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EDEN’s Role in Disaster Education Becky Koch, EDEN Chair North Dakota State University.

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Presentation on theme: "EDEN’s Role in Disaster Education Becky Koch, EDEN Chair North Dakota State University."— Presentation transcript:

1 EDEN’s Role in Disaster Education Becky Koch, EDEN Chair North Dakota State University

2 EDEN History 1993 Midwest floods – lessons learned CSREES grant to Iowa, Illinois & Missouri North Central Region committee 1997 – started becoming national 2002 CSREES training grant 2005 – all 50 states and three territories members

3 EDEN Mission Share educational resources to reduce the impact of disasters Interdisciplinary and multi-state programs Linkages with federal, state and local agencies & organizations Anticipation of future disaster education needs Timely communication & information delivery to meet audience needs Credible, reliable information

4 Disaster Phases Preparedness Prevention Response Recovery Mitigation

5 EDEN Institutional Members All 50 states + 3 territories 1862 & 1890 Land Grants Sea Grants CSREES

6 What is EDEN? Primarily a network Some programming Dedicated “volunteers” representing more 20 different program areas in various positions

7 EDEN Executive Committee Chair Becky Koch, ND, Communications Chair-elect Dave Filson, PA, Emergency Preparedness & Response Secretary Virginia Morgan, AL, Communications Past Chair Ed Jones, NC, Ext. Administration Marketing – Linda Williams, MT, County FCS Agent Professional Development – Eric Evans, MO, Em. Mgmt. Information Clearinghouse – Rick Atterberry, IL, Communications Annual Meeting – Sam Comstock, VT, Livestock

8 EDEN Executive Committee 1890s – Dawn Mellion-Patin, LA, Agriculture Sea Grant –Bob Bacon, SC Sea Grant CSREES Liaisons – Joe Wysocki and Bill Hoffman ECOP Liaison – Larry Arrington, FL Homeland Security Project Director – Steve Cain, IN Communication Specialist – Abigail Borron, IN Web Manager – Pat Skinner, LA Webmaster – Summer Prisock, LA

9 All Disasters are Local

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15 Local Extension educators: Must be prepare their families Must prepare their offices Can help prepare their communities

16 www.EDEN.lsu.edu Database of member resources State information, including institutional delegates EDEN-developed materials – National Preparedness Month, online courses

17 www.EDEN.lsu.edu Intranet – only organizational information –Issue page development –Operating guidelines, strategic plan draft, meeting minutes –Marketing materials

18 Online Courses Plant Biosecurity Management Course, 2006 Edition –Created by University of Missouri

19 Online Courses OnGuard: Protecting America’s Food System –Created by University of Minnesota

20 Online Courses USDA’s Roles in the National Response Plan –Created by North Dakota State University

21 Online Courses Ready Business –A collaborative effort by EDEN and DHS –Community development specialists

22 Online Courses Pandemic Preparedness for Businesses

23 Online Courses Ready Business + 4-H

24 Online Courses Pandemic Influenza Preparedness for Faith-Based Organizations –In cooperation with CDC

25 Online Courses Animal Agrosecurity and Emergency Management Course –University of Kentucky

26 eXtension Pioneer Communities of Practice –Agrosecurity –Flooding

27 Southern Region Planning Input from all program committees Draft guidelines, policies and action items for Extension disaster education and management Possible template for other regions

28 Animal Agrosecurity Conferences Develop partnerships & plans Extension, state vet, Dept. of Ag, livestock assns, Emergency Mgmt., Health, etc. Coming – food security conferences

29 Avian Influenza Team South Dakota State & Maryland Preparedness & response Coordinate with other entities Develop information, including in Spanish Train Extension educators Related eXtension resources

30 Relationships Dept. of Homeland Security Other USDA agencies Non-governmental organizations

31 EDEN Support – FY06 $290,000 from CSREES Food and Ag Defense Initiative Fund $190,000 from CSREES supplemental funds Immeasurable value from member institutions – 2002 educator survey estimated $2 million

32 EDEN is Us EDEN “staff” – 1.05 FTEs at Purdue and.75 at LSU –Coordination, communications, Web support All others “volunteers” EDEN is only as strong as delegates contribute to make it

33 What You Can Do Share resources in the EDEN database & by e-mail Promote EDEN resources Attend the annual meeting Support staff development

34 What You Can Do Encourage educators to work with county Emergency Management, learn NIMS, possibly have EOC seat Develop institutional communication & continuity plans Develop state and county disaster education teams/program plans

35 Brainstorm More What You Can Do Delegate roles and responsibilities committee chaired by Dawn Mellion- Patin, Southern University

36 EDEN’s Work Former Secretary Johanns commended EDEN at Infragard and International Symposium on Agroterrorism Kevin Cox, Hope Crisis Response Network CEO – “If more people used EDEN resources, our job would be easier.” Positive CSREES Program Review

37 All Disasters are Local – So is Extension It’s a Matter of When, not If – Be Prepared

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