With proper planning and local knowledge, we can protect communities from the worst impacts of natural disasters,  create jobs, and leave the land better for future generations.

Flood Resiliency Resources

Appalachia’s landscape and its history of extraction have made its communities uniquely vulnerable to climate-induced flooding. Our land’s topography, with its rolling hills and mountains, means people often live adjacent to rivers or streams, where limited flat land is located. These and other factors create a need for solutions led by Appalachian communities, who know best what we need.
To this end, ReImagine Appalachia partners with dozens of groups across the region to collaborate on solutions from the local to the federal level. The Appalachian Flood Policy Coalition drives regional collaboration and advocacy in support of federal policy change and investment needed to create a resilient Appalachia. The Central Appalachian Network supports bottom-up organizing and resource sharing to enable communities, local businesses, households, farmers, local governments, and other entities to move towards the implementation of resilience and recovery strategies.

Repairing Damaged Land Resources

Appalachian communities did not fuel our nation’s prosperity without a cost – thousands of environmental hazards burden our land. With federal funding, Appalachian communities can reclaim and remediate abandoned coal mines, orphan wells, and coal ash ponds left behind at shuttered power plants. Such burdens deter development, hurt ecosystems, contribute to the climate crisis, and threaten the health and safety of nearby people.
However, these liabilities create opportunities: Appalachia can reclaim dangerous environmental liabilities while creating thousands of jobs for the region.
The Appalachian Flood Resilience Coalition works to uplift evidence-based information and policies that are also grounded in the lived experience of Appalachian communities, particularly those impacted by and recovering from flooding, with a focus on federal policy advocacy. Visit the site here.
Visit site here
CAN is a network of nearly 100 different organizations working on community economic development. Their new website repository houses toolkits, guides, upcoming disaster resilience events, and frequent grant opportunities. Visit the site here.
visit site here

Blog Posts

Repairing Damaged Lands Reports