Disaster Risk Reduction Incentive
Self-Assessment

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Context

The Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) Incentive is a component of the Disaster Financial Assistance Arrangements (DFAA) Program and focuses on high-impact disaster risk reduction activities across three priority areas:

Each priority area includes a number of different activities that contribute to reducing disaster risk and improving recovery outcomes, which will be updated over time to incentivize continuous improvement in disaster risk reduction. Provinces/territories can receive credits for different activities completed in each priority area. The total number of credits then translates into the financial incentive in the DFAA.

For more information on the DRR Incentive and the DFAA, consult Section 14 of the DFAA Guidelines and Schedule 4.

Download a copy Disaster Risk Reduction Incentive - Self-Assessment

Self-Assessment

Instructions

  1. Choose the statement that reflects current practice, based on the criteria outlined in the section above. Select all Bonus Credit statements that reflect current practice
  2. Rationale and Evidence: Provide a brief rationale for the self-assessment level given and supporting evidence demonstrating all required criteria for that level have been met
  3. Add up the total number of credits for each section based on the selected statements

Section 1: Understanding Risk

Flood Risk

Activity

The province/territory maps, monitors, and regulates its flood risk.

Criteria

Hazard Mapping

Quality

Coverage

Hazard Monitoring

Hazard monitoring means the systematic and ongoing observation of environmental conditions, natural phenomena, and human activities that contribute to hazard risk. To receive credit, a flood hazard monitoring system must be:

Legislation/Regulations

To receive credit, legislation/regulations must:

To receive credit for monitoring and enforcing its land use legislation/regulations, the province/territory must demonstrate:

Table 1.1: Flood risk (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
The province/territory has flood maps, has a hazard monitoring system for its flood hazard, has land use legislation/regulations for flood hazard, and has a mechanism to monitor and enforce its legislation/regulation. 15
The province/territory has flood maps, has a hazard monitoring system for its flood hazard, and has land use legislation/regulations for flood hazard. 10
The province/territory has flood maps and has a hazard monitoring system for its flood hazard. 5
The province/territory has a hazard monitoring system for its flood hazard. 2
The province/territory has flood maps. 2
The province/territory does not map, monitor, or regulate its flood hazard. 0

Bonus Credit for Quality of Published Flood Hazard Maps.

Published flood maps reflect the impacts of climate change over a 75-year design horizon, include all relevant flood-generating mechanisms (coastal, fluvial, pluvial, structural protection failure, ice jam flooding), identify areas which would be inundated by a failure of a major flood protection system, and are stamped by a professional engineer.

3

Bonus Credit for Flood Hazard Mapping Requirements.

The province/territory has standardized requirements for all flood maps in its jurisdiction, and at a minimum these requirements include the following:

  • To reflect the impacts of climate change over a 75-year design horizon
  • To include all relevant flood-generating mechanisms (coastal, fluvial, pluvial, structural protection failure, ice jam flooding)
  • To identify areas which would be inundated by a failure of a major flood protection system
  • An established cycle for how often flood maps should be updated
2
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence

Wildfire risk

Activity

The province/territory maps, monitors, and regulates its wildfire risk.

Criteria

Hazard Mapping

Quality

Coverage

Hazard Monitoring

Hazard monitoring means the systematic and ongoing observation of environmental conditions, natural phenomena, and human activities that contribute to hazard risk. To receive credit, a wildfire hazard monitoring system must be:

Legislation/Regulations

To receive credit, legislation/regulations must:

To receive credit for monitoring and enforcing its land use legislation/regulations, the province/territory must demonstrate:

Table 1.2: Wildfire risk (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
The province/territory has maps for its wildfire risk, has a hazard monitoring system, has regulations that restrict unmitigated development/establish appropriate mitigation criteria in areas with high risk for wildfires, and has a mechanism to monitor and enforce its legislation/regulations. 15
The province/territory has maps for its wildfire risk, has a hazard monitoring system, and has legislation/regulations that restrict unmitigated development/establish appropriate mitigation criteria in areas with high risk for wildfires. 10
The province/territory has maps for its wildfire risk and has a hazard monitoring system for wildfire risk. 5
The province/territory has a hazard monitoring system for its wildfire risk. 2
The province/territory has maps for its wildfire risk. 2
The province/territory does not map, regulate, or monitor its wildfire risk. 0
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence

One additional natural hazard

Activity

The province/territory may add one additional natural hazard (e.g., earthquake, hurricane, landslide, snowstorms, etc.) that is a high risk in its jurisdiction based on its risk assessment to this list and receive credit for mapping, monitoring, and legislation/regulations in place for that hazard.

