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Resilience measures accept that the disaster will occur and that the community will experience some degree of impact.  However, these measures facilitate a rapid return to normal.  Shelters and evacuation protect the human capital of the community and allow its return.  Community teams (all of these examples are drawn from practice in the united States) deal with specific problems during the impact and early recovery.  Community Emergency Response Teams (CERT) provide neighborhood rescue and damage limitation, and the Amateur Radio Emergency Services (ARES) and Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Services (RACES) provide extensive communications capabilities.  Community disaster recovery task forces organize community resources to expand the relief and recovery efforts of first the federal and state governments and second the national Voluntary Agencies Active in Disaster.  Backup generators allow rapid restoration of power for critical systems.