In this episode of Policy Chats, host Dori Pham sits down with Professor Wei Guo, Associate Professor at the UCR School of Public Policy, to discuss how climate related disasters strain state and local public finances and what that means for equity and long term resilience.
Professor Guo explains why disaster recovery spending often remains elevated for years, while revenue effects especially property tax revenue vary depending on institutional structures. Using California as a case study, she highlights how Proposition 13 can produce unexpected fiscal outcomes after wildfires through property reassessments tied to housing turnover.
The conversation also examines how reimbursement based disaster aid can unintentionally discourage climate adaptation, reinforce rebuilding in high risk areas, and deepen inequalities for marginalized communities with limited upfront fiscal capacity. The episode concludes with a call to move from reactive recovery toward proactive climate adaptation, with stronger leadership and investment from state and federal governments.
Topics Covered:
- How climate disasters affect state and local government budgets
- Why disaster-related spending remains high years after recovery
- Property tax revenue, disasters, and California’s Proposition 13
- Equity challenges in disaster relief and reimbursement systems
- Climate resilience, managed retreat, and wildfire policy
- The limits of local government finance in climate adaptation
- Why state and federal governments play a critical role in resilience planning
Guest:
Wei Guo (Associate Professor of Public Policy)
Interviewers:
Dori Pham, Host of Policy Chats, and Jaz Williams, Dean's Ambassador
This is a production of the UCR School of Public Policy: https://spp.ucr.edu/
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Learn more about the series and other episodes via https://spp.ucr.edu/podcast.