Crisis Lab

Crisis Lab

Where expertise meets influence. Gain senior-level insights in policy, strategy & resilience.

  1. HACE 1 DÍA

    The Tightrope and the Net

    FEMA's workforce is being cut. The primary federal mitigation grant has been canceled. State disaster reimbursements have been frozen. Track these separately and they look like the usual policy disputes and budget fights. Track them together and the signal gets harder to miss: the federal government is pulling back from emergency management while pursuing actions that actively increase the threats state and local systems have to manage. In this episode, Kyle King breaks down what that squeeze looks like from both directions. He walks through the numbers on what state and local agencies are actually working with, examines why what's being called devolution is functionally abandonment with a policy justification, and poses the one question every organization with a continuity plan should be asking this quarter. Show Highlights [01:30] "The federal government is cutting the safety net and shaking the tightrope at the same time" [02:00] The devolution argument and where it breaks down [03:00] The numbers: FEMA workforce cuts, BRIC cancellation, EMPA freeze, and $11B in frozen reimbursements [03:30] The FEMA Review Council report: 160 pages reduced to 20, vote canceled [04:00] Where the burden is landing: emergency management's lost mission [05:00] Argonne National Laboratory data: $6.3M median state budgets, local agencies with one or fewer employees [05:30] Why interstate compacts and NIMS weren't built to function without a federal tier [06:00] The compression problem: strained resources and exposed vulnerabilities [08:30] NATO baseline requirements and why the current trajectory undermines both military and civil resilience [09:30] The one question every organization should ask this quarter Go Deeper Governance gaps don't wait for policy clarity. Crisis Lab helps senior professionals build cross-sector thinking that modern threats demand through applied learning, strategic analysis, and practitioner-led research. The Forum at Crisis Lab brings together senior leaders from emergency management, national security, business continuity, and governance for the kind of peer exchange these challenges require.

    11 min
  2. 27 MAR

    When Disasters Become Battlefields: Disinformation as a Gray Zone Weapon

    In this episode of the Crisis Lab Podcast, host Kyle King opens with a question most emergency managers haven't been asked: what if someone is actively working to make your disaster worse? Not by intensifying the physical impact, but by flooding the information space with narratives designed to make the response fail. What it reveals: disaster disinformation is no longer a communications problem. It's a gray zone weapon, and adversarial actors are pulling the trigger. From Hurricane Helene's false FEMA narratives that generated 160 million views and physically stopped responders from doing their jobs, to Valencia's floods where Spain's National Security Report traced 112 disinformation narratives to pro-Kremlin channels, to the LA wildfires and Texas floods where conspiracy theories spurred death threats against private firms. The playbook repeats: exploit the information vacuum, amplify institutional distrust, turn natural catastrophe into political crisis. Emergency managers are fighting an information warfare campaign with press releases and rumor response pages. The tools are wrong because the threat model is wrong. This episode isn't a call for better fact-checking. It's a call to recognize that civilian crisis management sits at the intersection of public safety, national security, and digital governance, and the profession's current architecture is built for the wrong threat. Tune in to hear why your next disaster plan needs an information warfare chapter written before the storm makes landfall. Show Highlights [00:56] When misinformation stops being accidental and starts being a weapon [02:01] Hurricane Helene: 160 million views and FEMA forced to pause outreach [03:14] Valencia floods: 112 false narratives and the Kremlin connection [04:06] LA wildfires and Texas floods: the same playbook, different disasters [04:51] Why disasters create conditions gray zone actors can only dream of manufacturing [06:03] The EU sees it at the strategic level. The operational level doesn't. That's the gap. [06:58] Why fact-checking fails when the goal is to discredit the fact-checkers [08:41] Three shifts: threat modeling, pre-positioned trust, and cross-sector coordination [09:58] Sweden's total defense model and what emergency management has historically resisted [10:59] The uncomfortable question for every crisis management leader Go Deeper: Crisis Lab Toolkits Listening is one thing. Applying it is another. Every Crisis Lab article comes with a companion toolkit: frameworks, checklists, and operational tools built for practitioners who need to act, not just stay informed. Free for all Crisis Lab subscribers. 👉 news.crisislab.io/toolkits