Criteria

Hazard Mapping

Quality

Coverage

Hazard Monitoring

Hazard monitoring means the systematic and ongoing observation of environmental conditions, natural phenomena, and human activities that contribute to hazard risk. To receive credit, the hazard-specific monitoring system must be:

Legislation/Regulations

To receive credit, legislation/regulations must:

To receive credit for monitoring and enforcing its land use legislation/regulations, the province/territory must demonstrate:

Natural hazard: [Indicate which natural hazard]

Table 1.3: One additional natural hazard (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
The province/territory has maps/models for the risk, has a hazard-specific monitoring system, has legislation/regulations that restrict unmitigated development/establish appropriate mitigation criteria in areas of high risk, and has a system for monitoring compliance/enforcing regulations. 10
The province/territory has maps for the risk, has a hazard-specific monitoring system, and has legislation/regulations that restrict unmitigated development/establish appropriate mitigation criteria in areas with high risk. 8
The province/territory has maps for the hazard and has a hazard-specific monitoring system. 3
The province/territory has a hazard-specific monitoring system. 1
The province/territory has maps for the hazard. 1
The province/territory does not map, monitor, or regulate the hazard. 0
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence

Public alerting

Activity

The province/territory provides training for, has processes in place for, regularly tests, and uses a public alerting system to provide timely hazard warnings in its jurisdiction.

Criteria

A public alerting system means a comprehensive network of communication tools designed to rapidly alert and inform the public about imminent threats or emergencies. The National Public Alerting System (Alert Ready) is an example of a public alerting system and can be used to meet this requirement if the province/territory has processes in place to use it.

To receive credit for processes in place to use the public alerting system, the province/territory must demonstrate that:

Table 1.4: Public alerting (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
The province/territory has a public alerting system, has processes in place to use it (including training and testing), and provides access for local authorities and regional governments to use the system. 3
The province/territory has a public alerting system and has processes in place to use it (including training and testing). 1
The province/territory does not have a public alerting system. 0
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence

Risk Communication and Disclosure

Activity

The province/territory provides public information about its highest natural hazard risks and requires the disclosure of natural hazard risks on real estate and development listings and transactions.

Criteria

A disaster risk communication strategy is:

Implementing a disaster risk communication strategy means the risk communication materials have been shared/published via the mechanisms identified in the strategy within the past year.

The disclosure of natural hazard risk refers to a seller/landlord making a potential buyer/tenant aware of natural hazards that pose a high risk to the property. This includes disclosing both previous damage from a natural hazard and any relevant high-risk designations for the property (e.g., a high-risk flood area, a wildland-urban interface fire area, a tsunami zone, etc.).

Table 1.5: Risk Communication and Disclosure (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
The province/territory implements its risk communication strategy and requires the disclosure of natural hazards that pose a high risk during real estate transactions (e.g., through a Property Disclosure Statement, a notice on land title, rental agreements, etc.), including both ownership transfer (i.e., sale) and rental transactions. 10
The province/territory implements its risk communication strategy and requires the disclosure of flood risk during real estate transactions (e.g., through a Property Disclosure Statement, a notice on land title, rental agreements, etc.), including both ownership transfer (i.e., sale) and rental transactions. 8
The province/territory implements its risk communication strategy and reaches at least 80% of its target populations on an annual basis. 3
The province/territory implements its risk communication strategy and offers guidance materials in at least three languages, based on the composition of the target populations. 2
The province/territory has a risk communication strategy for its highest natural hazard risks. 1
There are no requirements to disclose natural hazard risks on real estate, rental, and/or development transactions and the province/territory does not have a risk communication strategy for its highest natural hazard risks. 0

Bonus Credit for Flood Hazard Disclosure on Real Estate Listings.

