23

PNWER Profile

  • Upload
    gizi

  • View
    31

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

PNWER Profile. PNWER – formed by statute in 1991 PNWER is a Public/Private Partnership Alaska , Alberta, British Columbia, Idaho, Oregon, Montana, Saskatchewan, Washington , Yukon & Northwest Territories. Each State. PNWER Organization. House Republican Caucus. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: PNWER Profile
Page 2: PNWER Profile

PNWER Profile PNWER – formed by statute in 1991 PNWER is a Public/Private Partnership Alaska, Alberta, British Columbia, Idaho, Oregon, Montana, Saskatchewan, Washington, Yukon & Northwest Territories

Page 3: PNWER Profile

House RepublicanCaucus

House DemocratCaucus

Senate RepublicanCaucus

Senate DemocratCaucus

1 Executive Committee Member

Each State

Government(It is customary for the

government to work with the opposition in the

selection of delegates)

Private Sector Council

4 MLAs1 Executive Committee

Member

1 Executive Committee Member from each

state/province

Executive Committee• 8 Legislators• 8 Private Sector Members• Governors/Premiers (or designee)• PNWER Executive Director

Each Province

4 BoardMembers

PNWER OrganizationHouse RepublicanCaucus

House DemocratCaucus

Senate RepublicanCaucus

Senate DemocratCaucus

Government(It is customary for the

government to work with the opposition in the

selection of delegates)

Page 4: PNWER Profile

Private Sector Partners

Page 5: PNWER Profile

Other PNWER PartnersBorder Policy Research Institute University of LethbridgeHudson InstituteBusiness Council of BCCanadian American Business CouncilWoodrow Wilson CenterCarleton UniversityAK, WA, OR, ID, MT, BC, AB, SK Emergency ManagementBC Innovation CouncilIdaho National LabCascadia – Discovery InstituteCanadian American Border Trade AllianceAssociation of WA BusinessesUS Dept. of EnergyAsia Pacific FoundationBorder Policy Research Institute

Argonne National LabPacific Northwest National LabEnergy CouncilUS Dept. of Homeland SecurityApplied Science Technologists & Technicians of BCAPEGG BC & AlbertaWestern Economic Diversification CanadaHuman Resources Social Development CanadaCenter for Canadian StudiesInstitute of Health EconomicsUS/Canadian Consulate GeneralNational Conf. of State LegislaturesIdaho Farm BureauUnited WayUniversity of WA

Page 6: PNWER Profile

PNWER Working GroupsAgriculture

Trade

Transportation

Tourism

High-Tech

SustainableDevelopment

Disaster Resilience

Invasive Species

Health CareForestry

EnvironmentEnergy

Border Issues

WorkforceDevelopment

Each Working Group has a Public & Private

Sector Co-Chair

Page 7: PNWER Profile

• Industry Co-Chair, and Government Co-Chair• Issues driven by Work Groups – some initiated

by private sector, some by public• Detailed vetting process to develop work plan

for Working Group• Action Plan decentralized by Working Group

leadership

PNWER Working Groups

Page 8: PNWER Profile

Bi-National Energy Planning

Initially funded by US Dept of Energy Led by PNWER Legislative Energy Chair Task ForceWorking regionally to develop solutions to future energy demand and transmission congestionIntegrated Resource Planning for the Bi-National PNWER RegionLegislative Energy Institute – Training for Legislators

Page 9: PNWER Profile

Competitiveness and Border Security

Global markets demand that US/Canada border be much smarter and more efficientPNWER has programs to develop stakeholder designed pilots for common sense solutions to business and trade impediments

Page 10: PNWER Profile

Enhanced Drivers License

o PROJECT EXAMPLE: Washington State and DHS developed an enhanced driver’s license for use as personal identification for border crossings.

Page 11: PNWER Profile

HOW DISASTERS SEE US

Page 12: PNWER Profile
Page 13: PNWER Profile

SAMPLE PROJECTS• Activities/projects are grant funded• www.firsttosee.org social media system• Regional Maritime Recovery Exercises• City of Seattle and Snohomish County

Recovery planning• Cybersecurity planning and exercises• Assisting with the marketing of FirstNet in

Washington State• Regional maritime cybersecurity resilience

planning

Page 14: PNWER Profile

OUR 21ST CENTURY SITUATION• Each organization focused on their

individual mission and territory.• A very efficient system of systems that

functions well on a day-to-day basis, but is increasingly vulnerable to disruptions due to a host of natural and technological hazards that create vulnerabilities.

• We are becoming less resilient!!

Page 15: PNWER Profile

YOUR WORLD VIEW

• Me, my, I• They• We

Page 16: PNWER Profile

THE FORMULA TO FIX THE SITUATION

• Establish relationships• Share information• Collaborate• Plan together• Build trust

Page 17: PNWER Profile

ESTABLISH RELATIONSHIPS

• Between people• Between organizations• Public, private, nonprofit, mediao Find the areas of common interest

• Cyber, health, etc.• Transportation and other infrastructures• Joint conferences, • Build corridors, not walls

Page 18: PNWER Profile

SHARE INFORMATION

• It all starts here• What do you know that you can share?• Who else might need to have this

information?• First a network of peers• Then a network outside of the norm• Outside of your state or province• What you give is what you get

Page 19: PNWER Profile

COLLABORATE

• Inform• Coordinate• Partner• Collaborate• Collaborate with the enemy!

Page 20: PNWER Profile

PLAN

• Planning is critical to developing relationships

• Response, recovery, special hazard: e.g. cyber

• Cyclical• Eliminate the “Silos of Excellence”

Page 21: PNWER Profile

TRUST

• This is the ultimate goal• With trust comes a whole host of

possibilities

Page 22: PNWER Profile

CHALLENGES TODAY

• Federal funds are drying up• A significant turnover in people

• Emergency manager’s curse• Operating in a low trust environment• Lack of appreciation for the “soft skills”

and time it takes to do this work• Bosses don’t always understand• Someone must stand up and lead!

Page 23: PNWER Profile

CONTACT

Eric HoldemanDirector, Center for Regional Disaster Resilience (CRDR)www.pnwer.orgwww.regionalresilience.org [email protected] 253-376-6683