WHAT

Partnerships & Community Engagement

A crucial part of creating fire adapted communities is the principle that it is not up to any one organization or individual to “do it all.” Fire adaptation requires all of us to work together, engaging with partners and our whole community in inclusive and meaningful ways.

True community engagement is about more than information delivery and communication. Active engagement requires us to listen deeply and to learn as much as we teach. We, as practitioners and researchers, cannot be extractive in how we approach community members and partners. We must be supportive of a variety of lived experiences, cultural differences and language access needs. Resources like these toolkits created by the Washington State Fire Adapted Communities Learning Network help communities get a jump-start on wildfire preparation in an inclusive and accessible way.

Working with community members to further wildfire mitigation and adaptation can take many different forms. The Neighborhood Ambassador approach developed and shared by Wildfire Adapted Partnership is one example.

Regardless of the methods you use to engage your community, our approaches to community engagement must be as diverse as our communities themselves. This resource page includes tools, activities and information that will help foster and deepen partnerships and community engagement in your fire adaptation work.

Considerations

1
Effective partnerships and community engagement depend upon engagement with the whole community. Consider your community needs. Are all those who live and reside within your area represented in your engagement efforts? If not, work with partners to help develop approaches and partnerships that are inclusive.
2
Research exists which can help! Consider the available social science and work to better understand the social landscape within your community.

EXPLORE Partnerships & Community Engagement RESOURCES

  • WHO

  • WHERE

  • FORMAT

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Before Wildfire Strikes: A guide to improving wildfire preparedness and living with fire in Hood River County

Guide / Pamphlet / Handout
Oregon State University Extension
This resource includes practical tips and guidance about home hardening and creating defensible space, planning for wildfire on woodland properties by implementing management practices like thinning and fuel breaks, creating an emergency preparedness plans for families, and preparing for wildfire smoke by monitoring air quality and improving indoor air. It also explores how wildfires have... Read More

​Access and Functional Needs Library

Website / Interactive Map
California Governor's Office of Emergency Services
The Access and Functional Needs Library is a comprehensive clearinghouse for access and functional needs-specific best practices, guidance documents, videos, and more. Read More

“School’s Out, Now What?” Activity Guides, Wildfire Education, & Go Bag Activities for the Whole Family

Blog Post / Story
Jessica Sabine Brothers
“School’s out, now what?” seems to be a common question for many parents these days as summer is in full-swing and physical distancing practices continue across the country.  Families that were affected by school closures have pivoted right into summer activities, for better or worse.  Many of us are scrambling; youth activities have been cancelled or... Read More
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Photo Credit: Ed Keith, Deschutes County
Community Profile
Fire Adaptation in the Field
Barnegat Township, New Jersey

The New Jersey Fire Safety Council worked with Sustainable Jersey to create an innovative partnership for wildfire resiliency. Building upon Sustainable Jersey’s successful municipal outreach program, partners worked to add wildfire adaptation actions to the menu of actions which count toward a community’s achievement of Bronze or Silver certification. This creative partnership enabled wildfire to become part of the conversation for communities working toward sustainability certification in New Jersey. With 800,000 people living near the 1.1 million acres of Pine Barrens, partnerships like these are essential to fire adaptation in New Jersey.

Photo Credit: Matt Hecht, U.S. National Guard shared via Flickr Creative Commons