6. Acknowledging and building capacity

Page 14: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Potential Emergency Relief measures

State/Territory Governments • Emergency assistance

• Temporary living

• Household rebuild/repair

Australian Government grants • Centrelink Disaster Relief payment

Appeals • Not for profits

• Community groups – new and existing

Material aid/donated goods • Corporate

• Individual generosity

Page 15: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Emergency Relief - Observations

o Can be divisive if impact and community need are not well understood

o Majority of recipients are typically not used to accessing financial assistance

o Expectations of beneficiaries can be varied

o Expectations of donors need to be carefully managed

o Prescribed versus empowerment approaches

Financial assistance

• Often unnecessarily complex

• Coordination challenges – duplication and gaps

• Availability driven by intangibles such as media interest & public response

Donated goods

• Balancing people’s desire to give/help with need/dignity of those affected

• Potential impact on local economic recovery (e.g. local stores)

Page 16: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Appeals - Black Saturday 2009

Red Cross launched the Victorian Bushfire Appeal in partnership

with the Victorian and Australian governments on 8 February

• Close to 600,000 people donated to the Appeal

• 93% of the donations came from individuals

• 13 simultaneous call centres were in operation during collection process

• 350,000 calls received in one 3 hour period alone

Page 17: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Appeals - Black Saturday 2009

Background:

• 173 people deceased

• Hundreds of people injured

• Thousands of homes and properties damaged or destroyed

• Major impact on community infrastructure

• Major economic impacts

Exercise:

How would you allocate the funds?

• $401m (including interest)

Page 18: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Appeals - Black Saturday 2009

• Independent advisory panel made up of community leaders

established to oversee the Appeal Fund’s operation

• Administration undertaken through Victorian Government

Department of Human Services (no costs taken from the fund)

• $320m (80%) to individuals and families

• $81m to communities

• $225m on housing support

• More than $240m (60%) distributed in the first 12 months

• 46,000 payments made to date

Page 19: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Appeals - Black Saturday 2009

Initial emergency payments included:

• Compassion and Bereavement Payment

• Initial Home Dislocation Payment

• Severe Injury Payment

• Household Repairs Payment

• Tools of Trade Payment

• Exceptional Hardship Support Payment

• Rebuilding and recovery payments

Page 20: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Appeals - Black Saturday 2009

Subsequent Rebuilding and recovery payments

included:

• Destroyed Homes Payment

• Damaged Homes Payment

• Tenant Contents Payment

• Rural Properties Recovery Payment

• Severe Injury Transition to Home Payment

Page 21: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Appeals – Examples of Principles

• Ensure input from the affected community

• Distribution should be accessible, equitable and timely

• Guidelines should be well-publicised and accessible

• Individual and community recovery should be supported

• All money collected should be disbursed

• Separate appeals should be coordinated or, if possible,

combined

• Consideration should be given to other forms of financial

assistance available (capacity to recover)

• Appeal funds should be used for grants, not loans

• Assistance should not act as a disincentive to insurance

Page 22: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Lessons & Challenges

Page 23: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Overarching:

• Importance of a cohesive, integrated response -

coordinating diversity of effort to maximise outcomes

• Prompt Response/Proactivity versus sensitivity to

community and individual circumstances

• When is an appeal appropriate?

• Impact of an appeal on wider organisation’s work

• Diversity of impacts and impacted groups

Lessons & challenges

Page 24: Noel Clement - The Australian Red Cross: Emergency Relief provision for people affected by emergencies and disasters

Appeals:

•The Appeal ‘wave’ – highs and lows

•Tension between immediacy & ensuring full probity - incremental release of funds

• Building and maintaining trust in the appeal – independence of decision making versus organisation control

•Critical importance of communication and transparency

•Legislation/ taxation implications – “relief of distress”

•Distribution costs and infrastructure

•Role of the Media and Public scrutiny

•Donor intent/ expectations of beneficiaries

•Empowerment/dependency

•Long term nature of recovery

Lessons & challenges


Top Related