Case Study
Past Performance
Trust Infrastructure Framework · Federal Program Support
CSEPP Public Affairs & Closeout — Sustaining Community Trust Through Final Stockpile Destruction
Client: FEMA CSEPP / Kentucky Emergency Management  ·  Role: Subcontractor  ·  Status: Completed
10
Kentucky counties served through program closeout
3
Reports to Congress produced
Multi-year
Federal engagement spanning the program's final phase
Stockpile destroyed
Final CSEPP program milestone — TLR supported the program through closeout
Trust Infrastructure Kentucky · 10 Counties Federal Program Support FEMA CSEPP AFN · LEP · Community Engagement
The Situation

Imagine being asked to trust a government program that's been storing chemical weapons near your home for decades. That's what communities in 10 Kentucky counties were asked to do. The Chemical Stockpile Emergency Preparedness Program (CSEPP) was built on a difficult premise: residents near chemical weapons storage sites need to be informed, prepared, and ready to respond — year after year — even when nothing happens.

Maintaining that level of community readiness over the years requires something traditional public information programs rarely achieve: durable, genuine trust. The program was entering its final phase — stockpile destruction at the Blue Grass Army Depot — and the communications work had to hold through the finish line. That meant maintaining access and trust across a population that included residents with limited English proficiency and complex access and functional needs.

What We Did

TLR supported CSEPP's public information and community engagement work across 10 Kentucky counties over multiple years. Our work ran through three tracks simultaneously: ongoing public affairs content for program communications, formal reporting for Congressional oversight, and accessibility work to ensure materials reached every resident — not just those with internet access and English fluency.

Three Reports to Congress were produced during this engagement — formal documentation of program performance submitted to federal oversight. These aren't routine outputs. They require a command of program history, performance data, and policy context that only comes from sustained engagement.

As the program moved toward closeout, TLR supported the transition documentation for the Kentucky Public Information Network (KY-PIN) and the communication work needed to keep communities informed through final stockpile destruction — the most significant milestone in the program's history.

"Communities near chemical stockpiles had been living with risk for decades. The least we could do was make sure they had accurate, accessible information through the end."
Engagement Details
ClientFEMA CSEPP / KYEM
TLR RoleSubcontractor
SectorFederal / State
DurationMulti-year
StatusCompleted
Frameworks Applied
PrimaryTrust Infrastructure
Key Numbers
Counties served10 (Kentucky)
Reports to Congress3 produced
Engagement typeMulti-year federal
AccessibilityAFN + LEP
Program Context
FEMA CSEPP · Blue Grass Army Depot · KY-PIN · Kentucky Emergency Management
What We Delivered
  • 3 Reports to Congress — formal documentation of CSEPP program performance submitted to federal oversight
  • Public affairs content across 10 Kentucky counties — sustained outreach through the program's final phase
  • AFN/LEP-accessible materials — ensuring residents with limited English proficiency and functional needs received equivalent information
  • KY-PIN transition documentation — supporting orderly handoff of the Kentucky Public Information Network
  • Closeout communications through final stockpile destruction — sustained through the program's concluding milestone
What Changed

Communities living near the Blue Grass Army Depot stayed informed and engaged throughout the program — not because they were legally required to, but because the communications infrastructure was designed around their actual needs. When final stockpile destruction occurred, it wasn't a surprise. The people who needed to know, knew.

Three Reports to Congress documented the program's performance for federal oversight. The KY-PIN transition preserved Kentucky's preparedness network infrastructure past the CSEPP closeout. TLR's work ensured the end of the program was as well-managed as its duration — and that the communities who had lived with this risk the longest weren't left behind at the finish line.

Trust Infrastructure Framework · Applied
If communities don't trust the information they're receiving, they won't act on it.

CSEPP is one of the starkest real-world tests of TLR's Trust Infrastructure question: will communities engage? Residents near chemical stockpiles had every legitimate reason to distrust government messaging — the program itself acknowledged that a hazard existed. Sustaining trust over years required persistent investment in communication infrastructure (consistent, multi-channel, accessible outreach) and genuine relational reach (AFN and LEP populations receiving equivalent information, not afterthought materials). The lesson from this engagement: trust at this scale is built slowly, communicated consistently, and lost the moment the effort stops. TLR was there to make sure it didn't stop.

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