Decision Maker: Council
Decision status: Recommendations Determined
Minute by the Lord Mayor
To Council:
The Resilient
Sydney Program
The City was accepted into the 100 Resilient
Cities Challenge on 3 December 2014. The Challenge sought to find 100 cities
ready to build urban resilience - the capacity of individuals, communities,
institutions, businesses, and systems within a city to survive, adapt, and grow
no matter what kinds of chronic stresses and acute shocks they experience.
In September 2015, I stood with Minister
Stokes to announce the launch of the Resilient Sydney program, and the
appointment of Beck Dawson as the City’s first Chief Resilience Officer (CRO).
Beck was tasked with bringing in experts from government and other sectors to
develop a resilience strategy for Greater Sydney.
On 1 to 4 October 2015, I attended the first
100 Resilient Cities ‘City Leaders Summit’ in Bellagio, Italy. At the summit, I
had the opportunity to listen to speakers discuss the stresses and shocks being
faced by cities globally, and talk to other Mayors about the innovative
policies they were putting in place to respond to them. I came back with a
renewed resolve to ensure Resilience become a top priority for the City.
Over the next three years, the Resilient
Sydney program developed a city-wide strategy to keep our communities safe and
prepared through a research and an engagement process with an unprecedented
level of voluntary cooperation and collaboration across Sydney. The process
involved all 33 metropolitan councils in consultation with over 1,000 residents
and 100 businesses, departments and agencies from the NSW Government, and
community organisations.
The Resilient Sydney Strategy was released in
2018 with a vision for Sydney as a metropolis that is connected, inclusive and
resilient. The strategy has five directions and 35 collaborative actions and is
in implementation. Through its research and strategy development, Resilient
Sydney identified the top eight shocks likely to impact metropolitan Sydney.
Four years later, all eight have occurred, with Covid-19 an example of a
large-scale pandemic shock.
Supporting
Sydney during Covid-19
The Covid-19 pandemic provided an opportunity
for the Resilient Sydney program to translate the strategy into action, by
connecting Councils together to share practical resources and expertise,
collecting data on impacts and undertaking advocacy to the State Government.
Resilient Sydney hosted senior leaders from
Local Governments three times to identify common issues impacting their organisations.
Many of these were then formally raised with relevant State Government
Departments and a number of legislation and process changes followed.
Resilient Sydney also shared template
documents with councils, including emergency management pandemic sub-plans,
Business Continuity Plans, recovery plans, and draft communications to
employees and communities.
Resilience NSW
When we launched the Resilient Sydney
program, I said that Beck Dawson’s appointment as the City’s Chief Resilience
Officer was of the utmost importance. Thankfully, following this summer’s
devastating bushfires, the NSW Government has recognised the value of this
important work.
On 6 April 2020, the Premier of NSW, Gladys
Berejiklian, announced Resilience NSW - a new body to oversee the Government’s
disaster preparedness and recovery arrangements. Resilience NSW will be headed
by the former Rural Fire Services (RFS) Commissioner, Shane Fitzsimmons, and
will be responsible for coordinating emergency management policy and service
delivery as well as disaster recovery.
Resilience NSW has the opportunity to enable
a standardised approach to place-based, community-led resilience planning in
NSW. By building on the methodology and networks created by Resilient Sydney,
this body can capitalise on the City’s work to date. So I offer our support and
cooperation to the Resilience NSW Commissioner.
Now is the time to adopt the 100 Resilient
Cities framework and invest in Local Government to deliver place-based,
people-centred resilience programs for NSW. Central to this is investing in
people-centred decision making through inclusive engagement with a diverse
selection of representative stakeholders. This helps promote inclusivity,
diversity and equity, and supports development of resilience actions reflective
of a community’s key priorities. The City of Sydney and its metropolitan and
global partners have shown how it can be done.
I implore Resilience NSW to take a long term
view of protecting the people of Sydney and NSW. The robustness and security of
our water, food, fuel and energy systems will rely on the State taking a
strategic view of resilience in our regions and cities. There is a base level
of services we need for our future communities to thrive.
We rely on our environment to deliver many of
these services, so we must protect assets such as our top soil, our waterways
and other life-lines services from land clearance, fossil fuel developments and
other commercial pressures. This is a key area where a state agency must set a
life safety resilience approach more widely and go above and beyond the work of
the Resilient Sydney Program.
I commend the Chief Executive Officer and the
Chief Resilience Officer for their leadership and engagement with the 33
Metropolitan Councils of the Resilient Sydney program. The work of the
Resilient Sydney Program, its Steering Committee, State Government and business
partners and all the 33 contributing and engaged councils of our city over the
last four and a half years has enabled us to act together in the multiple
crises of the last 12 months, including drought, bushfires, floods and a
pandemic. These connections also serve us well in times of everyday prosperity.
Recommendation
It is resolved that:
(A)
Council
note:
(i)
that
the Lord Mayor has written to the incoming Commissioner of Resilience NSW
offering a briefing on Resilient Sydney; and
(ii)
that
the work undertaken by the Resilient Sydney Program helped local governments
across metropolitan Sydney prepare for and respond to a range of shocks and
stresses, including the recent bushfire crisis and Covid-19 pandemic;
(B)
the
Lord Mayor advocate to the Commissioner that Resilience NSW adopt a
place-based, people-centred approach through:
(i)
adoption
of the 100 Resilient Cities definition and methodology for resilience;
(ii)
applying
the 100 Resilient Cities framework to identify and understand the shocks and
stresses present within NSW communities;
(iii)
building
on the experience gained through the Resilient Sydney and Resilient Melbourne
programs, and the 100 resilient cities they are connected to; and
(iv)
enabling
people-centred decision making through inclusive engagement with a diverse
selection of representative stakeholders in each region or place. This helps
promote inclusivity, diversity, equity and supports development of resilience
actions reflective of a community's key priorities;
(C)
the
Lord Mayor advocate to the Commissioner to take a strong position against
projects that undermine the City's future resilience by eroding life-lines
services, such as fossil fuel developments that damage our waterways and
fertile farmland; and
(D)
the
Lord Mayor be requested to write a letter of commendation to all the Mayors of
the City for their response to support their communities, and ongoing
engagement with the Resilient Sydney program.
COUNCILLOR CLOVER MOORE
Lord Mayor
Moved by
the Chair (the Lord Mayor), seconded by Councillor Scully –
That the
Minute by the Lord Mayor be endorsed and adopted.
Carried
unanimously.
SS051491
Report author: Erin Cashman
Publication date: 29/06/2020
Date of decision: 29/06/2020
Decided at meeting: 29/06/2020 - Council
Accompanying Documents: