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About the Toolkit

The Climate Resilience Plan Alignment Toolkit is a suite of collaboration tools for local government staff and decision-makers, tribes and tribal-serving organizations, community members and non-profits, regional entities, and others to coordinate and align local and regional resilience planning efforts.

The Toolkit includes the following resources:

The "Big Ideas" and "Best Practices" are a great place to begin learning what it means to align plans. These sections on the landing page offer introductory information on how to foster greater coordination and integration across planning initiatives, including overarching principles of alignment, best practices, and tips for working through challenges that may arise during the process.

The Climate Resilience Plan Alignment Guides exist as both online, interactive guides and as printed booklets. Each guide provides background information and guidance on plans most applicable to a climate-change driven hazard. The print version of each guide includes the introductory Big Ideas and Best Practices to facilitate learning and collaboration in the field, as well as additional resources in the appendices.

The Plan Alignment Tool is an interactive decision-support tool for identifying alignment opportunities specific to a community or region. The tool allows users to filter different plans and hazards to create a unique, tailored plan alignment roadmap with relevant guidance from the Climate Resilience Plan Alignment Guides. The roadmap can be shared and printed to support strategic planning and collaboration.

Plan Alignment Case Studies summarize successful approaches and examples of plan alignment from communities and regions across California. The case studies showcase how integration efforts and collaboration can lead to better outcomes and long-term resilience in the face of climate change.

Community and Stakeholder Engagement tips and resources are provided to facilitate equitable coordination and outreach during a plan alignment process. The list of stakeholder examples can be used to map stakeholders and to facilitate equitable outreach and communication to traditionally underserved populations and stakeholders.

Frequently Asked Questions

Plan alignment is the process of leveraging connections, information, and resources to build shared language, data foundations, and processes across multiple planning efforts at any scale. Plan alignment, in essence, is based on collaboration. The resulting products of plan alignment are:

  • a suite of plans (with different scopes and purposes) that share the same data, similar underlying assumptions, aligned visions, and complementary goals, strategies, and actions, and
  • a shared understanding, process, and structure for multiple entities in a community or region to continue to collaborate and align efforts over the long term.

Climate change does not stop at jurisdictional boundaries and will continue to impact all aspects of our communities, economies, and environment. An adaptive response requires a fundamental change in the way that communities plan and evolve over time: a response that is collaborative, equitable, and aligned towards a shared vision of resilience for all.

A comprehensive and cohesive planning approach will pay great dividends and enable communities to holistically integrate multiple climate change considerations and resilience strategies throughout government decision-making processes and other efforts throughout a community or region. Most importantly, the outcome of plan alignment is that communities and regions will be in a better position to mitigate the impacts of climate change. Other benefits include reduced duplication of effort, lowered potential for policy conflicts, streamlined public outreach, and increased eligibility for implementation funding.

While the possible uses for each toolkit resource will vary at the discretion of each user and their unique context, examples of possible uses include the following. Note: the following are offered as general examples and are not mandates for how these resources should be used.

  • Any individual may use these resources to plan for climate change, inform a group of collaborators and stakeholders about multi-benefit adaptation planning, improve or align local or regional planning efforts, or foster robust, equitable community engagement in planning processes.
  • City, county, or tribal staff may use these resources to map a process and strategy for developing or updating local plans to address climate resilience.
  • Elected officials may use these resources to better understand each plan's purpose and regulatory background, including specific considerations for climate resilience.
  • Community organizations and community members may use these resources to understand how planning initiatives are developed and implemented, including how plans can be used to adapt and build resilience to climate change-driven hazards.
  • State and federal agency officials may use these resources to support local planning assistance efforts, develop or align resources, or inform planning guidance.

The Governor’s Office of Planning and Research updates the Climate Resilience Plan Alignment Toolkit on an annual basis and as needed as new state guidance, resources, and regulatory information become available. To report an error or submit content for consideration, email icarp@opr.ca.gov.

Legal disclaimer

Because communities throughout California are varied and have different needs, the recommendations in this toolkit and corresponding guides are designed for a wide spectrum of uses and applications. This toolkit is meant to be a resource for the public to use at their discretion; it does not alter or direct public agency discretion or decision-making in preparing planning documents. This resource should not be construed as legal advice, nor is the Governor's Office of Planning and Research enforcing or attempting to enforce any part of the recommendations contained herein. (Government Code [GC] § 65035).