As climate-driven disasters and public health emergencies increase in frequency and complexity, communities cannot afford to wait until disaster strikes to mobilize resources. Emergency preparedness requires a shift in philanthropic practice: from reactive, twice-a-year grantmaking cycles to flexible, agile, and trust-based funding that can move before, during, and after a crisis.
Preparedness is not a separate funding category – it is a lens that should shape how philanthropy invests across issue areas, from health and housing to food security, education, and economic mobility.
This session will explore how philanthropy can invest during “blue sky” periods between disasters to help communities build the relationships, infrastructure, and operational capacity needed for inevitable “gray sky” emergencies.
Participants will examine how funders can invest in preparedness capacity, resilient infrastructure, and coalition-building to strengthen response systems before emergencies occur.
Facilitated by Direct Relief, the Foundation for the Carolinas, Center for Disaster Philanthropy, and Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina Foundation the session will feature three interactive roundtables. Each roundtable will invite participants to identify barriers, share practical approaches, and surface opportunities for funders to work differently in an era when chronic disruption is becoming a defining operating condition for communities.
Participants will leave with practical approaches for integrating preparedness and resilience into existing grantmaking strategies, partnerships, and funding structures before the next crisis occurs.