
STRAT | July 22, 2025 | Preventing the Next Disaster Starts with Smarter Planning
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This episode of STRAT delivers a critical wake-up call: our current emergency preparedness planning process isn't enough for higher levels of government. Retired Marine Intelligence Officer Hal Kempfer discusses how military-style decision support, operational planning, and intelligence integration can be better adapted for civilian use—before another catastrophe strikes. Citing real-world failures like the Palisades Fire, Guadalupe River flood, and Montecito mudslides, Kempfer illustrates how a lack of holistic planning and intelligence preparation results in unnecessarily devastation. He illustrates how concepts in military planning processes can be adapted to better enable the Incident Planning Process used by first responders and emergency managers to get far better results in mitigation and preparedness, and minimize deadly failures. It's time to demand more robust, proactive planning at state and local levels—and to ensure those plans are understood and executed, not just filed away. If preparedness is the key to saving lives, this episode is your roadmap to doing it right.
Takeaways:
- Military decision support templates offer critical planning clarity.
- Civilian emergency systems often lack depth and proactive detail.
- Operational planning must include evaluating multiple courses of action.
- First responders often operate tactically, not strategically.
- Intelligence Preparation of the Environment (IPOE) is vital.
- FEMA’s past efforts at deeper planning were derailed by politics.
- Plans without training, exercises, and understanding are ineffective.
- Enforcement against waste and misuse of preparedness funding is essential.
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