From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Nov 3 10:35:18 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (PROGRAM ON CLIMATE CHANGE via Pcc_all via pccgrads) Date: Mon Nov 3 10:35:25 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] seminar of interest - Explorations in carbon management-Fri 11/3 at 3:30 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: ATM S 520 Atmospheric Sciences Colloquium Date Friday, November 7, 2025 Time 3:30 pm ? 4:50 pm PST Event interval Single day event Campus location Johnson Hall (JHN) Campus room JHN 075 Accessibility Contact atmadmin@uw.edu Event Types Academics, Lectures/Seminars Event sponsors Department of Atmospheric and Climate Science atmos.uw.edu atmadmin@uw.edu Description Speaker: Prof. Steve J. Davis, Professor of Earth System Science, Stanford University Title: Explorations in carbon management Host: Professor David Battisti, battisti@uw.edu Abstract: Prof. Davis will present three studies: one on CCS and CDR in mitigation scenarios and the climate implications of ?underdelivering?, one on the potential climate benefits and economics of seaweed farming, and one on the trade-offs of high-CDR and air quality in scenarios. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Pcc_all mailing list Pcc_all@u.washington.edu http://mailman21.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/pcc_all From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Nov 3 10:41:03 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (PROGRAM ON CLIMATE CHANGE via Pcc_all via pccgrads) Date: Mon Nov 3 10:41:14 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] CEI Seminar - Thursday, 11/06 - Alex Gagnon In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Join the Clean Energy Institute for the next speaker in their CEI Interdisciplinary Seminar Series on Thursday, November 6 with Prof. Alex Gagnon, Associate Professor of Oceanography at University of Washington and Co-founder and CEO of Banyu Carbon. Please see details below and in the attached flyer. Coffee & Career Chat * Thursday, 11/06 from 9:30 - 10:30 AM * NAN 291 * Open to all UW Grad students Seminar: Marine Carbon Dioxide Removal Powered by Photochemistry to Avoid the Worst Effects of Climate Change * Thursday, 11/06 from 4:00-5:00pm * NAN 181 * Open to public About the Speaker Dr. Alexander C. Gagnon is an Associate Professor of Chemical Oceanography at the University of Washington. He studies the mechanisms that control the skeletal growth and climate proxies in coral and plankton. His lab combines geochemical and materials science tools, like NanoSIMS and stable isotopes, with cultured marine organisms. Alex has undergraduate degrees in chemistry and molecular biology. He received a Ph.D. in Chemistry from Caltech and he completed a postdoc at the Department of Energy?s Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. He is an NSF CAREER awardee and Kavli Fellow. Dr. Gagnon also leads several efforts to evaluate, develop, and commercialize ocean-based carbon removal technologies. He was awarded an Activate Fellowship, which provides entrepreneurial training for scientists that are developing hardware technology in the climate, materials science, and defense sectors. For accessibility concerns, please contact event coordinator (myself) Danica Hendrickson at danicah@uw.edu. Nominate future speaker here (requires UW NetID to access form): https://forms.office.com/r/qXvNLHhkHg -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: CEI Seminar - 11-06-25 - Alex Gagnon.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 231113 bytes Desc: CEI Seminar - 11-06-25 - Alex Gagnon.pdf URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: CEI Seminar - 11-06-25 - Alex Gagnon.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 231113 bytes Desc: CEI Seminar - 11-06-25 - Alex Gagnon.pdf URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Pcc_all mailing list Pcc_all@u.washington.edu http://mailman21.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/pcc_all From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Thu Nov 6 07:34:33 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Clara Stanbury via pccgrads) Date: Thu Nov 6 07:36:29 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] P-GraSC Now Accepting Applications! Message-ID: Hello PCC, The Program on Climate Change Graduate Steering Committee (P-GraSC) is accepting applications! Please fill out this form before November 26 to be considered for the 2025-2026 PCC Graduate Steering Committee. We look forward to welcoming new members! More about P-GraSC Best, -- *Clara Stanbury (she/her)* *Graduate Research Assistant* *School of Oceanography * *University of Washington* cstanbur@uw.