    12 min
  3. 13 MAR

    When Trust Breaks: How Policy Failures Are Eroding Community Resilience

    In this episode of the Crisis Lab Podcast, host Kyle King opens with a scenario every emergency manager recognizes: an evacuation order goes out, every protocol is followed, every system is activated, and people don't move. What it reveals: trust is invisible infrastructure, and it fails the same way physical systems do. From Winter Storm URI in Texas to the Lahaina wildfire in Hawaii to Berlin's longest blackout since 1945, the pattern repeats. Policy trades resilience for efficiency, warnings go unheeded, systems fail, and public confidence collapses at every level of government. The gap between what institutions promise and what communities receive has become a structural vulnerability. This episode isn't a call for better messaging. It's a call to treat trust like what it is: critical infrastructure that requires assessment, maintenance, and investment. Tune in to hear why the next evacuation order's success or failure is being determined right now. Show Highlights [00:00] The evacuation order nobody followed [01:00] Why warnings fail when trust has already been spent [02:00] Trust as infrastructure: the social network behind every physical system [03:00] Winter Storm URI and the 2011 warnings Texas ignored [04:00] Berlin's blackout: efficiency purchased with redundancy [05:00] Spain's train collision and the pattern of unheard warnings [05:30] Hawaii's false missile alert and the Lahaina sirens that stayed silent [06:30] The Spain-Portugal cascading power failure [07:00] FEMA's workforce: 29,000 to 23,000 and falling [07:30] The complexity-response gap: crises at system speed, institutions at human speed [08:30] Four steps municipal leaders can take now [09:00] Mapping your trust landscape before the next crisis [09:30] Closing the warning-to-action gap through policy, not heroics [10:00] Ukraine's model: honest capacity communication under compounding stress [11:00] Trust is infrastructure. Start treating it accordingly. Go Deeper: Crisis Lab Toolkits Listening is one thing. Applying it is another. Every Crisis Lab article comes with a companion toolkit: frameworks, checklists, and operational tools built for practitioners who need to act, not just stay informed. Free for all Crisis Lab subscribers. 👉 news.crisislab.io/toolkits

    12 min
  4. 16 FEB

    Signal and Noise: What January 2026 Reveals About What Actually Matters

    In the Season 5 premiere, host Kyle King asks one question: what should we have been paying attention to? A blackout in Berlin, a fatal train collision in Spain, and the systematic destruction of Ukraine's power grid all point to the same pattern. The signal wasn't in the incidents. It was in the structural failures that preceded them. After a year of diagnosing what's broken, Kyle argues 2026 has to be about discernment. The profession isn't short on information. It's drowning in it. This episode separates signal from noise: single points of failure, unheard warnings, and survival duration metrics are signal. Threat briefings without operational implications and recycled frameworks are noise dressed as vigilance. This isn't a call for more awareness. It's a call for the discipline to focus on what counts. Show Highlights [00:00] Three countries, three causes, one question [01:00] Berlin's blackout: arson at a single junction point [01:30] Spain's train collision: warnings raised months before [02:00] Ukraine's grid at a third of peacetime capacity [03:30] What Crisis Lab diagnosed in 2025 [04:45] The structural pattern behind all three incidents [07:00] From diagnosis to discernment: what 2026 demands [07:45] Finding single points of failure before adversaries do [08:15] Signal vs. noise: what actually changes Monday morning? [09:15] Survival duration: the metric that matters most [10:00] Building discernment through deliberate community [10:45] Why Crisis Lab built The Forum Go Deeper: Crisis Lab Toolkits Listening is one thing. Applying it is another. Every Crisis Lab article comes with a companion toolkit: frameworks, checklists, and operational tools built for practitioners who need to act, not just stay informed. Free for all Crisis Lab subscribers. 👉 news.crisislab.io/toolkits

    12 min
  5. 2025 EM Wrapped: Year-End Emergency Management Review & 2026 Predictions

    19/12/2025

    2025 EM Wrapped: Year-End Emergency Management Review & 2026 Predictions

    In this special year-end episode of the Crisis Lab Podcast, host Kyle King sits down with a panel of industry leaders: Todd De Voe, Matt Green, Anastasia Maynich, Laura James, and Ralph Bloemers. They dissect the chaotic landscape of 2025 and the evolving role of the emergency manager. What it reveals: the dangerous lag between the velocity of modern crises and our traditional response systems. It also exposes the "capacity illusion" which is the belief that government agencies alone can handle the scale of today's disasters. Between the LA wildfires and the cascading infrastructure failures of 2025, the profession learned a hard lesson. Operational confidence can no longer mask the fragility of our communities. The panel tracks how "governance from 30,000 feet" often disconnects resources from the people who need them most. This creates a dangerous gap where policy meets reality. This conversation offers not a celebration of resilience, but a call to action. It reflects on the need to embrace "complex adaptive systems" rather than rigid command structures. It challenges the sector's hesitation to truly engage the public. It forces us to ask a hard question. Are we building systems that protect the status quo? Or are we ready to let communities lead their own recovery? Show Highlights [03:06] Introducing the Panel of Experts [07:02] The impact of speed and complexity in crisis response [09:33] The reality of under-resourced local emergency managers [29:37] Engaging community voices over official messaging [39:25] Understanding Fire Risks [40:02] The Role of Emergency Managers [41:12] How top-down governance fails neighborhood reality [42:43] Complex Adaptive Systems [44:35] Emergency Management Challenges [47:52] Learning from indigenous wisdom and fire stewardship [53:25] Why every home needs its own emergency manager [54:37] Recovery and Long-Term Challenges [01:03:17] Predictions for 2026: The context-switching trap [01:17:46] Closing Thoughts and Resources Connect with the Guests Anastasia Maynich LinkedIn: Anastasia Maynich MA, MS YouTube: XanamayX Website: xanamayx.com Podcast: Beyond the SOP Matt Green LinkedIn: Matt Green Newsletter: State of Disaster Book Club: Disaster Discourse Company: GEMS Ready Todd De Voe LinkedIn: Todd Thayer De Voe, MPA, CEM® Substack: Todd T. De Voe Newsletter: Emergency Management Network Laura James LinkedIn: Laura James Podcast: Resilient HERoes Ralph Bloemers LinkedIn: Ralph Bloemers

