Public – Private Partnership Launches New AmeriCorps Program to Help Communities
Build Resilience
Federal agencies, The Rockefeller Foundation, and Cities of Service
announce Resilience AmeriCorps initiative as part of Administration’s effort to
build climate resilience nationwide
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Building on the President’s Climate Action
Plan, today the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS), the
Department of Energy (DOE), the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), The Rockefeller Foundation, and
Cities of Service, announced a new commitment to launch a Resilience AmeriCorps
pilot program.
Resilience AmeriCorps will help communities
plan and implement efforts necessary to become more resilient to shocks and
stresses, including extreme weather and other impacts of climate change. Through
the pilot program, AmeriCorps VISTA members will serve in up to 12 communities
in 2015-2016 to support the development of resilience strategies that will both
help communities better manage the unavoidable and avoid the unmanageable. AmeriCorps VISTA members will build volunteer
networks to carry out program initiatives, and create education and outreach
materials to strengthen awareness and citizen engagement in low-income
communities.
“National
service is a powerful and proven solution to local issues communities face
today, including making communities more resilient, especially those most
vulnerable in the face of disasters,” said Corporation for National and
Community Service CEO Wendy Spencer. “This partnership will expand the role of
our AmeriCorps VISTA members in strengthening communities and will build on
AmeriCorps VISTA’s long history of partnering with federal agencies,
philanthropy, and city leadership. I am confident that the work of our
AmeriCorps members will have a significant impact on these communities and its
residents.”
“At the
Department of Energy, we are strong advocates for public-private partnerships
to enhance the resilience of our Nation," said Deputy Energy Secretary Liz
Sherwood-Randall. “Through this initiative, we will help some of our most
vulnerable communities become more resilient and get better prepared to meet
the challenges of climate change and extreme weather."
“EPA understands that environmentally
overburdened communities are often those most in need of resources to help
prepare for and respond to climate change,” said EPA Administrator Gina
McCarthy. “We are excited to support the new Resilience AmeriCorps pilot
program and look forward to its potential for encouraging service opportunities
that will meet local needs.”
"Crisis is increasingly part of
the 21st century, which is why it is imperative that communities – large and
small – place a premium on building resilience. With collaborative efforts
across all sectors we can ensure our country is prepared for the inevitable
shocks and gnawing stresses so that disruptions no longer become disasters,”
said Dr. Judith Rodin, President of The
Rockefeller Foundation. “The new Resilience AmeriCorps program will
create a new generation of talented individuals who are committed to building
resilience, and who can support cities today while deepening the bench for
innovative leadership in years to come. Resilience is a journey, not a
destination, and the time to embark on it is now.”
"As communities around the nation
become more vulnerable to severe extreme weather and climate related events,
NOAA and its partners are working to build resilient communities and
economies," said Holly Bamford, Ph.D., assistant NOAA administrator for
NOAA’s National Ocean Service performing duties of the assistant secretary of
commerce for conservation and management.
"These pilot projects are an exciting step in providing communities
with the tools, information, and services they need to become more
resilient."
“We
are excited to help lead the country’s first Resilience AmeriCorps with our
federal partners and the Rockefeller Foundation,” said Cities of Service
Executive Director Myung J. Lee. “Cities of Service works with our mayors to
help engage their citizens, improve their communities with impact volunteering,
and achieve results. We are glad to be a part of this program that will
strengthen cities structurally as well as socially, toward greater national
resilience."
The pilot program is one of a series of
actions the White House announced in support of the Administration’s commitment
to building resilience in vulnerable communities. Resilience AmeriCorps was
developed in response to a recommendation made by the President’s State, Local,
and Tribal Leaders Task Force on Climate Preparedness and Resilience.
On Wednesday, July 15 at 2 p.m. EDT the White
House will host a Google+
Hangout to discuss the important role of community
service in helping vulnerable communities become more resilient. The event will
feature speakers from the Administration, The Rockefeller Foundation, Cities of
Service, and local communities engaged in building community resilience. Members
of the public are encouraged to ask the participants questions during the
livestreamed conversation using the Twitter handle #ActOnClimate.
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