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Thu Nov 6 11:36:58 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Sophie Hurwitz via pccgrads) Date: Fri Nov 7 08:20:25 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Engage Course(CENV500) Applications! Message-ID: Hello! We want to remind students that applications are open for the winter graduate student course, CENV 500 (Communicating Science to the Public Effectively), also known as Engage. The applications close by next friday! See the additional information below. Please share with your department to help us share the news and get students in the course. Applications are at https://bit.ly/ENGAGE2026App and must be submitted by Friday, November 14th. Thank you so much! Best, Sophie Hurwitz ------------------------------ CENV 500: Communicating Science to the Public Effectively Winter 2025 3 credits (Credit/No Credit) Meets Wednesday / Friday 12:00-1:20 pm Whether you?re looking to give an unforgettable job talk, change a policymaker?s mind, or finally get your family to understand your research, the Engage course is a great professional development opportunity and learning experience. This is a discussion-based course for graduate students in the sciences that focuses on effective techniques for communicating science, with an emphasis on sharing your science with non-specialists. At the end of the quarter, each student will present a 20 minute public talk on their graduate research to be delivered during the 2026 Engage: Science Speaker Series. In this course, students will: - Develop and practice analogies to distill their research - Perfect their elevator pitches - Practice storytelling, audience consideration, and cultural competency - Play improv games to leverage improvisation as a public speaking tool - Engage in weekly readings and discussions - Hear from guest speakers on science communication Space is limited to 15 students, and the course fills quickly, often with an extensive waiting list. Thus, we have an application process and an expectation agreement which must be completed for a student to be considered. The student application is available here , and must be submitted by Friday, November 14th. General information about Engage: The Science Speaker Series and Seminar What others have written: Science Students Learn to Tell Stories The Seattle Times Crafting the Story Behind the Science A&S Perspectives Newsletter Engage Speaker Series: Where science meets storytelling UW Today If you have any questions about the course, please email Sophie Hurwitz, hurwitzs@uw.edu The Engage course and community invites all to apply. We strive to work with a diverse group of scientists and to create an inclusive space that lifts up the voices of individuals and enables them to be their fullest self in their science communication. If you anticipate needing accommodations for this class or the application, feel free to reach out directly to Sophie. [image: WN2026_flyer.png] -- *Sophie Hurwitz* *(they/them)* PhD Candidate| Hoppins Lab Department of Biochemistry University of Washington -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: WN2026_flyer.png Type: image/png Size: 397966 bytes Desc: not available URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Nov 10 10:56:21 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Miriam Bertram via Pcc_all via pccgrads) Date: Mon Nov 10 10:56:57 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] PCC Director Search-seeking your nominations and input by Mon Nov 17 Message-ID: Dear PCC Community, The College of the Environment is in the process of selecting the next Director of the Program on Climate Change. Becky Alexander accepted the position of Interim Chair of Atmospheric and Climate Science this spring and our interim director, Kyle Armour, will serve through December. We aim to have a permanent PCC director beginning in Winter 2026. The interim Dean of the College of the Environment, Joel Thornton, has assembled a search committee of T.J. Fudge (ESS, lead), Miriam Bertram (PCC Staff), Alison Gray (OCN), Becky Alexander (ATM), and Tara Kalia (OCN graduate student). Your input is of value to this process! Please take a quick moment to come up with a couple of UW faculty you think would do a great job. Self-nominations are also very welcome. The goal here is to cast a wide net and find the best candidates, It is also important that the Dean sees that the PCC is a vibrant and active program. Your participation in providing nominations is a measure of that vibrancy. If you find it hard to think of names, you can also send us your views on what is important in this search. Nominations and suggestions should be submitted to Miriam in the PCC office (uwpcc at uw.edu), and can be kept anonymous upon request. Nominees will be asked to answer a short series of questions about their vision for the PCC moving forward. The search committee is tasked with making recommendations to the Dean, who will then negotiate with potential directors. Please do express your enthusiasm and support for the PCC, and take that moment now, today, or as soon as possible. *Nominations will be accepted until MondayNovember 17.