Risk and Resilience: A Case of Perception versus Reality in Flood Management
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Enhance whole-of-society collaboration and governance to strengthen resilience.
- Improve understanding of disaster risks in all sectors of society.
- Increase focus on whole-of-society disaster prevention and mitigation activities.
- Enhance disaster response capacity and coordination and foster the development of new capabilities.
- Strengthen recovery efforts by building back better to minimize the impacts of future disasters.
2. Materials and Methods
- River (flood risk)
- The transportation network (risk from derailment, explosion, oil spill)
- Chemical plants and hazardous industries
- Transmission lines (elevated health risk from high voltage corridors)
- Oil and gas pipelines (toxic spills)
- Garbage dumpsites (a potential failing of large piles, health, and environmental hazard)
- Ownership/renting status of the residence
- Crowdedness factor based on the number of members in the household
- Language ability—English or French
- Employment status
- Job satisfaction
- Age—assuming that the very young and the very old would be more susceptible to the exposure to the disaster risk
- Persons with disability
- Level of education
- Family income
- Means of transportation (personal or public)
- Social network support
- Disaster experience by family or friends
- Importance of disaster preparedness
- Engagement in local politics as a proxy of participation
3. Results
4. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. List of Data Sources
Data | Source |
Exposure | |
Highways | DMTI Spatial, 2015 http://geo.scholarsportal.info/#r/details/_uri@=2347499980 |
Rail Lines | Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, 2012 |
Industrial Sites | Canada, Federal Government Open Data Program, created by request, 2016 |
GTA Pipes, Transmission Lines | DMTI Spatial, 2014 |
Slope and DEM | DMTI Spatial, 2015 (retired) |
Major Rivers | Provided by Toronto and Region Conservation Authority |
Susceptibility | |
Home Ownership | Statscan, 2011 census data via http://dc1.chass.utoronto.ca/census/ |
Age of Construction | Statscan, 2011 census data via http://dc1.chass.utoronto.ca/census/ |
Language Skills | Statscan, 2011 census data via http://dc1.chass.utoronto.ca/census/ |
Employment | Statscan, 2011 census data via http://dc1.chass.utoronto.ca/census/ |
Age | Statscan, 2011 census data via http://dc1.chass.utoronto.ca/census/ |
Disability | Statistics Canada, by request, 2017 |
Property Value | online real estate listings (ReMax), geocoded by address in ArcGIS Online |
Coping Capacity | |
GTA Fires Stations | http://geo.scholarsportal.info/#r/details/_uri@=3739967620 |
GTA Police Stations | http://geo.scholarsportal.info/#r/details/_uri@=3739967620 |
GTA Hospitals | http://geo.scholarsportal.info/#r/details/_uri@=3570906326 |
Ambulance Stations | Addresses gathered from publicly available information at municipal websites, Wikipedia, and Google; geocoded using ArcGIS Online |
Income | Statscan, 2011 census data via http://dc1.chass.utoronto.ca/census/ |
Education | Statscan, 2011 census data via http://dc1.chass.utoronto.ca/census/ |
Miscellaneous | |
Watercourses | Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, 2011 |
Watersheds | Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, 2011 |
Dissemination Areas | University of Toronto Census Analyzer http://dc1.chass.utoronto.ca/census/ |
Land Use | DMTI Spatial, 2014 http://geo.scholarsportal.info/#r/details/_uri@=2785150059$DMTI_2014_CanMapRL_Topo_LUR_ALL_PROV |
Census Tracts | University of Toronto Census Analyzer http://dc1.chass.utoronto.ca/cgi-bin/census/2011nhs/displayCensus.cgi?year=2011&geo=ct |
GTA Municipalities | DMTI Spatial, 2014 http://geo.scholarsportal.info/#r/details/_uri@=4044335176$DMTI_2014_CanMapRL_Streets_MUN_ALL_PROV |
Education | DMTI Spatial, 2015 http://geo.scholarsportal.info/#r/details/_uri@=4062179246 |
