RESILIENCE DISTRICT INCUBATOR

Empowering communities to invest in resilience at scale.

Local governments face growing pressure to address climate risk but with limited resources and fragmented funding streams. Insurance instability and escalating disaster costs are straining public budgets. Many communities are searching for durable new approaches to fund long-term resilience.

Climate Resilience Districts (Resilience Districts) offer one promising pathway: a structured mechanism for providing sustained, scalable funding for climate adaptation through tools like tax-increment financing and resilience bonds. When determining whether a district is the right fit, communities need space to explore feasibility, benefits, and alignment with local priorities. That’s where the Incubator comes in.

The Resilience District Incubator, developed by CA FWD and Resilient Cities Catalyst, provides hands-on support, a national learning network, and practical toolkits to guide communities through the exploration and implementation of Resilience Districts, or similar models for securing long-term, community-driven investment in resilience.

About the Incubator

The Resilience District Incubator is launching with pilot communities in California and Connecticut. The
Incubator bridges capacity gaps by offering communities:

  • Hands-on design and technical assistance from early exploration through district development.
  • A national peer learning network connecting pilot communities to share strategies, challenges, and solutions.
  • Advisory group insights from experts in insurance, public and private finance, risk modeling, and community development.
  • Practical toolkits and templates that support feasibility analyses, district development, and cross-sector partnerships.

By offering a structured curriculum and tailored technical support, the Incubator helps communities move beyond a dependence on one-time funding to stable, long-term funding to reduce risk.

What are Resilience Districts?

Authorized by California’s Senate Bill 852 (Dodd, 2022), Resilience Districts enable cities, counties, and special districts to fund projects that reduce local climate risks and support the operations, maintenance, and administrative functions needed to sustain those investments over time. Resilience Districts are modeled after Enhanced Infrastructure Financing Districts, a widely used mechanism for funding large-scale community infrastructure projects across the state.

Interested in learning more?

If you’d like to learn how Resilience Districts could work in your region, or if your community is interested in participating in the Incubator as a pilot partner, we welcome the opportunity to connect.