    1 h 21 min
  6. Operationalizing AI: How Senior Emergency Managers Can Fight Burnout with Tom Sivak

    17/12/2025

    Operationalizing AI: How Senior Emergency Managers Can Fight Burnout with Tom Sivak

    In this episode of the Crisis Lab Podcast, host Kyle King speaks with Tom Sivak, Chief Emergency Manager at Emergency Management One, about the fundamental shift in the crisis management profession from a knowledge economy to an allocation economy. What it reveals: the unsustainable nature of manual information processing in an era of polycrisis and velocity. With emergency management agencies facing chronic understaffing and budgets that demand "more with less," the traditional model of the "Rolodex leader" who holds the entire plan in their head is failing. Sivak argues that trying to manually process the astronomical amount of data in modern crises is no longer a badge of honor, it is a strategic vulnerability. This conversation offers a pragmatic roadmap for operationalizing AI not as a tech trend, but as a survival mechanism. It reflects what modern leadership demands: moving from being the "writer" of every brief to the "editor" of intelligence, building "blue sky" muscle memory so tools work when the pressure mounts, and reclaiming the "gut intuition" that only a human can provide. Show Highlights [04:00] Why AI is the only scalable solution for the "do more with less" mandate [06:00] The "Forethought" Principle: Why using AI only during disasters guarantees failure [08:00] Parallels to 1994: How the industry feared the internet before it became essential [13:00] The maturity model shift: Moving leaders from "writers" to "editors" [17:00] Using efficiency to focus on community resilience and mental health [21:00] The Human Lever: Why algorithms can process data but cannot replace gut intuition [23:00] Why value now comes from directing resources, not retaining facts [25:00] Validating the Emergency Manager's role as the original "Allocation" leader

    38 min
  7. Governance, Bureaucracy, and Recovery Lessons from Christchurch with Brenden Winder

    12/12/2025

    Governance, Bureaucracy, and Recovery Lessons from Christchurch with Brenden Winder

    In this episode of the Crisis Lab Podcast, host Kyle King sits down with Brenden Winder (Christchurch City Council). They dissect the fourteen year recovery journey following the Christchurch earthquakes. What it reveals: the dangerous illusion of short term success in emergency management. It also exposes the silent erosion of institutional memory. Between the 2010 earthquake (where systems appeared to hold) and the devastating 2011 event that claimed 185 lives, Christchurch learned a hard lesson. Operational confidence can mask systemic fragility. Winder tracks how the rush to add governance layers actually reduced transparency. This created barriers between resources and the community they were meant to serve. This retrospective offers not a celebration of resilience, but a warning. It reflects on the "asymmetry of recovery." Infrastructure is rebuilt while deep pockets of community trauma remain. It challenges the sector's reliance on international templates. It forces us to ask a hard question. Are we building systems that actually fit the local 80%? Or are we just applying the international 20%? Show Highlights [00:00] The limits of international frameworks in the face of neighborhood reality [03:00] The dangerous gap between perceived success (2010) and catastrophic reality (2011) [06:00] When adding more governance structure reduces community transparency [08:00] How election cycles and staff turnover erase the "intellectual property" of disaster response [17:00] Why "returning to normal" is a myth when infrastructure rebounds faster than people [21:00] Why international best practice is only a fraction of the solution [24:00] Contrasting the US emergency management "struggle session" with New Zealand's depoliticized approach

    29 min
  8. What Sweden's Transformation Tells Us About Gray Zone Reality

    28/11/2025

    What Sweden's Transformation Tells Us About Gray Zone Reality

    In this episode of the Crisis Lab Podcast, host Kyle King examines Sweden's transformation from traditional emergency management to integrated security governance. What it reveals: the gray zone reality facing emergency management professionals across Europe. Throughout 2025, coordinated Russian operations across Baltic civilian infrastructure exposed fundamental flaws in crisis management systems built for discrete events. Sweden's response offers not a blueprint to copy, but a mirror. It reflects what sustained multi-domain pressure demands: rethinking where emergency management sits in governance, how capability distributes across society, and what "prepared" means when crises don't end. Show Highlights [0:40] Russia's systemic campaigns across European civilian infrastructure in 2025 [01:44] Gray zone operations overwhelm traditional emergency management coordination [03:00] Denmark's reality check: Copenhagen Airport shutdowns connect to shadow fleets and cyber intrusions [03:50] Sweden's systematic rebuild treats gray zone reality as permanent operating condition [05:07] Total Defence integration model eliminates separation between military and civilian crisis management [09:36] Why surge capacity models collapse under continuous multi-domain pressure [12:00] The fundamental question: governance change or improved emergency response? [13:00] Missing piece: institutional recognition that informal coordination networks are the foundation of evolution Connect with Kyle King LinkedIn

    14 min

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Where expertise meets influence. Gain senior-level insights in policy, strategy & resilience.

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