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Extreme Weather Resilience

Neighbours checking on neighbours can save lives. 

The changing climate is inducing extreme weather events that are increasing in frequency and severity and causing havoc and devastation in many of our communities. Across urban centres, our most vulnerable neighbours are the least prepared to tackle such emergencies. Typically, they do not have access to necessary supplies and are unable to remove themselves from a harmful situation because of constraints that include health problems, mobility concerns and a lack of social networks. Governments can’t tackle these vast problems alone. Because caring is in our DNA — with outreach programs regularly being run by strong networks of committed volunteers — faith communities can help. We can assist our local municipalities to prepare neighbours for potential extreme weather events. 

Since 2015, Faith & the Common Good (FCG) has been taking action concerning the urgent need for neighbourhood-based extreme weather preparedness and resilience with a specific focus on vulnerable populations. Engaging diverse faith groups as well as local stakeholders (such as municipal staff, neighbourhood associations, advocacy and environmental groups and so on), our projects and programs aim at increasing community understanding, capacity, and action around how we can work together to support one another in preparing for and adapting to extreme weather.

Asset mapping. Hamilton, Ontario Planting a garden
Asset mapping. St John's Lutheran church, Hamilton Planting a food forest. Shri Ram Dham Temple, Kitchener

 

FCG has experimented with various models such as our 2018 pilot project in the GTHA, to create climate resilience hubs of local faith communities as well as working with the City of Brampton’s Emergency Management Office for the Lighthouse Project that trained over 22 faith communities to be first responders. These pilot projects have inspired broader action.

One non-profit partner, Community Resilience to Extreme Weather (CREW) continues to engage locals and community groups that act with faith communities to prepare high-rise residents with phone trees and checklists. Another group – OakvilleReady – has organized a network of weather resilience hubs across the Halton region.

Ultimately, if you are a faith community, you can do something to help the community you serve, with anything from acting as a cooling or warming centre, offering beverages and phone charging stations, serving as a communications hub, facilitating network opportunities to support training sessions, helping with outreach activities and workshops, sharing resources and volunteers to installing high-end equipment such as generators and food preparation facilities.

 

Current Projects

OakvilleReady is a collective initiative composed of team members from The Town of Oakville, Halton Environmental Network, and Faith & the Common Good. Local faith-based stakeholders (OakvilleReady Hub locations) include: Church of the Incarnation, Forestview, Kerr Street Mission, Knox Presbyterian Church, Maple Grove United, Shaarei-Beth El, St. Cuthbert Anglican Church, St. Paul’s United.

The idea is to utilize neighbourhood, faith-based buildings as ‘resiliency hubs’ – places where community members can go to find safe haven and reprieve from extreme heat or cold, but also spaces to learn about weather preparedness by building climate-ready infrastructure, both social and physical. These could include anything from teaching participants personal preparedness and how to build a 72 hour go-kit, to establishing community gardens that counter food insecurity. OakvilleReady works with faith and community groups, and the town of Oakville.

 

Past Projects

The Lighthouse Project

The Lighthouse Project (2017 - 2018) used community engagement strategies to promote local multi-stakeholder networks or resilience hubs, contributing to extreme weather preparedness: before, during and after an event. This pilot explored how local, social infrastructure could prepare residents in under-resourced urban environments for climate-related stresses and extreme weather emergencies in the three cities of Hamilton, Toronto and Brampton.

Brampton’s Emergency Managers offered training to volunteers from diverse faith-based organizations to enable them to be part of the City’s emergency response as refuge hubs. In Hamilton, our project partners were Environment Hamilton, an environmental organization and we explored how its existing networks could form around social resilience. In Toronto, we worked with Community to Extreme Weather Resilience (CREW) and a community organizer who undertook network building to support mostly newcomer populations in the inner city neighbourhood of the Saint James Tower (SJT) community.

As a result of the pilot, a residents’ working group was established in Toronto to address neighbour wellbeing and emergency response in one SJT apartment tower. In Hamilton, a multi-stakeholder network emerged to support the climate preparedness of agencies serving local vulnerable populations. Community Resilience To Extreme Weather, CREW Hamilton created a network throughout Hamilton, beginning with the Beasley neighbourhood. CREW Hamilton explored the potential for this network designed to support its members, who in turn would support the people they serve, to be prepared for weather-related emergencies. Members of the network contributed their unique expertise towards a plan for a neighbourhood response to extreme weather. This project engaged not only diverse faith groups, but also advocacy and social service groups, the Public Library, Public Health and Planning Departments.  Efforts led to the creation of Climate Ready Hamilton (CRH) with the support of McMaster University Semester in Residence (CityLab) students who developed communication materials and participated in asset mapping.

