The State of Disaster Recovery in Rural America
Patricia Hernandez
Patricia Hernandez
Patty Hernandez is co-founder and Executive Director of Headwaters Economics. Patty has 18 years of experience in researching economic development, building partnerships, and developing technology solutions to help communities plan and adapt to a changing world.
- Fieldnote Headwaters Economics presented with Montana Floodplain Program Ambassador award
- Contribution The path to wildfire-resistant building codes in Colorado offers lessons for other states
- Building wildfire-resistant homes after disasters will save billions
- News Is your Montana home at risk from wildfire? These tools can help you find out
- Contribution Extreme heat is not just an urban threat: The risk to rural communities
- Contribution Community Wildfire Defense Grants benefit rural and low-capacity communities
- Contribution Cascading wildfire insurance issues impact local and state budgets
- Reinvesting in rural America
- News Wildfire mitigation, firefighting boosted by legislation, officials tell committee
- News More Americans are moving into areas with higher flood and fire risk
Brent Powell
Brent Powell
Brent leads Headwaters Economics’ web and media development. Blending technical skills with creativity, he supports the team with website management, photography, videography, and graphic design.
- Contribution Tracking Western states’ diverse approaches to wildfire building codes
- Contribution Future-proofing the outdoor recreation economy
- Contribution Reinvesting in rural America
- Contribution A rural capacity map
- Contribution Austin, Texas: Built for Wildfire
- Contribution The American Community Survey in our data tools
- Building for wildfire
- Contribution Mobile home residents face higher flood risk
- Contribution Innovative New Ways to Count Outdoor Recreation
Last week, Headwaters Economics Executive Director Patty Hernandez moderated the plenary panel at The State of Disaster Recovery in Rural America: A Candid Expert Conversation, a convening hosted by Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies, the Center for Disaster Philanthropy, and Headwaters Economics.
The panel focused on the emerging barriers nonprofits, local governments, and community organizations face in rural disaster resilience — and what the changing landscape means in practice.
Thank you to panelists Dr. Nania Campbell (Bill Anderson Fund / Natural Hazards Center), Dr. John Cooper (Texas A&M), and Tony Pipa (Brookings Institution). And for support from Erin Coryell – Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies, and many others!
We’ve made video of the panels, summary info, and further resources available at: https://headwaterseconomics.org/events/2026-macp-rural-convening/
















