Last day to apply for EQUIP financial assistance!

All New Mexico agricultural producers who would like to be considered for financial assistance under general 2021 Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) or special conservation initiatives need to apply by tomorrow, January 8, 2021. Please see the news release for instructions to sign up for fiscal year 2021 Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP).

Ag Producers Should Take Advantage of Federal Program Assistance by January 8, 2021 Sign up Deadline

The United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS), Assistant State Conservationist for Programs Kenneth Branch, announced today that a sign up for fiscal year 2021 Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) is underway. All New Mexico agricultural producers who would like to be considered for financial assistance under general EQIP or special conservation initiatives need to apply by TOMORROW, January 8, 2021.

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While producers can apply year-round for EQIP assistance, this application cutoff announcement is specific to the following National Initiatives, State Initiatives and Local Allocations:

1)  General EQIP (Local Allocations)

2)  Organic (Certified and Transitioning)

3)  On-Farm Energy

4)  Conservation Activity Plans

5)  Strike Force Initiative

6)  Lesser Prairie Chicken Initiative

7)  NM High Tunnel (including Beginning Farmer and Rancher)

8)  Source Water

9)  National Water Quality Initiative (NWQI)

10)  New Mexico Wildlife Initiative

11)  Water SMART Initiative

12)  Socially Disadvantaged

13)  Beginning Farmer and Rancher

14)  Joint Chiefs

i. Greater Santa Fe Fireshed

15)  Tribal

16)  Water Management Entities (WME)

Producers can apply by visiting their local NRCS field office and submitting their Conservation Program Application (NRCS-CPA-1200) or those who have established a Client Gateway account may submit their application online. Producers need to receive a farm and tract number from the Farm Service Agency (FSA) by the application deadline.

As we roll out a new Farm Bill to our nation’s farmers, ranchers, and private forests, Kevin Norton, Acting Chief of the NRCS announced some of our FY2021 Agency’s priorities;

  • Better understanding of our customer needs and improve overall customer service.

  • Streamline our processes and program delivery to best serve our customers.

  • We recognize the importance of partnerships and relationships.

  • Our success is based on our locally led process.

  • Elevate the importance of soil health across our agency through outreach and communication efforts to further enhance and promote the delivery of soil health principles to staff, customers and partners.

    EQIP provides a targeted, science-based approach to restoring and protecting habitat while strengthening rural economies and cultivating collaboration among conservation partners. EQIP provides a flat rate payment to producers to install conservation practices, such as Cover Crops, Range Planting, Windbreaks, Residue Management No-Till, Riparian Forest Buffers, Watering Facilities, Fence, Tree Planting, and Wildlife Habitat Management.

    NRCS provides leadership in a partnership effort to help people conserve, maintain and improve our natural resources and environment. You can find more Programs at NRCS Programs. For more information about NRCS New Mexico visit NRCS New Mexico.


- USDA is an equal opportunity provider, employer, and lender. -

Wildfire Wednesdays #38: Rx Fire Outreach Toolkit - Tribal Relations Peer Learning Session

Hi Fireshed Members,

This will be our last Wildfire Wednesdays before the holidays. The newsletter will resume on January 6th. As you all know, making our communities safe from wildfire is a year-round, incremental process. With that in mind, please follow along with the Wildfire Wednesday newsletters in the New Year to for step-by-step guidance to get ready for wildfire in 2021.

This week’s Wildfire Wednesdays newsletter features:

  • Put Fire to Work: A toolkit for communicating the importance of prescribed fire as a tool for wildfire resilience

  • Peer learning session Friday 12/18: Utilizing 638 for Tribal Relations and Promoting Tribal Fuels Treatments

Happy Holidays,

Gabe

Put Fire to Work: A Prescribed Fire Outreach Toolkit for Partners and Practitioners

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We are very excited to feature Put Fire to Work in this week’s Wildfire Wednesday. This user-friendly toolkit created by the Washington Prescribed Fire Council is a great resource for finding effective messages about the importance of prescribed fire as a tool for community wildfire resilience and forest health. The site features message templates as well as step-by-step guides for developing outreach that will be effective for the particular context that you live or work within.

In addition to the outreach content stored on this site, the site’s user-friendly layout is noteworthy. Digital toolkits like this serve help to take some of the work out of social media outreach and new-media approaches.

Click here to check out the Put Fire to Work website.

If you use the Put Fire to Work toolkit, don’t forget to show them your appreciation on social media.

Utilizing 638 for Tribal Relations

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Peer learning session on Friday, December 18th, from 1:30 – 3pm MST.

Click here to register.

Sponsored by the National Partnership Office and hosted by The National Forest Foundation.

During this peer learning session, attendees will:

  • Meet the new Director of the Forest Service Office of Tribal Relations,

  • Gain an understanding of the “638 self-determination demonstration authority” granted to the Forest Service in the 2018 Farm Bill,

  • Gain an understanding of the relationship between 638 and the Tribal Forest Protection Act,

  • Have the opportunity to ask questions of the panelists.

Suggested Audience:

Forest Service employees, tribal partners looking to implement projects through 638, and natural resource collaborators

U.S. Forest Service Speakers include:

  • Reed Robinson, Director, Office of Tribal Relations;

  • Alicia-Bell Sheeter, Management and Program Analyst, Office of Tribal Relations; and

  • Alison Leiman, Grants Policy Specialists, Business Operations.

This session will be recorded and a link to the recording will be emailed to all registrants. If you are unable to attend the peer learning session but are interested, please register to ensure you receive the follow-up email.