* A description of the current director responsibilities is attached. Thank you in advance for helping, T.J., Miriam, Tara, Alison and Becky -- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Itemized current duties of PCC director.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 85599 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Pcc_all mailing list Pcc_all@u.washington.edu http://mailman21.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/pcc_all From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Wed Nov 12 16:28:27 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Program on Climate Change via pccgrads) Date: Wed Nov 12 18:02:02 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] =?utf-8?q?RSVP_for_PCC_Third_Thursday_on_November_20th?= =?utf-8?b?ISDwn42C?= Message-ID: Hello PCC Grads, Big dark getting to you? Come scare away the winter blues at the November Program Climate Change (PCC) Third Thursday happy hour! This event will take place in the Biology Greenhouse on Thursday, November 20th from 5 pm to 7 pm. To give us a sense of how many people to expect, if you plan on coming, please RSVP here by the end of the day on Monday, November 17. What is Third Thursdays? The PCC Graduate Steering Committee (P-GraSC) is hosting a happy hour with food and drink provided every Third Thursday. We believe building community among scientists and academics is more important now than ever, and we are doing this in an effort to foster more connections across the climate space here at UW. We aim to create these connections by giving folks from different disciplines a place to come together to chat, eat pizza, and look at cool plants. Who can attend Third Thursdays? All UW graduate students, postdocs, faculty and staff who work on climate or climate-change related issues, regardless of college or affiliation, are welcome and encouraged to attend. Feel free to forward to a friend who fits that description and might enjoy this event! If you would like to keep up to date with PCC news, you can sign up for the email listserv here. Feel free to reach out if you have any questions about the event, and hope to see you there :) Best, Stella Heflin 2025-26 PCC Steering Committee -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Thu Nov 13 07:40:07 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Miriam Bertram via Pcc_all via pccgrads) Date: Thu Nov 13 07:40:43 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Reminder! Your PCC Director Nominations needed-accepted until Monday Nov 17 Message-ID: Dear PCC Community, Please take a moment, perhaps now, to nominate one or more people for the role of PCC Director. Also, nominee names are great but providing context for why the candidate(s) should be considered would help the committee a great deal. Nominations will be accepted until Monday November 17. Thank you! ------------------------ The College of the Environment is in the process of selecting the next Director of the Program on Climate Change. Becky Alexander accepted the position of Interim Chair of Atmospheric and Climate Science this spring and our interim director, Kyle Armour, will serve through December. We aim to have a permanent PCC director beginning in Winter 2026. The interim Dean of the College of the Environment, Joel Thornton, has assembled a search committee of T.J. Fudge (ESS, lead), Miriam Bertram (PCC Staff), Alison Gray (OCN), Becky Alexander (ATM), and Tara Kalia (OCN graduate student). Your input is of value to this process! Please take a quick moment to come up with a couple of UW faculty you think would do a great job. Self-nominations are also very welcome. The goal here is to cast a wide net and find the best candidates, It is also important that the Dean sees that the PCC is a vibrant and active program. Your participation in providing nominations is a measure of that vibrancy. If you find it hard to think of names, you can also send us your views on what is important in this search. Nominations and suggestions should be submitted to Miriam in the PCC office (uwpcc at uw.edu), and can be kept anonymous upon request. Nominees will be asked to answer a short series of questions about their vision for the PCC moving forward. The search committee is tasked with making recommendations to the Dean, who will then negotiate with potential directors. Please do express your enthusiasm and support for the PCC, and take that moment now, today, or as soon as possible. *Nominations will be accepted until Monday November 17.