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HF2511 • 2026

A bill for an act relating to statewide resilience planning, including the development, implementation, and periodic updating of an Iowa state resilience plan. (Formerly HF 2158 .)

A bill for an act relating to statewide resilience planning, including the development, implementation, and periodic updating of an Iowa state resilience plan. (Formerly HF 2158 .)

Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC SAFETY
Last action
2026-03-03
Official status
Subcommittee: Zumbach, Shipley, and Staed. S.J. 456 .
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

A bill for an act relating to statewide resilience planning, including the development, implementation, and periodic updating of an Iowa state resilience plan. (Formerly HF 2158 .)

A bill for an act relating to statewide resilience planning, including the development, implementation, and periodic updating of an Iowa state resilience plan.

What This Bill Does

  • A bill for an act relating to statewide resilience planning, including the development, implementation, and periodic updating of an Iowa state resilience plan.
  • (Formerly HF 2158 .)

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-03 Iowa Legislature

    Subcommittee: Zumbach, Shipley, and Staed. S.J. 456 .

  2. 2026-02-25 Iowa Legislature

    Read first time, referred to Natural Resources and Environment. S.J. 409 .

  3. 2026-02-25 Iowa Legislature

    Message from House. S.J. 409 .

  4. 2026-02-25 Iowa Legislature

    Immediate message. H.J. 434 .

  5. 2026-02-25 Iowa Legislature

    Passed House , yeas 92, nays 0. H.J. 420 .

  6. 2026-02-25 Iowa Legislature

    Amendment H-8034 adopted, as amended. H.J. 420 .

  7. 2026-02-25 Iowa Legislature

    Amendment H-8046 to amendment H-8034 filed, adopted. H.J. 420 .

  8. 2026-02-24 Iowa Legislature

    Amendment H-8034 filed. H.J. 414 .

  9. 2026-02-16 Iowa Legislature

    Introduced, placed on calendar. H.J. 300 .

Official Summary Text

A bill for an act relating to statewide resilience planning, including the development, implementation, and periodic updating of an Iowa state resilience plan. (Formerly HF 2158 .)

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
House

File

2511

-

Reprinted

HOUSE

FILE

2511

BY

COMMITTEE

ON

PUBLIC

SAFETY

(SUCCESSOR

TO

HF

2158)

(As

Amended

and

Passed

by

the

House

February

25,

2026

)

A

BILL

FOR

An

Act

relating

to

statewide

resilience

planning,

including

the

1

development,

implementation,

and

periodic

updating

of

an

2

Iowa

state

resilience

plan.

3

BE

IT

ENACTED

BY

THE

GENERAL

ASSEMBLY

OF

THE

STATE

OF

IOWA:

4

HF

2511

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Section

1.

NEW

SECTION

.

463.1

Definitions.

1

For

purposes

of

this

chapter:

2

1.

“Critical

assets”

includes

all

of

the

following:

3

a.

Transportation

assets

and

evacuation

routes,

including

4

airports,

bridges,

bus

terminals,

ports,

major

roadways,

5

highways,

railways,

marinas,

rail

facilities,

and

railroad

6

bridges.

7

b.

Critical

infrastructure,

including

wastewater

treatment

8

facilities

and

lift

stations,

storm

water

treatment

facilities

9

and

pump

stations,

drinking

water

facilities,

water

utility

10

conveyance

systems,

electric

production

and

supply

facilities,

11

solid

and

hazardous

waste

facilities,

military

installations,

12

communications

facilities,

and

disaster

debris

management

13

sites.

14

c.

Critical

community

and

emergency

facilities,

including

15

schools,

colleges,

universities,

community

centers,

16

correctional

facilities,

disaster

recovery

centers,

emergency

17

medical

service

facilities,

emergency

operation

centers,

fire

18

stations,

health

care

facilities,

hospitals,

law

enforcement

19

facilities,

local

government

facilities,

logistical

staging

20

areas,

affordable

public

housing,

risk

shelter

inventory,

and

21

state

government

facilities.

22

d.

