Embracing Partnership and Realizing the Co-benefits of Collaboration. Spencer Plumb, National Forest Foundation, Southern Rockies Region, Flagstaff, AZ.

Presenter Information

Spencer Plumb

Location

USU Eccles Conference Center

Event Website

https://www.restoringthewest.org/

Streaming Media

Abstract

Public land management agencies face mounting challenges that include rapid ecological shifts, increases in the number and types of users, declining budgets, and demands for restoration to ensure the continued delivery of ecosystem services. The added management pressure faced by federal land agencies highlights the need for social and institutional changes. One positive institutional change driven by the need for increasing capacity has been the emergence of a variety of collaborative partnerships between federal agencies and national, state and local level organizations. In the case of the Forest Service, the National Forest Foundation is developing a variety of partnership models across the country that connect with businesses, municipalities, state agencies and other nonprofits. From running collaborative workshops to managing thinning contracts, this presentation will highlight examples of the different approaches and discuss the conditions that help make these working relationships successful. Sharing land management and stewardship responsibilities represents an opportunity to deepen the interdependent relationships between public land management agencies and the communities they operate in and serve.

Comments

Spencer Plumb is a social scientist specializing in forest and water policy. He earned his Ph.D. in Natural Resources from the University of Idaho in 2016 and holds a Master’s degree in Environmental Science and Policy from Northern Arizona University. He is currently the Southern Rockies Program Associate at the National Forest Foundation working out of Flagstaff, Arizona.

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Oct 17th, 9:20 AM Oct 17th, 9:50 AM

Embracing Partnership and Realizing the Co-benefits of Collaboration. Spencer Plumb, National Forest Foundation, Southern Rockies Region, Flagstaff, AZ.

USU Eccles Conference Center

Public land management agencies face mounting challenges that include rapid ecological shifts, increases in the number and types of users, declining budgets, and demands for restoration to ensure the continued delivery of ecosystem services. The added management pressure faced by federal land agencies highlights the need for social and institutional changes. One positive institutional change driven by the need for increasing capacity has been the emergence of a variety of collaborative partnerships between federal agencies and national, state and local level organizations. In the case of the Forest Service, the National Forest Foundation is developing a variety of partnership models across the country that connect with businesses, municipalities, state agencies and other nonprofits. From running collaborative workshops to managing thinning contracts, this presentation will highlight examples of the different approaches and discuss the conditions that help make these working relationships successful. Sharing land management and stewardship responsibilities represents an opportunity to deepen the interdependent relationships between public land management agencies and the communities they operate in and serve.

https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/rtw/2017/Oct17/2