“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.” -Alvin Toffler

Monday, June 30, 2025

Community Imperative: AI’s Impact on the Racial Wealth Gap June 2025

 Professor Pappoe Awarded Grant to Explore AI’s Impact on the Racial Wealth Gap

Professor Yvette Pappoe has been awarded a research grant by the Center for Civil Rights & Technology’s Leadership Conference Education Fund to explore how artificial intelligence (AI) is both exacerbating and potentially mitigating the racial wealth gap. In collaboration with Professor Nadiyah Humber (University of Connecticut School of Law), the project will examine the role of AI across two critical systems: 

       housing and employment. Specifically, the research will analyze how AI is being deployed in tenant screening, mortgage underwriting, and home appraisals, as well as in hiring, job displacement, and the deskilling or upskilling of labor. With credit and financial inclusion as a cross-cutting theme, the study aims to illuminate how AI systems can either reinforce or disrupt structural barriers to wealth for communities of color.

 

 



Thursday, June 26, 2025

USDA Cancels Additional Grants Funding Land Access & Training for Young Farmers [Non-white] June 2025

 

https://www.linkedin.com/posts/civil-eats_usda-cancels-additional-grants-funding-land-activity-7343352427594530816-I1Wv?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_android&rcm=ACoAAD2q5G8Biz-3odfvMh_Q-Ex7z-Ux5zSa4iY 

Rudy Arredondo

 

Founder/Director  

Latino Farmers & Ranchers International, Inc.

19627 Crystal Rock Dr., #21

Germantown, MD 20874

Mobile: (301) 366-8200

Email: latinofarmers@gmail.com

Latino Farmers & Ranchers International, Inc. is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization (EIN: 92-2467671) . Donations to LFRI 

are tax-deductible to the fullest extent of the law.

Monday, June 23, 2025

Water Security, Funding Opportunity: New Mexico. Tuesday, July 1, 2025 – Informational Webinar with Q&A.

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Application Timeline:

Monday, June 16, 2025 – The application portal opens for 42 days to receive applications.
Tuesday, July 1, 2025 – Informational Webinar with Q&A.
Monday, July 28, 2025 – Applications must be submitted online at
                                         https://nmwrri.nmsu.edu/nmwrri-agwrp/nmwrri-agwrp.html 
                                         by 5:00 pm MDT.
Friday, August 29, 2025 – Recipients of projects selected for funding will be notified.
Monday, September 15, 2025 – Projects begin.
 
The NM WRRI Agricultural Water Resilience Program (AgWRP) implements in part Action A2, New Mexico 50-Year Water Action Plan to incentivize agricultural water conservation. The goal is to maintain the resilience of New Mexico agriculture and provide food security in a future with less available water, as stated in HB2.5 317, the enabling legislation for AgWRP. To achieve this goal, NM WRRI will implement projects that improve farmers’ and ranchers’ ability to manage, conserve, and efficiently apply limited water resources for agricultural production. 
 
This funding opportunity is posted on the New Mexico Water Resources Research Institute website at https://nmwrri.nmsu.edu/nmwrri-agwrp/nmwrri-agwrp.html
 
Project applications should include new approaches, technological tools, or infrastructural improvements related to agricultural water conservation. Activities should improve infrastructure reliability, operational flexibility, use-efficiency, conservation, or resilience of water resources without increasing depletions. Eligible applicants are encouraged to propose innovative projects that fit the purpose of the program and address regional agricultural needs related to water. Projects must support New Mexico food security and the long-term continuation of New Mexico agricultural production. Projects must address one or more of the following regionally appropriate water resilience objectives:
  • Increase water efficiency to optimize the use of diminished water supplies
  • Improve reliability of water supply or infrastructure
  • Conserve water to decrease basin depletions and support long-term water sustainability
  • Improve groundwater sustainability
  • Implement new approaches and technologies to improve irrigation and stock water timing and management
  • Support voluntary adoption of drought-tolerant, lower water-use crops
  • Create operational flexibilities to adapt to changing climate and drought

 

Sarah Wentzel-Fisher
Land and Agriculture Policy Officer
(505) 280-9879
 

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