The PG&E Corporation Foundation Announces Recipients of $400,000 in Grants to Support Local Climate Change Resilience Planning
Funding focuses on disadvantaged, vulnerable, and historically underserved communities
The program awarded
“In California, the communities we are privileged to serve face a growing threat from a changing climate,” said
The Better Together Resilient Communities grant program, now in its fifth and final year, has invested
Project Proposals
The Tribal EcoRestoration Alliance’s project, “Fire as Medicine,” will build capacity and provide Native American tribal members with relevant firefighting certifications to participate in prescribed burns, purchase equipment for participating in prescribed burns, and share traditional tribal knowledge and techniques with a broader audience of practitioners.
“The Tribal EcoRestoration Alliance was founded in 2019 with seed funding from PG&E’s Better Together Resilient Communities grant,” said
The Blue Lake Rancheria’s project, “Humboldt County COAD Launch,” will fund 12-months of rapid start-up activities for the recently formed Humboldt County COAD (Community Organizations Active in Disaster) network, which is designed to help local non-governmental organizations prepare and coordinate for disaster response. The grant will help establish a network of communications in the region, enable disaster response training, and support outreach and information events.
“This support from PG&E’s Better Together Giving Program, in partnership with the
The Yurok Tribe’s project will use prescribed and cultural burns to collect scientific data on the impacts to soil quality, wildfire fuel, and invasive species and serve as a framework for future studies and wildfire mitigation plans. The project will also support food security by creating a traditional foods calendar to plan for climate-driven changes in seasonality for the foods they depend on for nutrition and culture.
"As a way to keep the environment in balance, Yurok people have implemented prescribed and cultural burns within ancestral territory since time immemorial,” said
The City of Richmond’s project, “Emergency Cooling Structures for Extreme Heat Events,” will increase access to cooling centers by installing cooling misters and canopies in local parks or community centers. Unsheltered residents will be trained and hired to staff the cooling centers and do outreach, along with a broader effort to educate the public in the ways climate change will directly affect the community and how to reduce that impact.
“The City of Richmond is dedicated to building community resilience to climate change,” said
About the Program
Grant proposals for the Better Together Resilient Communities program were evaluated for the extent to which they were designed to build community resilience and capacity to withstand climate-related hazards. Priority was given to proposals that demonstrated past or projected exposure to climate hazards and that addressed the needs of disadvantaged and/or vulnerable communities. To be eligible, applicants must be a governmental organization, educational institution or 501(c)3 nonprofit organization. All applicants must include a local or tribal government within
Please check the Better Together Resilient Communities website for more information.
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