The province/territory requires real estate listings (rental and sale) to disclose flood risk and has a mechanism for enforcement.

10

Bonus Credit for Wildfire Hazard Disclosure on Real Estate Listings.

The province/territory requires real estate listings (rental and sale) to disclose wildfire risk and has a mechanism for enforcement.

5

Bonus Credit for High-Risk Hazard Disclosure on Real Estate Listings.

The province/territory requires real estate listings (rental and sale) to disclose high risks from natural hazards that are not flood or wildfire and has a mechanism for enforcement.

3
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence

Calculate the total number of credits for this section.

Section 2: Mitigation Planning

Strategic Mitigation Plan

Activity

The province/territory has a jurisdiction-wide disaster mitigation plan that is current, publicly accessible, and includes a prioritized list of mitigation projects based on a risk assessment.

Criteria

To receive credit, a disaster mitigation plan must be:

Table 2.1: Strategic Mitigation Plan (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
The province/territory has a disaster mitigation plan that has been updated within the past four years to include progress that has been made towards the prioritized list of mitigation projects. 5
The province/territory has a disaster mitigation plan. 3
The province/territory does not have a disaster mitigation plan. 0
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence

Sharing Mitigation Lessons

Activity

The province/territory actively shares lessons, guidance materials and templates, and case studies of successful mitigation projects with external partners in the wider community of practice (e.g., local authorities, other provinces/territories, the federal government, the public, etc.).

Criteria

Sharing means providing/publishing written materials (e.g., lessons learned, case studies, guidance documents, templates, etc.) to the public or wider community of practice beyond the government. To receive credit for sharing materials, at least two written materials for mitigation have been shared/published in the past year (that were created by the province/territory, not redistributing content created by others).

Actively participating means contributing to the forum with external partners by sharing the experiences and written materials created by the province/territory with the other members of the forum. A forum can include a working group, a multi-jurisdictional initiative, a community of practice, etc. that is primarily dedicated to advancing disaster mitigation. Disaster mitigation must be one of the key themes/purposes of the forum.

Table 2.2: Sharing Mitigation Lessons (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
The province/territory actively participates in a forum with external partners to share/discuss lessons and practices related to mitigation and resilience. 2
The province/territory shares lessons, guidance materials and templates, and/or case studies of successful mitigation projects. 1
The province/territory does not actively share lessons, materials, and/or case studies of successful mitigation projects. 0
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence

Supporting Local Authorities

Activity

The province/territory supports local authorities in the development of local disaster mitigation plans for their jurisdictions.

Criteria

Training refers to courses, workshops, or other types of learning sessions. Training can be direct delivery (the province/territory trains local authorities), contracted out (the province/territory pays a service provider to train local authorities), or funding for training (the Province/Territory provides funding to local authorities to secure their own training). To qualify as training, the delivery must include some type of interaction and learning experience, and not just a document or how-to guide.

Dedicated funding refers to multi-year funding that is specific to the development of local disaster mitigation plans and not generic funding that can but does not have to be used for mitigation plan development. Dedicated funding can include provinces/territories fund-matching or contributing to other sources of funding for local authorities (such as funding available through the Federation of Canadian Municipalities); however, other sources of funding cannot be the sole source of funding available to local authorities.

Table 2.3: Supporting Local Authorities (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
The province/territory provides dedicated training and funding for local authorities to develop local disaster mitigation plans. 8
The province/territory provides dedicated funding for local authorities to develop local disaster mitigation plans. 5
The province/territory provides dedicated training to local authorities on how to develop and maintain local disaster mitigation plans. 3
The province/territory does not provide dedicated support to local authorities to develop local disaster mitigation plans. 0
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence

Local Authority Disaster Mitigation Plans

Activity

Local authorities in the province/territory each have a disaster mitigation plan that is current, publicly-available, and includes a prioritized list of mitigation projects based on a risk assessment.

