(NEW YORK) — A presidential task force charged with developing a  strategy for rebuilding areas damaged by Superstorm Sandy has issued a  report recommending 69 policy initiatives, most focused on a simple  warning: Plan for future storms in an age of climate change and rising  sea levels.
The report released Monday by the Hurricane Sandy Rebuilding Task Force  says coastal communities should assume floods are going to happen more  frequently and realize that spending more now on protective measures  could save money later. It calls for development of a more advanced  electrical grid less likely to be crippled in a crisis, and the creation  of better planning tools and standards for communities rebuilding  storm-damaged areas. “Decision makers at all levels must recognize that climate change and  the resulting increase in risks from extreme weather have eliminated  the option of simply building back to outdated standards and expecting  better outcomes after the next extreme event,” the report says.
 Some of the group’s key recommendations are already being  implemented, including the creation of new flood-protection standards  for major infrastructure projects built with federal money and the  promotion of a sea-level modeling tool that will help builders and  engineers predict where flooding might be an issue in the future.
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 The task force also endorsed an ongoing competition, called “Rebuild  by Design,” in which 10 teams of architects and engineers from around  the world are exploring ways to address vulnerabilities in coastal  areas.
 President Obama created the task force in December. Its chairman,  Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Shaun Donovan, said in a  statement that the group focused on finding ways to cut red tape in the  delivery of disaster aid and “piloting innovative strategies that can  serve as a model for communities across the nation as they prepare for  the impacts of climate change.”
 In its report, the task force didn’t delve deeply into what types of  infrastructure might be best suited to protect the shoreline. It  endorsed a greater use of natural barriers like wetlands and sand dunes,  but said better tools were needed to help planners evaluate what works  and quantify the long-term cost benefits of those types of green  projects. It also said those projects should be planned regionally if  they are to have their greatest effect.
 It said the government should find ways to encourage the  private-sector development of fuel distribution and telecommunications  systems less likely to be crippled by extended power outages. After  Sandy, drivers in New York and New Jersey had problems finding gas  stations that still had fuel due to a series of problems that rippled  through the distribution system. Mobile phone networks were snuffed out  in some areas because of equipment that lacked adequate battery power,  or other backup electrical supplies.
 A large section of the report dealt with how federal authorities should respond once a storm has struck.
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 Among the recommendations:
 — Federal agencies should streamline their review processes for  reconstruction projects related to Sandy. It said that if standard  government permitting timelines are applied, some rebuilding projects  might have to undergo redundant reviews by multiple agencies and could  be held up as long as four years. Some of those reviews will be  consolidated to save time and money, the task force said.
 — The Small Business Administration’s disaster loan program, which  gave $3.8 billion in low-interest loans to storm victims, performed  better than it did during Hurricane Katrina, but should be tweaked  further. Training programs for loan officers should be improved.  Eligibility for some loans should be loosened slightly. Approvals should  happen faster for people who meet credit requirements. A separate  application track should be established for small businesses, which  often need money fast to survive, but wind up languishing in long queues  behind huge numbers of homeowners.
 — Federal mortgage policies should be revised so homeowners can get  insurance checks faster. After Sandy, many homeowners complained that  mortgage banks delayed delivering their insurance payments because of  bureaucratic issues.
 On one vital issue related to insurance, the task force had no easy solution.
 It noted that due to reforms of the financially distressed National  Flood Insurance Program that began before the storm, many thousands of  people who live in low-lying areas will likely see huge premium  increases if they don’t lift their homes up on pilings. The task force  said that for many homeowners, both options will be unaffordable. It  recommended further study of that dilemma.