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Tuesday, December 6, 2022
Learn How to Prepare for the Fiscal Year 2023 Nonprofit Security Grant Program
EMX staff exchange brings non-federal emergency managers to FEMA. Nominations are open through December 15, 2022
FEMA
Advisory
Emergency Manager Exchange Nominations
Extended to Dec. 15
State,
local, tribal, territorial emergency managers, join us! The 2023 Emergency
Manager Exchange (EMX) is seeking four dedicated public servants who work in
non-federal governmental offices or programs to spend time at FEMA in a 4-6
month paid work exchange.
Staff Exchange
The EMX staff
exchange brings non-federal emergency managers to FEMA to work alongside
leadership and staff from FEMA’s Office of Response and Recovery or Resilience.
State, local, tribal, and territorial emergency managers bring new perspectives
and guide FEMA on how to improve our programs.
In an exciting
update for 2023, the exchange will be fully reciprocal. As the participating
government organization sends their employee to work at FEMA, in return, a
full-time FEMA employee will be sent to support that non-federal government
office or program.
Reimbursed Costs
For the duration
of the assignment, FEMA will reimburse the participant’s home organization for
the cost of the participant’s salary up to the federal GS-13 level, plus
benefits. The exchange is authorized under the Intergovernmental Personnel Act
(5 CFR part 34) mobility program. Where consistent with FEMA’s travel policies,
this program includes travel costs and per diem in Washington, D.C.
The visiting
FEMA employee is available to address capability gaps identified by the
non-federal government organization in their nomination letter. Nominations are
open through December 15, 2022.
New Perspectives
This staff exchange
provides FEMA and its partners with a new way to collaborate in support of
emergency management priorities. This exchange opportunity highlights the “2022-2026
FEMA Strategic Plan” focus on strengthening the emergency management
workforce.
This opportunity
brings FEMA hand in hand with our emergency management partners and
stakeholders as we work together to increase disaster resilience, and
ultimately, help people, before, during and after disasters.
Nomination is by Home Organization
Each
participant’s non-federal government organization must nominate their applicant
to the program. Consistent with Federal ethics obligations and guidance, while
at FEMA, non-federal government exchange participants may not work on issues
that directly involve their home jurisdiction of employment.
DEFENDER OF LATINO FARMERS IN THE US, RUDY ARREDONDO
March
23, 2018
by
Hernando RamÃrez-Santos
Abasto
Magazine
https://abasto.com/en/news/sweet-potato-a-special-guest-for-the-holidays/
If there is anyone who really knows the life of Latinos in the agricultural fields of the United States, it is undoubtedly the Mexican Rudy Arredondo, founder and president of the National Latino Farmers & Ranchers Trade Association.
Working in the harvesting of crops with his parents during his childhood, adolescence and in his adult life, educating and defending the labor rights of immigrants and the work of the small Latino farmers, Arredondo has lived the transformation in the fields and the impact that the growth of immigration has had in the last half century.
Arredondo was born in the Santiago valley in Guanajuato, México. His father, who was a farmer, immigrated to the United States in search of better opportunities in the early 1940s. When he was 3 years old, with his mother, they crossed the border and settled with their father in the RÃo Grande Valley close to Edinburg, Texas, where they worked in the fields.
“Since we didn’t have money to pay a babysitter, since I was 5 years old, my mother would bring me to work with her in the fields,” Arredondo remembers. During his childhood and adolescence, he traveled around the country with his parents working the harvest seasons.
During that time as day laborer, Arredondo had his first experience working as a volunteer in the early days of the Union of Field Workers, which later achieved a great recognition with his leader César Chávez.
He divided his time between the fields and his study. He graduated from high school, went to college in Edinburg where he studied business administration and did military service.
Due to his experience and knowledge of Latino field workers, around 1974 a law firm in the city of Washington, DC, offered him work as a paralegal in the area of legal aid to farmers.
SECRETARY
PERDUE ANNOUNCES USDA’S FARM BILL AND LEGISLATIVE PRINCIPLES FOR 2018
THE NUMBER OF HISPANIC FARMERS HAS INCREASED
That’s where he began to explore the political world
and the functioning of government agencies. In the Rural Housing Alliance, he
served as general director of the area west of the Mississippi to help Latino
families to own homes and was an investigator of cases of discrimination
against agricultural workers in the Department of Agriculture.
In the late 1990s, Arredondo opened his own
consulting office in terms of civil rights and as a member of the board of
directors of the Rural Coalition, he noticed the rapid growth of Latino farmers
in the country and the lack of an organization to represent them. “I realized
that even though the Coalition was multi-ethnic, the voice of Latinos was not
strong enough for the needs of this group,” Arredondo said.
According to the 2002 Agricultural Census, the
number of Hispanic farmers had increased to 50,592 throughout the country.
Given this situation, Arredondo decided to form the National Latino Farmers
& Ranchers Trade Association.with a group of Hispanics.
Monday, December 5, 2022
$5,000 or $10,000 tier level, apply. 2023 MRC Operational Readiness Award
Tier 1
Awards at the $5,000 level are intended to build capabilities to meet local response needs. This
may be most applicable to units that are smaller in size, have a
specific/targeted need, a newly formed unit, or a unit that is focused on
rebuilding their MRC unit if previously inactive or underutilized.
Tier 2
Awards at the $10,000 level are intended to strengthen current capabilities for primary or evolving
response missions. This may be most applicable to units that have an
established volunteer management structure, have the capacity to further expand
their unit response capabilities, have a demonstrated record of supporting
public health emergency responses, or have a record of supporting multiple
natural disaster response missions.
Examples
of project activities for a Tier 1 ($5,000) Award:
- Develop recruitment strategy
for medical professionals using social media and news outlets.
- Develop onboarding process to
register volunteers, conduct administrative requirements, and track
training requirements of volunteers.
- Identify and track MRC Core
Competencies, ICS, and specialized training events to support emergency
responses using the MRC Volunteer Tier Levels or other categorization.
- Conduct workshops or meetings
with emergency response partners, identify response roles for MRC
volunteers, and build and/or strengthen MRC mission sets.
- Conduct training events and
exercises that support MRC mission sets.
- Capture lessons learned from
exercises or response activities. Update mission sets or response plans as
needed.
Examples
of project activities for a Tier 2 ($10,000) Award:
- Conduct regularly scheduled
unit training events that reinforce volunteer capabilities to support unit
mission requirements.
- Identify and implement training
opportunities to support unit mission capabilities, such as workshops or
exercises.
- Conduct recruitment and
training of volunteers for response roles identified for specific unit
missions.
- Strengthen awareness and build
integration of MRC capabilities with stakeholders through joint training
events or exercises.
- Identify and purchase mission
set resource requirements and train volunteers on use of equipment/supplies.
- Capture lessons learned from
exercises or response activities. Update mission sets, job action sheets,
and/or response plans as needed.
Additional
information about this funding opportunity is available in the Request
for Applications and application resources are available on the NACCHO’s
MRC Funding Opportunities webpage.
Applications
are open through December 9.
We look
forward to your application!
Please email mrc@naccho.org
for any further questions.
Thank You,
NACCHO Medical Reserve Corps Team
National Association of County & City Health Officials
1201 Eye Street NW, 4th Floor, Washington, DC 20005
Webinar: Preparing for the Fiscal Year 2023 Nonprofit Security Grant Program. December 8, 2022 03:00 PM ET
|
December
5, 2022 |
Nonprofit Security
Grant Program - Webinar
Informational
Outreach Invitation Preparing
for the Fiscal Year 2023 Nonprofit Security Grant Program The Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) Grant Programs
Directorate, the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) Cybersecurity and
Infrastructure Security Agency, and the DHS Center for Faith-Based and
Neighborhood Partnerships, jointly invite all interested 501(c)(3) nonprofit
organizations to a Nonprofit Security Grant Program (NSGP) Informational
Webinar virtual event to provide a look-back on the Fiscal Year (FY) 2022
NSGP, and look-ahead for the prospective FY 2023 NSGP. The NSGP provides funding
for physical and cyber security enhancements and other security-related
activities to nonprofit organizations that are at high risk of a terrorist
attack. In addition, the NSGP seeks to integrate nonprofit preparedness
activities with broader state and local preparedness efforts. FEMA will host several NSGP virtual webinars to provide lessons
learned from the FY 2022 NSGP cycle and, most importantly, share valuable
information on what nonprofits should consider now in preparation for the FY
2023 NSGP application submission cycle. Each webinar will contain similar
content including an opportunity for nonprofits to provide a platform to
share NSGP investment accomplishments, feedback, and ask questions. You Must Register in Advance: When: December 8, 2022 Time: 03:00 PM ET (US and Canada) Register in advance for this meeting: https://fema.connectsolutions.com/ehnjunvdpxep/event/registration.html When: December 13, 2022 Time: 03:00 PM ET (US and Canada) https://fema.connectsolutions.com/e51cutauazfn/event/registration.html After registering, you will receive a confirmation email
containing information about joining the Adobe Connect meeting. Please check
both junk/spam as some email filters may redirect the attendance confirmation
email. For any questions regarding these sessions or to request special
accommodations, please contact FEMA-NSGP@fema.dhs.gov.
With honor and
integrity, we will safeguard |
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