Criteria

To receive credit, local authority disaster mitigation plans must be:

Table 2.4: Local Authority Disaster Mitigation Plans (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
At least 75% of local authorities have a current disaster mitigation plan. 15
At least 50% of local authorities have a current disaster mitigation plan. 10
At least 25% of local authorities have a current disaster mitigation plan. 5
The province/territory has a system for and actively tracks how many local authorities have a current disaster mitigation plan. 2
The number of local authorities with disaster mitigation plans is unknown. 0
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence

Leveraging Disaster Resilience Enhancements and Strategic Mitigation Funding in the DFAA

Activity

The province/territory leverages available disaster resilience enhancement and strategic mitigation funding within the DFAA Program for its eligible disasters.

Criteria

For spending on disaster resilience enhancements and/or strategic mitigation, the province/territory may use its most recent eligible disaster or the average of the past three eligible disasters.

Disaster resilience enhancements spending can refer to either total maximum amount (i.e., of the available disaster resilience enhancement funding, the province/territory spent at least 20 or 50%) or to the number of projects (i.e., for at least 20 or 50% of its claims/projects in Streams 2 and 3, the province/territory included disaster resilience enhancement funding).

Strategic mitigation spending refers to the amount of the Stream 5 funding envelope of the province/territory (either 50 or 80% of the available funding envelope).

Table 2.5: Leveraging Disaster Resilience Enhancements and Strategic Mitigation Funding in the DFAA (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
In its most recent eligible disaster, the province/territory spent at least 50% of its eligible disaster resilience enhancement funding and/or 80% of its strategic mitigation (Stream 5) funding. 5
In its most recent eligible disaster, the province/territory spent at least 20% of its eligible disaster resilience enhancement funding and/or 50% of its strategic mitigation (Stream 5) funding. 3
The province/territory's disaster financial assistance program includes eligibility for disaster resilience enhancements under Streams 2 and 3 and for strategic mitigation under Stream 5. 2
The province/territory's disaster financial assistance program includes eligibility for strategic mitigation under Stream 5. 1
The province/territory's disaster financial assistance program includes eligibility for disaster resilience enhancements under Streams 2 and 3. 1
The province/territory's disaster financial assistance program does not include eligibility for disaster resilience enhancements or strategic mitigation funding. 0
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence

Calculate the total number of credits for this section.

Section 3: Pre-Disaster Recovery Planning

Pre-Disaster Recovery Plan

Activity

The province/territory has a pre-disaster recovery plan that is current and publicly accessible.

Criteria

A pre-disaster recovery plan is one that has been developed in advance, in which the jurisdiction documents (at a minimum): how it intends to approach disaster recovery, who will be involved (organizational structure), with whom it will communicate and how, and the financial resources available for recovery and how to access them.

For a plan to be considered current, it must be in current use (e.g., not archived or superseded) and have been issued and/or updated in the past four years.

For a plan to be considered publicly accessible, it must be available online in a digital format, free of charge, and can be located using a reasonable search.

Table 3.1: Pre-Disaster Recovery Plan (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
The province/territory has a pre-disaster recovery plan that has been updated within the past four years. 5
The province/territory has a pre-disaster recovery plan. 3
The province/territory does not have a pre-disaster recovery plan. 0
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence, such as a weblink

Disaster Recovery Indicators

Activity

The province/territory has a list of disaster recovery indicators and actively tracks and publicly reports on its disaster recovery indicators.

Criteria

Disaster recovery indicators refer to metrics used to measure and evaluate the effectiveness of disaster recovery efforts. To be considered recovery indicators, the identified indicators must be publicly available and include an update cycle that covers the duration of disaster recovery.

Recovery indicators should reflect physical, social, economic, and environmental recovery factors to capture a holistic picture of recovery.

