'Need to make sure that we are prepared to respond': IEMA head reflects on severe weather disasters impacting Illinois

tornado
A car is flipped on its side in a parking lot on the 7500 block of Gladstone Drive on June 21, 2021 after a tornado came through the area in Naperville. Photo credit Jon Durr/Getty Images

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (WBBM NEWSRADIO) --The head of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency blames climate change for the frequency and severity of the weather the last several years.

"We have seen over fifteen different billion-dollar disasters in the United States in 2022. That's up from where it was in 2021," said Alicia Tate-Nadeau.

"We need to make sure that we are prepared to respond to those. And of that, there were $332 billion worth of damages. $181 billion of that was from uninsured folks."

IEMA is hosting more than 600 emergency planners from throughout the state for an annual conference.

Tate-Nadeau said a newer responsibility for the emergency professionals is election security.

"Really thinking about the physical security of the poll workers who are out there," she said. "Like anything, our job is to plan. That doesn't mean that something is going to occur, but our job is to make sure that we prepare."

The Illinois Emergency Management Summit continues in Springfield through Friday.

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Featured Image Photo Credit: Jon Durr/Getty Images