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Boulder Hazard Mitigation Plan <br />Introduction <br />1.0 Introduction <br />1.1 Purpose <br />In 2008 the Boulder Office of Emergency Management (OEM), together with the communities of Erie, <br />Jamestown, Lafayette, Longmont, Louisville, Lyons, Superior, Ward, and the Boulder Valley and St. Vrain <br />School Districts, prepared the first Boulder County Multi -Hazard Mitigation Plan to better protect people <br />and property from the hazards that threaten our County. By completing the plan, our County became <br />eligible for certain federal disaster assistance including the Federal Emergency Management Agency's <br />(FEMA) Hazard Mitigation Grant Program and the Pre -Disaster Mitigation program. Our County also earned <br />credits for the National Flood Insurance Program's Community Rating System. <br />In 2016 Boulder County received approval from FEMA and established another 5-year hazard mitigation <br />plan and program. The organizations participating in the 2016-2022 Boulder County Hazard Mitigation Plan <br />participated in yearly updates and accomplished significant and steady progress on projects. The Board of <br />County Commissioners reviewed yearly updates and approved the Hazard Mitigation Program Progress <br />summary as provided each year by the Boulder OEM. <br />The 2016 Hazard Mitigation Plan built off the 2008 plan's mitigation goals and continued project planning <br />within that framework. In the 2022 Hazard Mitigation Plan there are new goals created from a community <br />desire to refresh the plan's goals and create a new framework and direction within this planning effort and <br />projects to address hazards. <br />The update of the 2016 Hazard Mitigation Plan began in 2019 and included most planning partners from <br />the 2016 planning team with new members from departments within the municipalities represented. The <br />planning process had a renewed vigor and vitality from previous planning efforts. The planning group <br />placed an emphasis on significantly updating the mitigation goals, assessing the effects of climate change <br />on hazards, vulnerabilities and risk. <br />As with any civic effort, the process to revise and update our hazard mitigation plan works best when it is <br />as inclusive as possible. The OEM reached out to stakeholders, partners, and residents to educate, inform, <br />and generate unprecedented levels of participation. In 2016, Boulder County Office of Emergency <br />Management (BOEM) launched a virtual planning process using social media to broaden the dialogue to <br />include those members of our communities that in the past have been underrepresented in the planning <br />process. This activity was continued in the 2022 plan and a community survey was utilized to incorporate <br />community input. <br />Through an inclusive revision process focused on the mitigation goals of our communities we have <br />developed a revised plan that will help enable our communities to protect their critical facilities, reduce their <br />liability exposure, minimize the impact and disruption caused by hazards, and reduce the costs of disaster <br />response and recovery. <br />1.2 Background and Scope <br />Our communities within Boulder County are very familiar with the threats of fire and flood. Yet we face other <br />hazards as well, including tornadoes, drought, hailstorms, and even earthquakes. Each hazard threatens in <br />some way our economy, our property, and our lives. The good news is that we are not powerless against <br />these threats. Through mitigation, we can reduce or even eliminate much of the damage caused by the <br />hazards we face. <br />FEMA defines hazard mitigation as any sustained action taken to reduce or eliminate long-term risk to <br />human life and property from a hazard. A Congressional study found that, on average, each dollar spent on <br />mitigation saves $6 in future losses. Even more importantly, those savings pale in comparison to the lives <br />