Resilience to hazards overlapping a pandemic: A shelter resource stabilization model

N. Hutton, Jennifer L. Whytlaw, Joshua Behr, Juita-Elena (Wie) Yusuf, Taiwo C Olanrewaju Lasisi, Jennifer Marshall, Vicky Seiler Rimer
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Abstract

COVID-19 and the resulting financial impacts had budget and workforce implications for organizations involved in emergency shelter provision. To address distancing and sanitation protocols as well as virus transmission and vaccination rates, shelter supplies, facility modifications, and staffing adjustments were needed. As funding and authorizations to implement public health guidance and stabilize the workforce expired, emergency managers had to determine whether to continue pandemic protocols. In order to understand these relationships, we conducted a workshop in September 2021 with 137 emergency managers, public health leaders, and other government and nonprofit practitioners from 20 states, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Canada to identify resource reallocation strategies utilized for sheltering from post-lockdown to post-vaccine periods of the COVID-19 pandemic. We applied a fiscal recovery framework to explore how these operational changes were influenced by and have implications for fiscal and policy support as well as operational adaptability. Results show that as fiscal and policy support waned, some pandemic protocols were suspended, thereby shifting and reducing human and facility resource needs. Distancing protocols benefited from improvements in masking, vaccine, and testing availability without consistent mandates, but non-congregate shelter provision was reduced as authorizations and funding expired. Modified service contracts and increased utilization of special needs registries can realign resources with health and safety needs. Based on participant responses, we developed a Retractable Stabilization Model to indicate how shelter resources can be reallocated and supported by future policy interventions to provide a range of emergency sheltering options during pandemics and overlapping hazards.
对流行病重叠危害的复原力:住房资源稳定模型
COVID-19及其造成的财务影响对参与提供紧急住房的组织产生了预算和人力方面的影响。为解决保持距离和卫生规程以及病毒传播和疫苗接种率问题,需要提供住房供应、改造设施和调整人员配置。随着用于实施公共卫生指导和稳定工作人员的资金和授权到期,应急管理人员必须决定是否继续执行大流行方案。为了了解这些关系,我们于2021年9月与来自20个州、美属维尔京群岛和加拿大的137名应急管理人员、公共卫生领导人以及其他政府和非营利从业人员举行了一次研讨会,以确定用于从封锁后到疫苗接种后的COVID-19大流行期间进行庇护的资源重新分配策略。我们应用财政复苏框架来探讨这些业务变化如何受到财政和政策支持以及业务适应性的影响和影响。结果表明,随着财政和政策支持的减弱,一些大流行方案被暂停,从而转移和减少了人力和设施资源需求。在没有一致授权的情况下,隔离协议得益于掩体、疫苗和检测供应的改善,但随着授权和资金到期,非聚集性住房的供应减少了。修改服务合同和增加对特殊需要登记处的利用,可以根据健康和安全需要重新调整资源。根据参与者的反应,我们开发了一个可伸缩的稳定模型,以表明如何重新分配住房资源,并得到未来政策干预措施的支持,以便在大流行和重叠灾害期间提供一系列紧急住房选择。
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