Homes Safer to Natural Hazards Are Possible if We Learn From History of Car Safety

'TODAY SHOW' FEATURES RESILIENCE ACTION FUND FOUNDER ON MAKING HOMES SAFER TO HAZARDS, CITING PAST REGULATORY SUCCESS WITH CAR SAFETY

RAF Founder Aris Papadopoulos talking to NBC's Kerry Sanders

Resilience Action Fund (RAF) founder and construction industry veteran Aris Papadopoulos today spoke to Kerry Sanders on NBC’s "Today Show." Both were at the Institute for Business and Home Safety’s (IHBS) crash-test facility in South Carolina, witnessing a home built to the latest codes (applicable to 90 percent of the U.S.) being destroyed by winds gusts around 115 mph. That’s about the intensity of a level 1 hurricane or tornado. See: https://www.today.com/video/-1-metal-straps-could-help-save-homes-during-powerful-storms-1065039939911

IBHS’s test demonstrated that even the latest codes are still below hazard levels that the public faces. This weakness had been repeatedly demonstrated with hurricane, flood and fire events across the country. It will make 2017 the most costly disaster year in U.S.history, perhaps exceeding $300 billion.

Homes are most people's largest and most important investment. Instead of making disaster vulnerability affordable, lets make hazard resilience affordable.

Aris Papadopoulos, Founding Chair, Resilience Action Fund

Yet the building industry is moving at a snail’s pace to raising building standards, often lobbying government against such improvements, mostly by claiming affordability to the public. Nonetheless, the public is being saddled with billions of dollars in costs, whether through direct losses, insurance rates or taxes/ government debt.

RAF’s founder compares the present situation to how car builders reacted to calls for greater safety in the 1960’s. They then claimed that the public could not afford it, or they did not have the solutions. Yet under the pressure of regulation, the industry innovated and moved down the cost curve that made safety affordable to all. Today, safety is being used a marketing tool to promote cars. He believes that the same needs to happen in the homebuilding industry, which has gotten used to decades of setting the bar too low.

RAF is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization, whose mission is to advance awareness, transparency, and education for greater resilience in the built environment against natural and other hazards. The mission is closely aligned with the goals of the UN Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction: 2015-2030, signed in March 2015 by 187 countries. This milestone agree­ment is referenced in the COP21 Paris Agree­ment, which contained the strong­est ever call for climate adaptation. RAF is also the publisher of the recent book ‘Resilience: The Ultimate Sustainability – Lessons from Failing to Develop a Stronger and Safer Built Environment’ (available at www.buildingresilient.com.

For more information please contact resilienceaction1@gmail.com

Source: Resilience Action Fund

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