Read a 2020 paper co-authored by one of the project animators: Neighbourhood climate resilience: lessons from the Lighthouse Project

 

Proof of Concept (2015 - 2016) Resilient Communities = Connected Communities

MapResileince-300x232.pngWith support from Live Green Toronto , Olive Tree Foundation, Evergreen CityWorksWellbeing TorontoCity of Toronto’s Environment & Energy Division, City of Toronto's Office of Emergency Management and the University of Toronto’s Geography & Planning department, we conducted a 2015 proof of concept project to understand how Toronto’s diverse faith communities could be better utilized as local service centers during extreme weather emergencies.  The project featured a year-long, in-depth assessment of diverse faith pilot sites across the city as well as public workshops, asset mapping, emergency preparation training, cross sector collaboration, and resource development. This pilot lead to the 2017-2018 Lighthouse Project (see above).

What did we learn? 

Neighbourhoods are most resilient when residents know each other, have multiple active networks, care for their vulnerable neighbours and have committed and tangible external supports. 

That is why our on-going extreme weather resilience work is focused on building a "social infrastructure" for climate response.  Faith communities have important roles to play in helping to curate community "resilience hubs" where residents feel welcome, animated, and willing to stay and contribute. 

Check out our 2015 Toronto-area case studies to see the wide variety of local partnerships that diverse places of faith established to increase the climate resilience of their neighborhoods.  The following video also provides a glimpse of one of the early community engagement workshops that was held as part of our 2015 Toronto pilot to help connect communities.

Working together to leverage these shared assets on behalf of our most vulnerable should be an important part of our local climate response plans.

Municipalities and traditional emergency response actors are struggling to meet the overwhelming needs of simply maintaining critical infrastructure in the face of these unprecedented stresses.  Too frequently, our most vulnerable community members are left without sufficient support.

How can my faith community get started?

Extreme Weather Toolkit Faith groups can add great value to local emergency response structures. They are typically the first ones in and last ones to leave. They possess a shared sacred calling around community service and care for the Earth. They offer local community connections, volunteer mobilization, and locally relevant resources that can enhance response and recovery effectiveness.

Faith & the Common Good’s Extreme Weather Tool Kit will help your faith group think through the essential components of an extreme weather response plan. 

It provides some great resources to help you engage with municipal and community partners, including sample letters and power point presentation slides.

While the toolkit is tailored for faith groups in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) who want to support their most vulnerable community members better withstand extreme weather emergencies, it can easily be adapted to your location and or community organization. 

 

Join our shared learning network

Faith & the Common Good and its collaborative partners across the country are building a community of practice to enhance community resilience to extreme weather.

Want to join our conversations? Send an email to [email protected] to be included on our on-going training and shared learning.

 

Further Reading

Keep scrolling through this page! We have case studies and resources for how faith-based groups can provide extreme weather support locally.

FCG in the News

Mixing faith and community to bring climate preparedness home July 2022

It takes a community to weather a storm December 2021

Faith-based groups answered the call when tragedy struck December 2021

Upcoming Events

Togetherness: As the weather gets wildly worse, ensure your survival by learning to love your neighbour
St James Town steering committee
St James Town local "Lighthouse Project" Steering Committee. Toronto, ON

Delighted to share some Toronto West End insights  about our extreme weather resilience hub project. Our Lighthouse Project is piloting how to create inclusive, community-driven extreme weather preparation hubs in Toronto, Hamilton & Brampton.

This excerpt is from Katrina Onstad's “Togetherness: As the weather gets wildly worse, ensure your survival by learning to love your neighbour” (Toronto West End Phoenix, November 2018, www.westendphoenix.com/november-2018-toronto-of-the-future)

Toronto is particularly susceptible to extreme weather disasters simply because it’s booming: the more concrete the city, the hotter the city. The urban heat-island effect is caused by tightly packed buildings and paved surfaces boxing in the heat. And when the rain comes, the lack of green spaces and growing number of impermeable surfaces mean there’s nowhere for water to go but into our ancient, overloaded pipes.

Connecting Care: Building a Network

“The protocol is not very complicated; it's just a matter of making sure the doors are wide open for people to come into our air-conditioned environment, and making sure water is available at all times.” — Matthew Pearce, the CEO of Old Brewery Mission
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/matthew-pearce-heat-wave-homeless-1.4732065

The Lighthouse Project in Hamilton has been building a network of residents and community stakeholders in the interest of preparing neighbours for the impacts of increasing extreme weather events. This network is newly named as Community Resilience to Extreme Weather (CREW) Hamilton.

