Each year the final project is a major part of the Water Leadership Institute. The WLI 2025 cohorts wrote articles on turning challenges into strengths through resilient leadership.
In the water utility sector, crisis leadership is not optional—it’s fundamental. For organizations responsible for delivering safe, reliable water, leadership during disruption determines whether systems collapse or recover with resilience. This responsibility does not rest with a single individual. It must be embedded in utility leadership teams and organizational culture, ensuring every level of the workforce is prepared to anticipate, respond, and adapt.
What Utilities Prepare For – and How
Water utilities face an expanding range of threats: extreme weather events, infrastructure failures, and cyberattacks that can disrupt essential services. While utilities cannot prevent all crises, they can prepare for them. Structured frameworks like the National Incident Management System (NIMS) provide a backbone for coordinated response across jurisdictions. The American Water Infrastructure Act (AWIA) further requires utilities to assess risks, prepare emergency response plans, and build resilience into daily operations.
But frameworks and regulations are only the starting point. Their effectiveness depends on how leaders apply them—turning static documents into living systems that shape decisions in real time. Without strong leadership, response plans risk becoming mechanical at best and chaotic at worst.
Leadership in Action: Real-World Lessons
What separates successful responses from failed ones is leadership. The following examples highlight how each core skill can determine outcomes in a crisis:
These examples show that the “Seven Core Skills of Crisis Leadership”—decisiveness, communication, collaboration, awareness, trust, empowerment, and continuity—are not abstract ideals. They are tested daily in the field and separate effective responses from failed ones.
A Call to Action: Embedding Leadership into Utility Resilience
Utilities already spend millions on infrastructure upgrades. But pumps and pipelines cannot lead through a flood, cyberattack, or contamination event. People do. The real question is not whether utilities will face another crisis, but whether leaders and teams will be ready when it happens.
To prepare, utilities should:
Effective leadership ensures resilience, protects public health, and sustains trust. In the water sector, the next crisis is not a matter of if, but when—and leadership will make all the difference.
Authors: Bethel Abate, Miguel Sibayan, Tammy West, Steve Mosley, Annie Cashon, Andrew Brocato, Courtney Thomas
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