Natural,

cultural,

and

historical

resources,

including

23

agricultural

lands,

conservation

lands,

parks,

shorelines,

24

surface

waters,

wetlands,

and

historical

and

cultural

assets.

25

2.

“Regionally

significant

assets”

means

critical

assets

26

that

support

the

needs

of

communities

spanning

multiple

27

geopolitical

jurisdictions,

including

water

resource

28

facilities,

regional

medical

centers,

emergency

operations

29

centers,

regional

utilities,

major

transportation

hubs

and

30

corridors,

airports,

and

seaports.

31

Sec.

2.

NEW

SECTION

.

463.2

Iowa

state

resilience

plan.

32

1.

By

December

31,

2028,

the

Iowa

flood

center

established

33

under

section

466C.1

shall

develop

and

adopt

an

Iowa

state

34

resilience

plan

in

coordination

with

the

department

of

35

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transportation,

economic

development

authority,

department

1

of

homeland

security

and

emergency

management,

department

2

of

agriculture

and

land

stewardship,

department

of

natural

3

resources,

and

any

other

stakeholder

deemed

relevant

by

the

4

Iowa

flood

center.

5

2.

The

goals

of

the

Iowa

state

resilience

plan

are

to

6

accomplish

the

following:

7

a.

Protect

against

the

loss

of

life

and

property

by

8

providing

for

hazard

mitigation

and

long-term

disaster

9

recovery.

10

b.

Effectively

incorporate

future

hazard,

demographic,

and

11

development

conditions

into

all

state

programs

addressing

built

12

and

natural

infrastructure

at

risk

from

flooding,

anticipated

13

changes

in

water

supply,

and

other

natural

hazards.

14

c.

Identify

priority

projects

to

increase

resilience

across

15

the

state.

16

d.

Establish

a

strategy

to

allocate

state

and

federal

17

funding

that

support

the

execution

of

projects

and

goals

18

outlined

in

the

plan.

19

e.

Be

a

guide

to

state

and

local

resilience

policy.

20

3.

The

Iowa

state

resilience

plan

shall

include

all

of

the

21

following:

22

a.

A

statewide

risk

assessment

that

includes,

to

the

extent

23

practicable,

all

of

the

following:

24

(1)

A

gap

analysis

of

state

and

local

government

capacity

25

to

adequately

evaluate

and

address

the

factors

that

increase

26

hazard

risk,

including

risks

associated

with

flooding

and

27

anticipated

changes

in

water

supply.

28

(2)

Temporal,

seasonal,

and

spatial

variability

projections

29

of

at

least

thirty

years

for

flooding,

water

supply,

and

the

30

other

top

natural

hazards

identified

in

the

state

hazard

31

mitigation

plan.

32

(3)

An

analysis

of

local

mitigation

and

post-disaster

33

redevelopment

plans

and

their

regional

impact.

34

(4)

An

analysis

of

present

and

potential

losses,

including

35

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all

of

the

following:

1

(a)

Land

subsidence.

2

(b)

Property

inundation.

3

(c)

Natural

and

built

infrastructure

failures.

4

(d)

Natural

resource

degradation

as

a

result

of

flooding.

5

(e)

Anticipated

changes

in

water

supply.

6

(f)

Other

top

natural

hazards

identified

in

the

state

hazard

7

mitigation

plan.

8

(5)

The

economic

impact

of

best

available

extreme

weather

9

projections

on

the

state’s

resources,

including

all

of

the

10

following:

11

(a)

Forestry.

12

(b)

Agriculture.

13

(c)

Water.

14

(d)

Soil

health.

15

(e)

Wildlife.

16

(f)

Hunting.

17

(g)

Other

natural

resources.

18

(h)

Infrastructure.

19

(i)

Economic

productivity

and

security.

20

(j)

Education.

21

(k)

Public

health.

22

(6)

An

analysis

of

historic

and

projected

development

in

23

known

and

projected

hazard

areas,

including

areas

under

threat

24

from

flooding,

anticipated

changes

in

water

supply,

and

other

25

top

natural

hazards

identified

in

the

state

hazard

mitigation

26

plan.

27

b.