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Parameter | Guidance for Assigning Binary Values 0 or 1 Based on Response to the Survey | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Exposure Weight W1 | Question | Binary value = 0 | Binary value = 1 | Remarks |
I live near a hazardous situation such as a river, chemical plant, etc. | If false | If true | Add all binary numbers to get total exposure | |
Susceptibility Weight W2 | Question/variable | Binary value = 0 if response is as below | Binary value = 1 if response is as below | Remarks |
My home is | Owned | Rented or other | Add all binary numbers to get total susceptibility | |
# members in household (crowdedness) | <4 | >4 | ||
Language (English) | very well/good | moderate/poor/blank | ||
Employment | Full time/self-employed | Part time/retired | ||
Job satisfaction | Very satisfied/satisfied | Somewhat satisfied/not satisfied/blank | ||
Age | >20 and <65 | <20 and >65 | ||
Disability | No | Yes | ||
Lack of Coping Capacity Weight W3 | Question/variable | Binary value = 0 if response is as below | Binary value = 1 if response is as below | Remarks |
Education | College and higher | Less than college | Add all binary values to get total lack of coping capacity | |
Income | >50 K | <50 K | ||
Transportation | Personal vehicle | Public/rideshare | ||
Social network | Very important | Important/somewhat/other | ||
Disaster experience | Yes | No/blank | ||
Disaster preparedness option | Family/friend | Public shelter/blank | ||
Voted in the past election | Yes | No/blank/n/a |
Parameter | Criteria to Assign Binary Values to Variables | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Exposure Weight W1 | Variable | Binary value = 0 | Binary value = 0 | Remarks |
Highways, Railway tracks, River and creeks, Industries, Oil and gas pipelines, Dumpsites–stockpiles, Low lying areas (terrain/slope) | If no exposure to a potential hazard | If within 1 km buffer zone of any of the potentially hazardous situations | Add all binary assigned values to get total exposure | |
Susceptibility Weight W2 | Variable | Binary value = 0 | Binary value = 1 | Remarks |
Residence type | Detached/semi | Rented apartment | Add all binary assigned values to get total susceptibility | |
Age of property construction | Post-1980 | Pre 1980 | ||
Language | very well/good | moderate/poor/blank | ||
Employment | Full time/self-employed | Part time/retired | ||
Age | >20 and <65 | < 20 and >65 | ||
Disability | No | Yes | ||
Property value | >400 K | ≤400 K | ||
Lack of Coping Capacity Weight W3 | Variable | Assign value = 0 | Assign value = 1 | Remarks |
Education | College and higher | Less than college | Add all binary assigned values to get total lack of coping capacity | |
Income | >50 K | ≤50 K | ||
Disaster preparedness: Hospital | ≤1 km | >1 km away | ||
Disaster preparedness: ambulance service | ≤1 km | >1 km away | ||
Disaster preparedness: Health emergency services | ≤1 km | >1 km away | ||
Disaster preparedness: Police station | ≤1 km | >1 km away |
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Agrawal, N.; Elliott, M.; Simonovic, S.P. Risk and Resilience: A Case of Perception versus Reality in Flood Management. Water 2020, 12, 1254. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12051254
Agrawal N, Elliott M, Simonovic SP. Risk and Resilience: A Case of Perception versus Reality in Flood Management. Water. 2020; 12(5):1254. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12051254
Chicago/Turabian StyleAgrawal, Nirupama, Mark Elliott, and Slobodan P Simonovic. 2020. "Risk and Resilience: A Case of Perception versus Reality in Flood Management" Water 12, no. 5: 1254. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12051254
APA StyleAgrawal, N., Elliott, M., & Simonovic, S. P. (2020). Risk and Resilience: A Case of Perception versus Reality in Flood Management. Water, 12(5), 1254. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12051254