2025 Annual Conservation in the West Poll

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Research Library 29 May 2020

CONGRESSIONAL CONSERVATION TOOLKIT: A Guide to Land, Water and Climate Issues and the Impact on Latino Communities

Now more than ever, it is essential to demonstrate the importance of public lands and waters to the Latino community in the US, as well as the policies necessary to maintain them. The COVID-19 crisis has shown how badly we need close, accessible, and abundant public lands and waters for health and wellness. Each section of this toolkit covers the health, economic, public opinion, and cultural implications of the policies that protect our public lands, in addition to the threats that climate change and regulatory rollbacks pose. This toolkit also shows growing concern about the climate crisis and its effects on Latino populations.

Research Library 25 September 2019

WILDFIRE MANAGEMENT TOOLKIT: Latino Considerations

Our nation’s greenhouse gas emissions and resulting climate change are leading to higher temperatures, record-setting heat waves, and drier and more arid conditions in the West. These conditions matched with underfunded forest management, outdated land use policies and practices, and more people living in fire-prone areas has led to catastrophic wildfires that affect more people. Since 2000, an average of 73,200 wildfires burned an average of 6.9 million acres, a figure which has nearly doubled the average annual acreage burned in the 1990s (3.3 million acres). In 2017 alone, wildfires burned 10 million acres. In addition, a new study has found that approximately 85% of wildfires are caused by human activity and one in three houses in the US resides in the wildland urban interface (approximately 44 million homes).

Featured Projects 22 May 2020

HLN Ministerial Grant Application

Due to COVID-19, Hispanic Access Foundation has changed the Community Event Fund into unrestricted funds that Eclesial Leaders in the Hispanic Leadership Program can use where they believe to be necessary and most helpful. The award amount is $500.

Debido a COVID-19, Hispanic Access Foundation ha cambiado el Fondo para el Evento Comunitario en fondos sin restricciones que los Líderes Eclesiales en el Programa de Hispanic Leadership pueden usar donde creen que sea necesario y de mayor ayuda. Se otorga una beca de $500.

News Releases 22 May 2020

National Outdoor Groups Release Six “Recreate Responsibly” Tips for Enjoying the Outdoors Safely During COVID-19

In advance of Memorial Day weekend – the unofficial start of the summer season – a newly formed coalition of outdoor groups created the Recreate Responsibly initiative to share ways for Americans to stay healthy while enjoying public lands, parks, trails, waters, and other outdoor areas. During the COVID-19 pandemic, more Americans are spending time outside because of the mental and physical benefits that fresh air and nature provide. As state officials reopen outdoor spaces, people want guidance on how to reduce the risk to themselves and others while enjoying time outside.

Blog 22 May 2020

On Illness and Adaptation

I think I’m better prepared than most to weather this transition in our lives.

Not only because I’m relatively privileged, continue to have two wage-earners in our household, with a dog and a backyard and abundant green space nearby to enjoy spring in our small family unit.

That’s certainly true, and immensely helpful, and a gift I wish I could bestow on others. But I have another rather strange asset that has unknowingly prepared me for this, mentally and emotionally.

Blog 21 May 2020

Partner Spotlight: Taking the Time to Explore Our Backyards

Growing up in big cities my whole childhood taught me to consider squirrels and pigeons as wildlife. When I moved to Colorado as an adult, my frame of reference drastically shifted. Out on the trails I’ve seen coyotes, fox, moose, and bald eagles just to name a few natural world friends. Seeing these creatures out on the trails in the mountains has been a great source of happiness for me and one I have missed most during these uncertain times of the Coronavirus pandemic.

Blog 20 May 2020

Partner Spotlight: Continental Divide Trail Coalition Responds to COVID-19

The Continental Divide Trail Coalition (CDTC) is the 501(c)(3) national non-profit working in partnership with the US Forest Service, National Park Service, and Bureau of Land Management to complete, promote and protect the Continental Divide National Scenic Trail. Founded in 2012 by a passionate group of volunteers and recreationists, CDTC is a membership organization working to build a strong community of supporters who want to see the CDT protected not just for today’s users, but for generations to come.

News Releases 14 May 2020

Conservation Webinar Focuses on Water and How the World Has (and Hasn’t) Changed

Hispanic Access Foundation is launching its new webinar series “Staying Connected to Conservation” on May 15. In the first webinar, “Water and How the World Has (and Hasn’t) Changed,” HAF and its featured guests will discuss the importance of staying engaged during this time — and how to do so from home; how COVID-19 has and hasn't changed the natural world; and improving resilience with green infrastructure.

Blog 07 May 2020

First Month as an NPS RTCA and HAF Fellow in the New Mexico Office

Throughout my life I have had the opportunity to live in different cities. What I have learned from moving is the ability to learn different techniques and skills that have made the process less tedious. Moving to Santa Fe New Mexico was not as complicated as it has been moving to other places in the past. When I was looking for a place, I decided that the place should meet with three requirements: 1) That the rental cost was within the budget I created 2) That the place had a centric location 3) If possible, that the place was furnished. I was lucky to find a room that met these qualities in a house where an elderly couple lives in. upon my arrival they received me with a warm welcome and made me feel almost like another member of their family.

Blog 10 May 2020

Making the Best of a Bad Situation

Picture this: you finally get the chance to work in our nation’s capital.

Things are going great, you’re finally getting acclimated, and a little over a month in a deadly virus forces you to go back home and work from there. This is the situation I, and many other fellows find themselves in right now, and while most people may see it as a strictly negative situation, I figure it’s my chance to make the best out of a bad situation.

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