Building Resilience

New Binational Working Group to Protect Communities, Infrastructure, and Economies in the Pacific Northwest.

The Pacific Northwest is facing a defining crossroads. From intense wildfire seasons affecting both residential communities and the wildland-urban interface (WUI), to severe seismic risks and increasingly volatile weather patterns, the region is confronting a sharp rise in the frequency and severity of natural or human-caused disasters.

These events are no longer just abstract environmental concerns—they are triggering multi-billion-dollar economic disruptions. Local economies are grappling with fractured supply chains, soaring public expenditures for emergency rebuilding, and a destabilized insurance market where rising premiums and coverage withdrawals threaten to leave homes and businesses completely uninsurable.

Recognizing that disasters do not respect borders, the Pacific Northwest Economic Region (PNWER), in partnership with longtime PNWER Sponsor the Pacific Northwest Building Resilience Coalition (PNBRC), has announced the creation of the Resilience Working Group.

“This new binational initiative expands on PNWER’s longstanding Emergency Preparedness and Response program,” noted PNWER’s Executive Director Brandon Hardenbrook. However, rather than simply optimizing how the region responds to disasters after they strike, this initiative-taking Working Group shifts the focus entirely to the front end: designing, building, and financing long-term regional resilience before the next crisis occurs, he noted.

This shift toward prevention rather than remediation has been a longstanding goal of the Pacific Northwest Building Resilience Coalition, noted Lionel Lemay, the newly appointed Chair of the Coalition. “Our research has proven that for every dollar spent on risk reduction and prevention, more than ten dollars are saved on disaster recovery and rebuilding, he noted. “Disaster prevention is not a cost,: he stated,: it’s an investment”.

Purpose and Mission: Shifting from Reaction to Prevention

The fundamental mission of the Resilience Working Group is to strengthen the Pacific Northwest’s collective capacity to withstand, adapt to, and rapidly recover from evolving environmental, climatic, and human-caused threats. Over a multi-year period, the group will lead a comprehensive, region-wide effort to modernize the way homes, commercial buildings, and critical infrastructure are built and maintained.

The Working Group will actively target four core pillars:

  • Comprehensive Risk Assessment: Evaluating vulnerability across both built infrastructure and natural ecosystems throughout the region.

  • Proactive Mitigation: Advancing systemic risk-reduction strategies by updating land-use planning, improving engineering designs, and accelerating modern building code adoption.

  • Financial and Policy Innovation: Developing novel insurance, financial, and regulatory mechanisms to protect governments, businesses, and everyday citizens from escalating disaster costs.

  • Cross-Border Collaboration: Aligning strategies across international and state-provincial boundaries to ensure that innovative resilience solutions are consistent, scalable, and highly collaborative.

The PNWER Advantage: A Unique Binational Sandbox

PNWER is uniquely positioned to spearhead an initiative of this magnitude. As a statutory public-private partnership, PNWER represents a massive footprint of ten distinct jurisdictions across the United States and Canada.

Because building codes, regulatory landscapes, and private insurance markets vary widely across these borders, individual local governments cannot solve these vulnerabilities in isolation. PNWER’s proven track record of bringing together state and provincial legislators, private-sector executives, and public-sector agency heads creates the ideal environment for building a unified, cross-jurisdictional approach to climate and disaster adaptation.

Operational Structure: Three Specialized Panels: To transform its broad mandate into actionable policies, the Working Group will operate through three interconnected, specialized panels. Each panel will be guided by its own project lead, a multi-year action plan, and distinct, measurable deliverables.

1. Planning & Prevention (Mitigation Panel): This panel focuses on the foundational stages of safety, looking heavily at spatial planning and macro-level risks. Key focus areas include hazard mapping, community preparedness, and systemic wildfire mitigation strategies in the vulnerable WUI. Additionally, the panel will conduct cascading-failure analyses to determine how a weak link in one infrastructure sector (such as power or water) could cripple interconnected systems during a crisis.

2. Design & Construction Panel” Tasked with physical durability, this panel addresses performance-based architectural design and modern engineering standards. It will champion code modernization, enforceability, and the deployment of next-generation, fire-resistant, and low-carbon building materials. Recognizing that standard updates mean nothing without execution, this panel will also spearhead workforce training and industry capacity-building initiatives.

3. Risk Management & Finance Panel: The economic anchor of the working group, this panel tackles the pressing issue of market stability. Members will evaluate public-private financing mechanisms for resilience upgrades, develop clear cost-benefit frameworks for public investments, and explore innovative risk-transfer tools. Crucially, they will work on structural solutions to stabilize the private property insurance market while optimizing government disaster relief programs.