An

inventory

of

critical

assets,

including

regionally

28

significant

assets,

that

includes

an

outline

of

each

asset’s

29

condition,

capacity,

and

present

and

potential

losses

from

30

flooding,

anticipated

changes

in

water

supply,

and

the

other

31

top

natural

hazards

identified

in

the

state

hazard

mitigation

32

plan.

33

c.

A

methodology

for

prioritizing

both

state-funded

34

resilience

projects

and

projects

funded

by

state-administered

35

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federal

programs.

The

methodology

shall

include:

1

(1)

Consideration

of

project

cobenefits,

including

2

multihazard

risk

reduction,

economic

development,

ecosystem

3

services,

and

tourism

and

recreational

opportunities.

4

(2)

Regional

considerations,

including

demography,

income,

5

geography,

and

proximity

to

critical

assets.

6

(3)

Consideration

of

upstream

and

downstream

impacts

of

7

riverine

projects

on

communities

and

local

ecology.

8

d.

A

prioritized

list

of

all

ongoing,

planned,

and

proposed

9

resilience

projects

funded

or

administered

by

the

state

that

10

includes

all

of

the

following:

11

(1)

The

cost

of

each

project.

12

(2)

A

quantification

of

the

total

funding

needed

statewide.

13

e.

Recommendations

for

voluntary

methods,

to

decrease

risks

14

and

adverse

impacts

associated

with

flooding,

anticipated

15

changes

in

water

supply,

and

natural

hazards

as

identified

in

16

the

statewide

risk

assessment,

including

all

of

the

following:

17

(1)

Strategies

for

overcoming

identified

gaps

in

state

and

18

local

government

capacity

to

address

hazard

risk,

including

all

19

of

the

following:

20

(a)

Community

education

and

communication

concerning

local

21

hazard

risk

reduction.

22

(b)

Improvement

of

coordination

of

hazard

risk

reduction

23

efforts

across

state

agencies.

24

(c)

Operations

and

maintenance

for

existing

projects.

25

(d)

Technical

assistance

and

other

support

to

local

26

governments.

27

(2)

Statutory

or

regulatory

remedies

for

managing

risk.

28

(3)

Expected

implementation

timelines,

agency

involvement,

29

and

implementation

costs

for

each

action

or

remedy.

30

(4)

Existing

and

potential

funding

sources

for

facilitating

31

resilience

planning

and

projects.

32

(5)

Possible

cobenefits

associated

with

resilience

actions.

33

(6)

Plans

for

integrating

recommended

approaches

to

risk

34

reduction

into

existing

state

strategies

for

hazard

mitigation,

35

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environmental

protection,

and

economic

opportunity

and

1

development.

2

f.

Metrics

for

tracking,

reporting

progress

to

state

and

3

local

policymakers,

and

updating

the

Iowa

state

resilience

4

plan.

5

4.

On

completion

of

the

Iowa

state

resilience

plan,

the

6

Iowa

flood

center

shall

deliver

the

plan

to

the

governor,

the

7

general

assembly,

and

the

department

of

homeland

security

and

8

emergency

management.

9

5.

The

Iowa

flood

center

shall

deliver

a

report

to

the

10

governor

and

general

assembly

by

December

31,

2029,

and

every

11

two

years

thereafter.

The

report

shall

include

all

of

the

12

following:

13

a.

A

summary

of

the

progress

made

on

recommendations

14

and

identified

projects

in

the

plan

during

the

previous

two

15

calendar

years.

16

b.

Updated

recommendations

based

on

the

information

gathered

17

by

the

Iowa

flood

center,

if

applicable.

18

c.

Strategies

to

increase

resilience

in

the

state,

including

19

identifying

potential

funding

sources

for

those

strategies.

20

6.

The

Iowa

flood

center,

in

coordination

with

the

21

department

of

transportation,

economic

development

authority,

22

department

of

homeland

security

and

emergency

management,

23

department

of

agriculture

and

land

stewardship,

department

of

24

natural

resources,

and

any

other

stakeholder

deemed

relevant

by

25

the

Iowa

flood

center,

shall

update

the

Iowa

state

resilience

26

plan

every

five

years

or

sooner.

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