* A description of the current director responsibilities is attached. Thank you in advance for helping, T.J., Miriam, Tara, Alison and Becky -- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Itemized current duties of PCC director.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 85599 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Pcc_all mailing list Pcc_all@u.washington.edu http://mailman21.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/pcc_all From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Thu Nov 13 08:34:48 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Miriam Bertram via pccgrads) Date: Thu Nov 13 08:35:19 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Heads up--Wi Climate Communication Seminar (OCN/ESS/ATMOS 593)--speakers and topics Message-ID: Hello PCC grads, I've had several conversations and am working with lots of suggestions as to the topics and speakers for the Climate Communication Seminar this winter quarter. We are focusing on topics that can help everyone give a great talk to a general audience. I'd like to know what you think. Topics on my list so far (some speakers are confirmed, others are on my wish list): 1. How to explain radiation balance, greenhouse effect and models and projects. All with a hopeful outlook. (Tom Ackerman and Kyle Armour) 2. Summarizing the SPM for a general audience, haiku as an example (Greg Johnson) 3. Goal setting, project design and evaluation (UW Office of Educational Assessment, Angela Davis-Unger) 4. Risk Communication: Tania Busch Isaksen and Meredith Li-Vollmer 5. Misinformation and Reaching Across Differences 6. Emotional responses to climate change (hope, joy, grief, anxiety). 7. Climate change as an affordability issue (insurance, energy). Thank you for any thoughts. -Miriam -- Miriam Bertram, PhD Assistant Director, UW Program on Climate Change PCC Office: Ocean Sciences Building Room 335A PCC office phone: 206-543-6521 PCC Private Linkedin Group : UW Program on Climate Change Connector -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Thu Nov 13 09:49:40 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Claudia Luthy via pccgrads) Date: Thu Nov 13 10:25:58 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Basilica Bio Climate Resiliency Event 11/16 Message-ID: Hi all! Basilica Bio, an Environmental Justice non-profit is hosting a really cool event at Tractor Tavern this Sunday I wanted to share. I hope you can make it, or share it with your friends! ?A Light in the Dark: A Mutual Aid Mixer for Climate Resilience (21+)?? What would you do if the power went out for a week? If the air filled with smoke again? If the big one hit? Join @basilicabio for A Light in the Dark: an afternoon of music, mutual aid, and climate readiness at Ballard?s iconic Tractor Tavern on Sunday, November 16th from noon to 3pm. This event is part of the City of Seattle?s Climate Readiness Curriculum Initiative, bringing together community, creativity, and preparedness in one space. We?ll be joined by @fairweatherfoes, a local band whose set will soundtrack the afternoon as we share practical tools for building resilience: what to pack in a go-bag, how to make an evacuation plan, and how to stay connected when systems fail. ? Featuring: Raffle prizes Disaster preparedness resources Free zines ...and more! Because climate resilience isn?t just about surviving. It?s about caring for one another when it matters most. *Sign up here: https://luma.com/il4hvhb8 * ?This event is free and open to all over 21 years of age. Accessibility note: Tractor Tavern is ADA accessible and all-gender restroom access is available.? If you have any questions about the event, please reach out to cluthy@uw.edu. Hope to see you all there! -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Thu Nov 13 10:28:41 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Program on Climate Change via pccgrads) Date: Thu Nov 13 10:29:48 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Invitation: PCC Director feedback meeting Message-ID: Dear PCC Grads, P-GraSC invites you to join a meeting on Thursday, November 20, from 3-4pm to share your input on the PCC Director role and nominations. We would like to hear from you about what graduate students think should be prioritized in the process to ensure that our voices are represented. We will also have one of the PCC graduate student representatives (GSR) and PCC Director selection committee members, Tara Kalia, in attendance. We will plan to take notes on what you all share at this meeting, and Tara will communicate directly with the selection committee. This meeting is the best avenue to share feedback on the selection process and your presence will help ensure that graduate student voices are heard! The