A Collaborative Coalition of Public and Private Leaders

True resilience requires buy-in from every tier of society. The Working Group draws upon a diverse, multi-disciplinary membership to ensure all voices are represented:

  • The Public Sector: State and provincial legislators, governors’ and premiers’ offices, building code officials, emergency management directors, and State, Provincial, and Territorial Fire Marshals.

  • The Private Sector: Architecture, engineering, and construction firms; insurance and reinsurance executives; institutional investors and finance professionals; and critical infrastructure and utility operators.

  • Academic and Nonprofit Partners: University researchers, international standards organizations, and public safety and sustainability advocacy groups.

Furthermore, the group is committed to deep external engagement, formally coordinating its efforts with Indigenous governments, Tribal Nations, local municipalities, federal agencies in both countries, and prominent bodies like the National Association of State Fire Marshals (NASFM).

The Roadmap: Staged Objectives and Expected Outcomes

To maintain long-term momentum, the Working Group has laid out a phased roadmap detailing clear benchmarks from inception to past the five-year mark.

  • Years 1-2: Near-Term] -> Establish baselines, map code gaps, launch design pilots

  • Years 3-5: Mid-Term]  -> Align cross-border standards, scale pilots, create financial incentives.

  • Years 5+: Long-Term]   -> Slash regional disaster losses, stabilize insurance, anchor global model.

Near-Term Objectives (Years 1–2): The immediate focus centers on intelligence gathering and groundwork. The group will establish baseline regional risk assessments, identify critical vulnerabilities in existing building codes, and draft a unified regional resilience policy framework. To demonstrate the efficacy of these concepts early, the group will launch localized pilot projects that demonstrate innovative, resilient construction alongside a dedicated funding and investment strategy.

Mid-Term Objectives (Years 3–5): As data matures into insights, the focus turns to scaling. The Working Group will work toward aligning and harmonizing resilience standards across state and provincial lines, expanding successful pilot programs region-wide, and introducing concrete financial incentives for resilient construction. A key benchmark will be integrating these risk-reduction strategies with private insurers to pull premium costs back down.

Long-Term Objectives (5+ Years): The ultimate horizon aims to institutionalize these practices permanently into regional planning, finance, and design. The group aims to achieve measurable, structural reductions in disaster losses and recovery expenses, permanently securing the insurability and economic viability of the Pacific Northwest. In doing so, PNWER intends to establish the region as the global gold standard for cross-border disaster resilience.

Governance and Participant Commitment

The initiative is designed to maximize public-private expertise without placing an undue burden on its participants’ schedules. The Working Group will be steered by co-chairs appointed by PNWER and PNBRC leadership, and each panel will feature a dedicated project chair and vice chair tasked with tracking deliverables.

The full Working Group will convene quarterly—utilizing virtual formats for three sessions, and a hybrid format during the annual PNWER Summit. Individual panels will meet virtually as needed, with a minimum of four meetings per year.

Transparency remains a priority, with comprehensive progress reports delivered publicly at each annual summit. General participants can expect a modest time commitment of roughly 16 hours per year, while panel chairs will dedicate approximately 24 hours annually to steering these vital initiatives forward.

Through this coordinated, forward-looking alliance, PNWER and PNBRC are laying out the blueprint to protect infrastructure, secure regional economies, and ultimately save lives across the Pacific Northwest.

________________________________________

i.e. To join the working group, contact Lionel Lemay at LionelLemay@ConcreteNexus.com, 847-922-7995.

________________________________________

The Pacific Northwest Building Resilience Coalition is a gathering of organizations committed to advancing the planning, development, and construction of buildings and associated infrastructure that are better able to recover from and adapt to the growing impacts of an ever-changing urban and physical environment. Follow us at https://buildingresiliencecoalition.org/

Frank Came

Recent Posts

Investing in Resilient Infrastructure

Expenditures on fixed infrastructure are seldom viewed as revenue-generating investments, but in truth, they are…

2 days ago

Building Tomorrow’s Cities in the Pacific Northwest

2050 is not a distant, abstract deadline for future generations to resolve. The physical foundation…

1 week ago

The Pacific Northwest Building Resilience Coalition Appoints Lionel Lemay as Chairperson

The Pacific Northwest Building Resilience Coalition (PNBRC) has appointed Lionel Lemay as Chairperson effective June…

1 week ago

Is Concrete Emerging as a New Standard for Sustainability?

The next decade will be a race in which governments set the target and private…

2 weeks ago

The Changing Face of Concrete – What Does the Future Hold for the Construction Sector

The "green revolution" in the cement and concrete industry is shifting from experimental pilot programs…

3 weeks ago

The Concrete Manifesto – A Plan for a Better Tomorrow

The "foundational document" for our future is a National Net-Zero Concrete  Roadmap. When governments provide…

1 month ago