Wildfire Wednesdays #37: Chipping - Home Hardening - Eastern Jemez Landscape Futures

Hi Fireshed Members,

‘Tis the season for informational webinars about wildfire adaptation. Grab your favorite snack, send the link to a neighbor or colleague who might share your enthusiasm, and tune in to these great informational sessions to get ideas about how you can take action in your community this upcoming Spring.

This week’s edition of Wildfire Wednesday features:

  • Chipping Best Practices Webinar tomorrow, December 10th

  • A Wildfire Home Retrofit Workshop for fire professionals and educators (community leaders)

  • East Jemez Landscape Futures: A collaborative approach to post-fire

Stay safe,

Gabe 

Chipping Best Practices Webinar Tomorrow!

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1 PM MST on December 10

Join wildland mitigation subject matter expert Jeremy Taylor and RSG! Program staff for a Best Practices Webinar on Chipping Programs.

Click here for webinar registration.

 We’ll cover:

  • Considerations when launching a chipper program

  • Promoting the program/engaging the community to participate

  • Operational considerations

  • Funding opportunities/mechanisms

We also will be introducing a new opportunity available to program members to support chipping programs in their response area.

A Wildfire Home Retrofit Workshop for fire professionals and educators

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December 15th, at 10am MST

For the full agenda, and to register, click here.

Fire professionals and educators are invited to join our FREE virtual Wildfire Home Retrofit Workshop. Please share this invitation with your peers or other fire professionals and educators you know.

During this interactive workshop, attendees will learn:

  • How homes are threatened during a wildfire

  • How to identify a home’s ember vulnerabilities and prioritize retrofits based on cost, effort and location scenarios

  • How to effectively communicate home hardening techniques to homeowners throughout the U.S.

There will be opportunities to share ideas, experiences and best practices as well as opportunities to ask questions during multiple Q&A sessions.

East Jemez Landscape Futures: A collaborative approach to post-fire

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December 15th, 12pm MST

Click here to register!

The East Jemez Landscape Futures (EJLF) project is a collaborative, landscape-scale approach to help guide future planning and research efforts in the severely altered landscapes of the eastern Jemez Mountains. EJLF seeks to address uncertainty by building a network of land managers, scientists, artists, NGOs and interested community members to inform future management, identify research needs, and capture stories from individuals and communities who were affected by these changes.

This webinar will share the EJLF experience and lessons learned responding to the complex questions of post-fire landscapes. Hosted by the Burned Area Learning Network and the Southwest Fire Science Consortium

Presenters: Colin Haffey, Sasha Stortz, and Savannah Lehnert

Wildfire Wednesdays #36: Structure Loss Data - Pile Burns on SFNF

Hi Fireshed Members,   

As winter sets in, this is a great time to take a step back and make a plan to prepare your home and property for wildfire in 2021. Starting to make a plan now will allow you to work efficiently in the spring and will be a lot less stressful that trying to plan and complete projects in the spring and summer, which are always busy.  

This Wildfire Wednesdays features:  

  • Data for structures burned by wildfire in each state 

  • Prescribed fire and pile burning in Northern New Mexico 

Best,

Gabe 

Data for Structures Burned by Wildfire in Each State: A Tool to Communicate Wildfire Effects 

The traditional way — and the easiest way — to compare wildfire seasons is the number of acres burned. But blackened acres does not tell the whole story about the effects of fires on humans. A new, user-friendly database by Headwaters Economics identifies the number of structures, by state, destroyed by wildfires between 2005 and 2020. This is a powerful tool for communicating the importance of preparing our home ignition zones for wildfire.   

To learn more about the tool, click here.  

To use the tool for yourself, click here.  

 

Santa Fe National Forest May Implement Hyde Park, Thompson Ridge Pile Burns this Week 

Dec. 1, 2020 - Fire managers on the Santa Fe National Forest (SFNF) are looking at a potential window this week to implement the previously announced Hyde Park and Thompson Ridge prescribed pile burns to reduce the risk of wildfire. 

The 132-acre Hyde Park pile burn near Black Canyon Campground on the Espanola Ranger District is designed to eliminate woody debris from a nearby thinning project within the Greater Santa Fe Fireshed.  

The 1-acre Thompson Ridge slash pit prescribed burn is a collaborative effort between the Jemez Ranger District and the surrounding area to promote Fire Adapted Communities.  

To learn more about these two pile burns, click here for the full news release.

Wildfire Wednesdays #35: Turkey and Leaves - Prescribed Burn Associations

Hi Fireshed Members,  

I hope you all have a happy and safe Thanksgiving. After the turkey and potatoes, if you want to work up a sweat without leaving your house, get your favorite family member to help you rake the yard and clean the gutters... I'm sure they’ll love it.  

This edition of Wildfire Wednesday is a brief one.  

Stay Safe,  

Gabe 

Prescribed Burn Associations: A Webinar by The Cohesive Strategy 

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Mark your calendars for Thursday, December 10th from 9 - 10:30am pst.  

As part of their ongoing Living with Wildland Fire learning series, The Western Region of the Fire Leadership Council presents a webinar about Prescribed Burn Associations and the different approaches they take in different places. Prescribed Burn Associations are more common in the Southeast part of the country and have been widely recognized as a powerful way to build local capacity and acceptance for the use of prescribed fire as a tool for wildfire risk reduction.  

Don’t take my word for it, check the webinar out yourself by clicking here.