Tellus Partners with Claremont Graduate University to Create ResilientScape, a Natural Disaster Screening Tool for Environmental Justice Communities
March 7, 2024
In?the summer of 2023, Tellus Civic Science (Tellus) entered into a collaborative partnership with Claremont Graduate University’s (CGU) Geographic Information System (GIS) Practicum to develop a mapping tool—ResilientScape—with the goal of identifying environmental justice (EJ)
communities in California that are environmentally and socio-economically disadvantaged and also at high risk for natural hazards, such as drought, flooding, heat waves, and wildfires. EJ communities that endure high exposure to climate change impacts need targeted support to improve disaster preparedness and resiliency, such as community planning, capacity building, green infrastructure, and renewable energy projects – ResilientScape helps to highlight those areas in California that are at risk. Tellus developed the concept for ResilientScape, established core requirements of the tool to meet the needs of EJ communities, and provided regular guidance to the GIS Practicum students as they digested large public datasets and developed the user interface and tool functionality. As Professor Claudia Cáceras, Ph.D., who leads the GIS Practicum, describes the students’ experience, "Our Fall 2023 GIS Practicum students worked on the design, implementation, and evaluation of a GIS-based solution to support underserved communities in California. This real-world experience helps the transition from students to practitioners. We appreciate the work experience on this project and collaboration with Tellus."
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Tellus is excited to publicly launch the beta version of?ResilientScape, through which the firm hopes to engage strategic partners and further tailor the tool’s functionality to best facilitate the needs of prospective users. The core data for ResilientScape comes from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)?National Risk Index (NRI)?and?CalEnviroScreen, a tool that helps identify communities disproportionately impacted by multiple sources of pollution, provided by California Environmental Protection Agency’s Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA). Within the ResilientScape tool, users can filter by geographic area (down to the census tract), socio-economic and environmental indicators, and natural hazard types. Tellus is grateful for the ongoing partnership with CGU, which is hosting ResilientScape, and the dedication of the students who built the tool: Hunter Sayre, Anjan Rana Magar, Juan Parrilla, Ahmad Alasmar, Mohammed Aljohani, Abdullateef Almuhrij, Fares Alrewily, and Mansi Alsmarah.
Please visit our news page to view this story with a link to the ResilientScape tool: https://lnkd.in/g_ZEMiPA