meeting will be held virtually via Zoom: https://washington.zoom.us/j/93637140624 Feel free to also join us at Third Thursday later the same day at 5pm (RSVP)! Best, 2025-2026 PCC Graduate Steering Committee -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Thu Nov 13 14:08:52 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Program on Climate Change via pccgrads) Date: Thu Nov 13 14:18:03 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Invitation: PCC Director feedback meeting In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hello all, We're moving this meeting to be 2:30-3:30 on November 30 to avoid a conflict with Eric Steig's PCC/ESS Colloquium talk at 3:30. You're welcome to join late or leave early as your schedule allows! Best, P-GraSC ________________________________ From: pccgrads on behalf of Program on Climate Change via pccgrads Sent: Thursday, November 13, 2025 10:28 AM To: pccgrads@uw.edu Subject: [pccgrads] Invitation: PCC Director feedback meeting Dear PCC Grads, P-GraSC invites you to join a meeting on Thursday, November 20, from 3-4pm 2:30-3:30 to share your input on the PCC Director role and nominations. We would like to hear from you about what graduate students think should be prioritized in the process to ensure that our voices are represented. We will also have one of the PCC graduate student representatives (GSR) and PCC Director selection committee members, Tara Kalia, in attendance. We will plan to take notes on what you all share at this meeting, and Tara will communicate directly with the selection committee. This meeting is the best avenue to share feedback on the selection process and your presence will help ensure that graduate student voices are heard! The meeting will be held virtually via Zoom: https://washington.zoom.us/j/93637140624 We also have Third Thursday later the same day at 5pm (RSVP)! Best, 2025-2026 PCC Graduate Steering Committee -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Fri Nov 14 10:36:41 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Miriam Bertram via pccgrads) Date: Fri Nov 14 10:37:14 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fwd: [Environment_advisers] NOW HIRING: Reader Grader in FISH/Q SCI 454 in Winter 2026 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Samantha Scherer via Environment_advisers < environment_advisers@u.washington.edu> Date: Fri, Nov 14, 2025 at 10:24?AM Subject: [Environment_advisers] NOW HIRING: Reader Grader in FISH/Q SCI 454 in Winter 2026 To: CoEnv Advisers Cc: Tim Essington *The School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences (SAFS) is hiring a Reader Grader for duties in Winter Quarter 2026:* *Course: *FISH 454 Intro to Quantitative Ecology *Instructor: *Tim Essington *Dates: *December 15, 2025 ? March 15, 2026 *Compensation*: $25.00/hour up to a maximum of 19 hours/week *Deadline to Apply: *November 26. Priority consideration given to applications received by this date. Applications will be accepted after this date if the position remains unfilled. *Course description*: Examines concepts in ecological modeling focusing on the rationale, interpretation, and motivation for modeling in ecological sciences. Explores individual, population, and ecosystem-based models. Excel-based computer exercises, model building and interpretation, readings. Prerequisite: MATH 125, MATH 135, or Q SCI 292; and Q SCI 381 or STAT 311. Offered: jointly with Q SCI 454 To apply, complete application form* at https://tinyurl.com/ApplySAFSRG and upload the following additional documents (under one cover, with course name and number and your full name in the document?s title): 1. Cover letter ? include description of your general background, why you are applying for this ASE position, strengths and any abilities directly related to the specific course(s) that you would bring to the position, etc. 2. Current resum? 3. Name, title, and contact information (email, phone number) for three references who are familiar with your teaching abilities and/or knowledge and experience relevant to the content of the course(s) for which you are applying. **To access the form, log in using your @**uw.edu* * address (**https://mail.google.com/a/uw.edu* *).* -- Samantha Scherer (she her), Director, Academic Services and DEI UW School of Aquatic & Fishery Sciences https://fish.uw.edu/students/advising/ Fishery Sciences Bldg, Suite116 ( map ) | 206-543-7457 Office Hours: 9:00 - 3:00 Mon-Thurs (Monday remote only) *Schedule a Meeting:* https://calendly.com/safsgrad *The University of Washington acknowledges the Coast Salish peoples of this land, the land which touches the shared waters of all tribes and bands within the Suquamish, Tulalip and Muckleshoot nations. In support of Indigenous communities, I commit to protecting the environment; investing in tribal economies; electing officials that understand/support tribal governments, relationships, and laws; challenging and rejecting stereotypes about Indigenous people; educating myself and my family about the histories, cultures, and issues impacting Indigenous communities.