Jennifer Gorman
Biography
Jennifer Gorman is a Master of Public Policy student with a focus in energy and water policy. Her research interests include climate change mitigation, sustainable energy solutions and equitable public policy.
As a graduate student researcher at the Luskin Center for Innovation, Jennifer works with the Water Supply-Wildfire Research and Policy Coordination Network to address the major water supply management challenges that have emerged following the Paradise and Eaton fires.
Prior to graduate school, Jennifer worked at Strategen Consulting, where she co-authored a dozen policy-related publications, developed analyses on the workforce impacts of clean energy developments, and produced recommendations for decarbonization pathways that were adopted by legislatures and utility commissions.
Jennifer earned a bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering from UC Berkeley.
Jennifer is working alongside Stella Greenwood, Megan Rich, Derrick Ruiz and Theresa Willmott-McMahon on a project about wildfire displacement.
Project Overview
After the January 2025 wildfires, most recovery efforts focused on the permitting, debris removal and rebuilding processes for homeowners who wanted to rebuild. But the fires also displaced informally housed residents and renters –– populations who face a different set of housing challenges like limited insurance coverage, minimal legal protections, and ineligibility or perceived ineligibility for many post-disaster recovery programs. By identifying who these displaced residents are, what housing barriers they face and where current programs fall short, this project will help our client reform existing programs to better support displaced renters searching for stable and affordable housing.
Why is this topic, specifically, important to you?
Our team comprises researchers with a wide range of academic, personal and professional backgrounds –– from growing up in a border community shaped by housing insecurity, to working with youths experiencing homelessness, to researching the fires’ water supply impacts –– that connect us to the topic in different ways. All of us, however, witnessed the wildfires’ devastating effects on Greater Los Angeles, and are grateful to support an equitable recovery for all residents.
Who are the partners involved in this project and how will you be working with them?
Our client is the Los Angeles County Development Authority (LACDA), which is providing overall direction and connecting us to key stakeholders. Our team is working closely with LACDA staff to review existing programs, analyze housing recovery data and gather insights through expert interviews with county agencies, nonprofits and community organizations. We are also grateful for the community organizations providing us with primary data and supporting our analysis efforts. The Department of Angels is providing survey data from displaced residents, the Eaton Fire Collaborative is providing information on housing recovery, and the Altadena Tenants Union is helping us understand local tenant experiences and advocacy work.
How do you hope that this project will impact the field moving forward?
We hope this project will inspire policies and procedures that help displaced residents find housing stability, and provide a disaster response framework that other communities can adopt. By centering renters and informally housed individuals, we aim to inform policies that reflect the realities of Los Angeles’ housing crisis and contribute to a more equitable model of disaster housing recovery, one that recognizes and supports residents who are often excluded from traditional programs. Ultimately, we hope our project prompts citywide policy reforms that influence similar changes across the state –– strengthening long-term housing stability and encouraging more inclusive policy design and implementation.
Fellow at a Glance
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