View More Blog Posts

Resources

Video: A Journey of Community Resilience: St James Town

Filmmaker Gregory Greene asked Lidia Ferreira if he could make a short video about her work with FCG, CREW, and the Lighthouse Project in Toronto’s St. James Town. Supported by a small grant from Toronto’s Resilience Office he worked with Lidia to identify local issues around climate change adaptation and building community resilience. Then everything changed. A six-alarm electrical fire in one of the St. James Town apartment towers led to a mass evacuation and a host of very difficult challenges for all of its residents. The fire gave Greene his resilience story which is told by a fire survivor, a community leader and a resident activist.

Public Engagement through Existing Faith-Based Organization Network

ICLEIThe Collaborative Implementation Groups (CIG) project targeted 12 municipalities throughout the Great Lakes watershed to identify and implement an adaptation initiative in their community over the period of one year (January 2017 – December 2017). The output of this project was the creation of 12 case studies, which outline the experience of each municipality as they implement their specified initiatives.

One of those municipalities was the City of Brampton, where census data demonstrated that 90% of Brampton citizens had religious affiliations. All major faith groups were represented and made frequent use of 79 registered places of worship across the City. The presence of faith-based communities in Brampton brought to light a new method of sharing information and spreading resilience across vulnerable communities. From this realization, the Lighthouse Project began.

Visit www.icleicanada.org to access the Brampton case study.

CASE STUDY: Strengthening the Role of Faith-Based Organizations to Support Emergency Preparedness (2018, Tamarack Institute)

Tamarack case studyCASE STUDY: Strengthening the Role of Faith-Based Organizations to Support Emergency Preparedness, by Heather Kearn & Sheila Murray, Tamarack Institute Case Study (2018)

Visit www.tamarackcommunity.ca to access the case study.

Resilient Communities Presentation

Resilient CommunitiesNovember 24, 2015
With support from Live Green Toronto , Olive Tree Foundation, Evergreen CityWorks, Wellbeing Toronto, City of Toronto’s Environment & Energy Division, City of Toronto's Office of Emergency Management OEM), and the University of Toronto’s Geography & Planning department, Faith & the Common Good conducted a 2015 proof of concept project to understand how Toronto’s diverse faith communities could be better utilized as local service centers during extreme weather emergencies. This presentation was the culmination of that effort.

Presenters:

  • Moderator: Dave MacLeod
  • Donna Lang, Faith & the Common Good
  • Adam Garcia
  • Adriana Chang, University of Toronto
  • Boris Rosolak, City of Toronto OEM

 Download PDF (2.2 MB)

Presentation: Resilience Hub Costs

Resilience Hub CostsThe cost of acting as a local extreme weather resilience site is one of the principal concerns for faith communities. Can we afford to serve vulnerable residents during extreme weather emergencies? What kind of capital and operating costs does this work entail? University of Toronto's Geography & Planning graduate students helped us look at this question in 2015. The result is this PowerPoint presentation.

 Download PDF (2.6 MB)

Community Resilience to Climate Change podcast

Rabble.ca Resilience podcastApril 3, 2018
Sheila Murray, Beatrice Ekoko, Lidia Ferreira, and Michelle Sullivan all work in some capacity with an initiative called the Lighthouse Project, a pilot that aims to develop new approaches for building resilience in a number of Ontario communities in the face of the growing spectrum of threats presented by climate change. Scott Neigh interviewed them about those threats, about what exactly resilience might look like, and about the different approaches they are using to get there.

Listen to the podcast.

Extreme Weather Toolkit

extreme_weather_toolkit.jpg

This Extreme Weather Tool Kit will help your faith group think through the essential components of an extreme weather response plan. It is tailored for faith groups in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) who want to support their most vulnerable community members to better withstand extreme weather emergencies.

 Download PDF (3.5 MB)

Extreme Weather Resilience Case Studies

Solar Case Studies

The Neighbourhood Extreme Weather Resilience pilot project, completed in 2015, explored how Toronto’s diverse faith communities could be better utilized as local service centres to help vulnerable populations during extreme weather emergencies. These case studies give a sense of the potential of this work by providing a snapshot of the action plans and community partner engagement at each of the project’s faith pilot sites.

 Download PDF (4.05 MB)

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