Table 3.2: Disaster Recovery Indicators (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
The province/territory updates its recovery indicators on a regular basis (at least every two years). 5
The province/territory has assessed and publicly reports baseline data for its recovery indicators. 3
The province/territory has identified a list of recovery indicators and has established a data strategy for how to measure the indicators. 1
The province/territory does not have or track recovery indicators. 0
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence, such as a weblink

Sharing Recovery Lessons

Activity

The province/territory actively shares lessons, guidance materials and templates, and case studies of disaster recovery with external partners in the wider community of practice (e.g., local authorities, other provinces/territories, the federal government, the public, etc.).

Criteria

Sharing means providing/publishing written materials (e.g., lessons learned, case studies, guidance documents, templates, etc.) to the public or wider community of practice beyond the government. To receive credit for sharing materials, at least two written materials for disaster recovery have been shared/published in the past year (that were created by the province/territory, not redistributing content created by others).

Actively participating means contributing to the forum with external partners by sharing the experiences of and written materials created by the province/territory with the other members of the forum. A forum can include a working group, a multi-jurisdictional initiative, a community of practice, etc. that is primarily dedicated to advancing disaster mitigation. Disaster recovery must be one of the key themes/purposes of the forum.

Table 3.3: Sharing Recovery Lessons (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
The province/territory actively participates in a forum with external partners to share/discuss lessons and practices related to disaster recovery. 2
The province/territory shares lessons, guidance materials and templates, and/or case studies of disaster recovery. 1
The province/territory does not actively share lessons, materials, and/or case studies of disaster recovery. 0
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence, such as a weblink

Supporting Local Authorities

Activity

The province/territory supports local authorities in the development of pre-disaster recovery plans for their jurisdictions.

Criteria

Training refers to courses, workshops, or other types of learning sessions. Training can be direct delivery (the province/territory trains local authorities), contracted out (the province/territory pays a service provider to train local authorities), or funding for training (the province/territory provides funding to local authorities to secure their own training). To qualify as training, the delivery must include some type of interaction and learning experience, and not just a document or how-to guide.

Dedicated funding refers to multi-year funding that is specific to the development of local pre-disaster recovery plans and not generic funding that can but does not have to be used for planning. Dedicated funding can include provinces/territories fund-matching, contributing to, or topping up funding from another source (such as funding available through the Federation of Canadian Municipalities), however, other sources of funding cannot be the sole source of funding available to local authorities.

Table 3.4: Supporting Local Authorities (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
The province/territory provides dedicated training and funding for local authorities to develop pre-disaster recovery plans. 8
The province/territory provides dedicated funding for local authorities to develop local pre-disaster recovery plans. 5
The province/territory provides dedicated training to local authorities on how to develop and maintain local pre-disaster recovery plans. 3
The province/territory does not provide dedicated support to local authorities to develop local disaster mitigation plans. 0
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence, such as a weblink

Local Authority Disaster Recovery Plans

Activity

Local authorities in the province/territory each have a pre-disaster recovery plan that is current and publicly available.

Criteria

A local authority pre-disaster recovery plan is one that has been developed in advance, in which the jurisdiction documents (at a minimum): how it intends to approach disaster recovery, who will be involved (organizational structure), with whom it will communicate and how, and the financial resources available for recovery and how to access them. The pre-disaster recovery plan must be connected to both the local authority's emergency management plan/program and its official urban plan.

For a plan to be considered current, it must be in current use (e.g., not archived or superseded) and have been issued and/or updated in the past four years.

For a plan to be considered publicly available, it must be available online in a digital format, free of charge, and can be located using a reasonable search.

Table 3.5: Local Authority Disaster Recovery Plans (Table instructions)
Activity # of Credits
At least 75% of local authorities have a current pre-disaster recovery plan. 15
At least 50% of local authorities have a current pre-disaster recovery plan. 10
At least 25% of local authorities have a current pre-disaster recovery plan. 5
The province/territory has a system for and actively tracks how many local authorities have a current pre-disaster recovery plan. 2
The number of local authorities with a pre-disaster recovery plan is unknown. 0
Note: Provide a brief description of how the province/territory meets this criteria and provide supporting evidence, such as a weblink

Calculate the total number of credits for this section.

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