Enhancing the Resiliency of America’s Communities
For Immediate Release May 10, 2016 www.iccsafe.org |
Contact: Trey Hughes 1-888-ICC-SAFE (422-7233), ext. 5237 thughes@iccsafe.org |
Enhancing the Resiliency of America’s CommunitiesICC Supporting and Participating in White House Conference on Resilient Building Codes With a 100-year history of developing model codes and standards used in the design, construction and compliance process for buildings and other facilities, the International Code Council (ICC) is supporting and participating in the White House Conference on Resilient Building Codes today, May 10, in Washington, D.C. The conference is highlighting the critical role of building codes in furthering community resilience and the importance of incorporating the future impacts of climate change into the code and standards development process. President Obama declared May as National Building Safety Month in order to recognize and pay tribute to those who ensure the safety and resilience of the nation’s buildings, and to reaffirm the U.S. commitment to upholding and abiding by strong and effective building safety standards. “Research proves that investments in prevention and mitigation pay enormous dividends for communities before, during and—most notably—after disasters when recovery begins,” said ICC Chief Executive Officer Dominic Sims, CBO, who will be a panelist during the summit. “As the White House and members of the building industry bring increased attention to the important role codes and standards play in achieving a resilient nation, the Code Council is renewing its commitment to helping build safer and more affordable communities across the U.S. and around the globe.” “The International Codes are currently used at the local or jurisdictional level in all 50 states, federal agencies, U.S. territories, and in other countries,” added ICC Board of Directors President Alex Olszowy, III, with the Lexington Fayette Urban County Government in Lexington, Ky. “While these efforts should be applauded, they also should send a signal to other jurisdictions that it’s time to take public safety and community resilience to another level.” In addition to reaffirming its long-term commitment to producing future generations of building codes and standards that incorporate the latest in science and technology, the Code Council is renewing its support of advancing resilience through the following activities:
“ICC and its partners plan to engage a broad-based group of stakeholders to make the community resilience report framework as palatable, constructive, and inclusive as possible,” Sims explained. “The framework should reflect the strengths and weaknesses of a community, its trajectory, and its ability to positively respond to and rapidly recover from disruptive events.” Collaboration is the key, according to noted emergency management expert James Lee Witt, who served as Director of FEMA during the Clinton Administration and is a former Chief Executive Officer of the Code Council. “With 85 percent of the nation’s critical infrastructure owned by the private sector, community resilience is really a matter of diverse private and public organizations working together,” Witt said. “Public leaders and elected officials should be reaching out to the private sector seeking solutions, and one of the most effective ways to start is the adoption and enforcement of building codes and standards, which provide a strong foundation for safety and protection.” For more information on the Code Council’s resources available to assist jurisdictions, manufacturers and the public with building resiliency, please go to http://www.iccsafe.org/about-icc/safety/resiliency/. ### About the International Code Council The International Code Council is a member-focused association. It is dedicated to developing model codes and standards used in the design, build and compliance process to construct safe, sustainable, affordable and resilient structures. Most U.S. communities and many global markets choose the International Codes. |