Call for Northwest Agricultural Communities & Resilience Practitioners
Do you need to update your comprehensive or hazard mitigation plan to address extreme weather issues? Do you live in or serve Northwest farming communities in WA, OR, or ID that are grappling with intense rainfall, snowpack runoff, and flooding issues? If so, please consider this project opportunity.
The Model Forest Policy Program (MFPP) is seeking one or two northwest agricultural communities to help design and test a facilitated cohort training program focused on resilience for rural communities in WA, OR, or ID. The training is focused on addressing extreme weather and increasing safety of farming communities with resilient land use planning and strategies for rural flood mitigation. We are looking for collaborators from two target audiences:
- Forest and farming community organizations and decision-makers
- Resilience professionals who serve rural communities with planning and project implementation support (e.g., planners, cooperative extension, consultants, emergency managers, floodplain managers, etc.)
This is a one-year project with a 3-4 month engagement with rural community leaders and cohort professionals. We will provide an honorarium for collaborators’ time and expertise as they test-run the facilitated cohort-based training module. Participants will gain knowledge and practical skills in resilient rural land use strategies and contribute to the capacity for agricultural resilience across the northwest region.
Participation is contingent upon grant funding from the Community Grants Program of the Northwest Climate Resilience Collaborative. Your expression of interest in the training program is helpful to the grant proposal process.
For additional details contact project manager Gwen Griffith at gwen@mfpp.org. Learn more about the self-guided training modules from the early phases of the Resilient Rural America Project at www.mfpp.org/rrap.
Interested parties are asked to complete the brief Google form below by Monday, May 29, 2023: