Thursday, July 2, 2020

Fund for Environmental Journalism. July 2020




SEJ's Fund for Environmental Journalism Awards $76,760 in Story Project Grants in First Round of Rapid Response Grants 2020

The Society of Environmental Journalists' Fund for Environmental Journalism has awarded $76,760 for 22 new story projects selected through the first round of Rapid Response story project grants on a wide range of environmental issues and regions. Through these grants, SEJ will:

·    Fund Journalists: 33 professional journalists, photographers, and editors will receive stipends of up to $2,000 each.

·    Increase Representation: More than 60% of the funds were awarded to story projects focused on under-represented communities or diverse perspectives on environmental issues.

·    Support Local Stories: More than 80% of the story projects focus on a local or regional issue, ranging from Haiti's coastal fisheries to environmental health in Alaska's Arctic north.

"As tens of thousands of journalists are laid off or furloughed, new funding for local environmental journalism on under-represented communities and undercovered issues is critical," says Meaghan Parker, SEJ's executive director. "Environmental challenges most severely affect our most vulnerable communities. But as the COVID-19 crisis exacerbates the media's ongoing financial crisis, those stories are even less likely to be told. Through our Rapid Response grants, we are seeking to help fill the gaps in coverage by directly supporting independent environmental journalism."

For the last 10 years, SEJ's Fund for Environmental Journalism has helped foundation partners and individual donors support journalism projects that are editorially independent and independently juried. Support for the Rapid Response grants comes from The Hewlett FoundationThe Bullitt FoundationWalton Family Foundation and other foundation and individual donors to the Fund for Environmental Journalism.

"SEJ is extremely grateful to our generous foundation funders and to the individual donors who make the Fund for Environmental Journalism possible," said Parker. "Thanks to their investment, environmental journalists are able to keep doing what they do best: find and tell the world's stories."

In response to the COVID-19 crisis, SEJ's Rapid Response grants are designed to support journalists' health and livelihoods by focusing on stipends rather than travel funds. A new simpler judging process maintains SEJ's independent jury process but with a faster turnaround from submission to award. "Many thanks to our volunteer judges for thoughtfully reviewing the high number of quality applications that we received," said Parker.

SEJ is accepting applications for Round 2 of Rapid Response grants on a rolling basis. Topics eligible for consideration include: Climate or conservation in North America; oceans and coasts globally; water security in the United States; and the Mississippi River basin. Apply today.

The recipients of the Fund for Environmental Journalism Rapid Response grants (Round 1):



COVID-19 crisis continues to disproportionately harm Black, Indigenous, and Latinx people and other communities of color

The COVID-19 crisis has not passed and continues to disproportionately harm Black, Indigenous, and Latinx people and other communities of color. The pandemic has revealed how the communities hardest hit are often the same communities that suffer from high levels of pollution and poor access to healthcare. The fight for environmental justice cannot be separated from the fight for racial justice.

Unacceptable....One answer the Environmental Justice COVID-19 Act

Read more!

Photo by iStockphoto.com/LFO62
| Take Action |

Unacceptable

Our nation is in the midst of a public health crisis brought on by a failed response to COVID-19. Making matters worse, an independent study has found that Black people are more than twice as likely to die from the virus than white people. This is unacceptable. A new bill, the Environmental Justice COVID-19 Act, will help investigate and address the disproportionate effects COVID-19 has had on Black communities.

Please help us get it passed.

Racism is Killing the Planet. July 2020

Read more!

Photo by Mark Peterson/Redux
| Sierra Magazine |

Racism Is Killing the Planet

“It’s no exaggeration to say that racism and white supremacy harm all of us,” says Hop Hopkins, the Sierra Club’s director of strategic partnerships. “In addition to robbing us of our humanity, racism is also killing the planet we all share. An idea—a long-overdue realization—is growing in the environmental movement. I really believe in my heart of hearts—after a lifetime of thinking and talking about these issues—that we will never survive the climate crisis without ending white supremacy.



Read more!

Photo courtesy of Jonathon Berman
| Article |

A Movement Moment

“The Sierra Club is committed to meeting this moment,” says Sierra Club president Ramón Cruz. “The Board of Directors has officially signed onto the platform of The Movement for Black Lives, demanding an end to police brutality and white supremacy, and defunding the police in favor of investing in Black communities.

"What’s happening now may seem unprecedented, but it’s not. It’s an extension and a deepening of the work that’s long been central to the Sierra Club."



Read more!

Photo courtesy of Javier Sierra
| En Español |

Peace Will Come When Justice is Done

The marches and rallies in support of The Movement for Black Lives have been overwhelmingly peaceful, amid the violent repression they have suffered, fanned by Donald Trump’s incendiary rhetoric. Regardless of his attempts to asphyxiate everything that is decent in our country, his construction of a wall around the White House, and his hiding from the American people, Trump now lives right across the street from what used to be Lafayette Square, which DC Mayor Muriel Bowser renamed Black Lives Matter Plaza earlier this month. The country and its political system must work for all of us, no matter where we are from, our gender, or the color of our skin.

"There will be no peace without justice—for all."





Photo by iStockphoto.com/LFO62
| Take Action |

Recovery Live! Supporting Families of Adults Who Experience SMI and/or SUD Thursday | July 23, 2020 | 2:00–3:00 p.m. EDT

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Wednesday, July 1, 2020

GCC's Equitable Adaptation Legal & Policy Toolkit. July 2020


Save the Date:
Launching GCC's Equitable
Adaptation Legal & Policy Toolkit

Wednesday, July 29, 2020
1 PM ET / 10 AM PT


Please join the Georgetown Climate Center on Wednesday, July 29, 2020, for a webinar launching GCC’s new Equitable Adaptation Legal & Policy Toolkit, an online resource for community-based organizations and state and local governments working to develop and implement equitable adaptation solutions.

The effects of climate change disproportionately burden low-income communities and communities of color, who already face significant economic, social, and environmental challenges. The cumulative impacts of pollution, racism, and political and economic disenfranchisement make it difficult for these communities to withstand and recover from extreme heat, flooding, and other climate impacts. The Equitable Adaptation Legal & Policy Toolkit explores best emerging practices, legal and policy tools, and case studies to help state and local governments work with communities to develop and implement climate adaptation solutions that achieve beneficial outcomes for all.

The Equitable Adaptation Legal & Policy Toolkit was co-created by GCC staff and a panel of advisors, and was informed by the insights and expertise of a network of local, state, and federal adaptation practitioners; community-based organization leaders; and other partners.

The full Equitable Adaptation Legal & Policy Toolkit will be available on July 29.

GCC would like to thank the Kresge Foundation and the other generous funders who support GCC's work for making this project possible.



Contact climate@georgetown.edu for questions about the webinar.
Contact Tiffany.Ganthier@georgetown.edu for questions about the toolkit.

DHS Announces Grant Allocations for Fiscal Year 2020 Preparedness Awards. July 2020


FEMA ADVISORY – June 30, 2020

As part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) ongoing efforts to support state, local, tribal, and territorial partners, Acting Secretary Chad F. Wolf today announced final allocations of $385 million for seven Fiscal Year (FY) 2020 DHS competitive preparedness grant programs. These allocations, together with the more than $1.3 billion in non-competitive grant funding announced by DHS in February and April, total nearly $1.8 billion in FY 2020 granted to assist states, local areas, tribal and territorial governments, nonprofit agencies, and the private sector with their preparedness efforts.
The FY2020 grant guidance continues to focus on the nation’s highest risk areas and national priorities. Grant recipients under the State Homeland Security Grant Program (SHSP) and Urban Area Security Initiative (UASI) will be required to dedicate a minimum of 20 percent of awards to address four priority areas: cybersecurity (5 percent); soft target and crowded places (5 percent); information and intelligence sharing (5 percent); and emerging threats (5 percent).
The full DHS announcement is available on the DHS website. Further information on DHS preparedness grant programs is available at www.dhs.gov and www.fema.gov/grants.

Systems Failure: Policing Can’t Be Reformed: Why Defunding and Abolishing is the Common-Sense Approach



Monday, July 13, 2020
12:30 pm PT / 3:30 pm ET
Communities across the country are rising up and demanding that policymakers reallocate budgets by divesting from the police and investing directly in Black communities. This webinar will explore what “defund” means, its connection to police abolition, how “anti-Blackness” must be confronted before any system can provide safety and justice, and why PolicyLink rejected police reform in favor of systems transformation aligned with the demands of this historic moment.

Featured Speakers:
  • Michael McAfee, President and CEO, PolicyLink
  • Rachel Herzing, Executive Director, Center for Political Education
  • Anne Price, President, Insight Center for Community Economic Development
  • Anand Subramanian, Managing Director, PolicyLink
REGISTER NOW


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Dr. Victor McCrary, ASI Fellow, is the new vice-chair of the National Science Board (NSB)





According to a May 7 announcement from the independent body of advisors to both the President and the Congress on policy matters related to science and engineering and education in science and engineering, Dr. McCrary will serve in this position for the next two years.

Currently, Dr. McCrary is in his fourth year of service on the NSB. He has served on the External Engagement Committee and chaired the Honorary Awards Subcommittee and the Skilled Technical Workforce Task Force which led the NSB’s The Skilled Technical Workforce: Crafting America’s Science and Engineering Enterprise report issued in 2019.

McCrary is vice president for research and graduate programs at the University of the District of Columbia. Previously, he was vice chancellor for research at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and the first vice president for research and economic development at Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD.

McCrary was the business area executive for science & technology at The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, where he directed internal research and development funding to develop new core competencies and technologies in the areas of national security and space.

He started his career at AT&T Bell Laboratories as a Member of Technical Staff and then as a program manager and division chief at the National Institute of Standards and Technology. McCrary has authored or co-authored over 60 technical papers and co-edited two books in his career. He is a former national president of the National Organization for the Professional Advancement of Black Chemists and Chemical Engineers (NOBCChE) and a Fellow of the American Chemical Society.

The National Science Board and the National Science Foundation (NSF) director jointly pursue the goals and function of the NSF.

NSB identifies issues critical to NSF’s future and establishes the agency’s policies within the framework of applicable national policies set forth by the President and the Congress. The Board also serves as an independent body of advisors to both the President and the Congress on policy matters related to science and engineering and education in science and engineering. The President appoints NSB’s 24 members—selected for their eminence in research, education, and records of distinguished service—for staggered six-year terms.ident appoints NSB’s 24 members—selected for their eminence in research, education, and records of distinguished service—for staggered six-year terms.


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African Scientific Institute,



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