* _______________________________________________ Environment_advisers mailing list Environment_advisers@u.washington.edu http://mailman22.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/environment_advisers -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: FISH 454 WIN26 ReaderGrader RFS.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 54330 bytes Desc: not available URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Fri Nov 14 13:00:39 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Quinn from Basilica Bio via pccgrads) Date: Fri Nov 14 13:57:39 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] =?utf-8?q?Basilica_Bio_Climate_Readiness_Event_Updates?= Message-ID: https://basilicabio.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ee6945dc3ad63d1698de44a9e&id=60213651fb&e=897eb886e7 ** Upcoming Events Announcement ------------------------------------------------------------ Hi friends! We know we usually only send you one email a month, but we have been growing so much lately and have some updates we thought you might want to know about ? We have three upcoming events all centered around climate resilience, we would love to see you there! Please RSVP at the links below or follow our Luma events calendar. https://basilicabio.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ee6945dc3ad63d1698de44a9e&id=567a04d348&e=897eb886e7 RSVP On Luma (https://basilicabio.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ee6945dc3ad63d1698de44a9e&id=211c56b023&e=897eb886e7) ** ?? A Light in the Dark ?? ------------------------------------------------------------ ** Mutual Aid Mixer for Climate Resilience 21+ ------------------------------------------------------------ What would you do if the power went out for a week? If the air filled with smoke again? If the big one hit? Join us for A Light in the Dark: an afternoon of music, mutual aid, and climate readiness at Ballard?s iconic Tractor Tavern on Sunday, November 16th from noon to 3pm. This event is part of the City of Seattle?s Climate Readiness Curriculum Initiative, bringing together community, creativity, and preparedness in one space. We?ll be joined by the Fairweather Foes, a local band whose set will soundtrack the afternoon as we share practical tools for building resilience: what to pack in a go-bag, how to make an evacuation plan, and how to stay connected when systems fail. Featuring: Raffle prizes Disaster preparedness resources Community mapping Mutual aid network building Free zines ...and more! Because climate resilience isn?t just about surviving. It?s about caring for one another when it matters most. This event is free and open to all over 21 years of age. Accessibility note: Tractor Tavern is ADA accessible and all-gender restroom access is available. ?? Resilience in Practice ?? A Virtual Gathering on Climate Readiness & Community Care How do we prepare for the crises we can?t predict?and care for one another when systems fail? Join Basilica Bio for Resilience in Practice, a virtual evening of conversation, learning, and collaboration featuring local experts, community organizers, and climate storytellers. Together, we?ll explore how to build community resilience that?s rooted in equity, preparedness, and collective care. Through a mix of panel discussions, breakout rooms, and resource sharing, participants will gain tangible tools to strengthen local networks, create neighborhood emergency plans, and connect with Seattle?s growing network of resilience hubs. Follow our Luma events calendar (https://basilicabio.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ee6945dc3ad63d1698de44a9e&id=2c0d7866b2&e=897eb886e7) ? Stories for Change ? A Climate Storytelling Gathering for Community Resilience As the nights grow longer, we gather to share the stories that sustain us. Stories of Change: A Climate Storytelling Gathering for Community Resilience is a community storytelling event exploring how we build resilience?together?in the face of climate change. Join Basilica Bio and featured speaker Eileen Lambert, a Latine climate storyteller and communications strategist, for an evening of reflection, creativity, and connection. Through storytelling, art-making, and open mic readings, we?ll explore what it means to live and care for one another in a changing world. Inspired by Adrienne Maree Brown?s Emergent Strategy, this event invites participants to imagine resilience not as endurance, but as interdependence. Together, we?ll share local stories of climate adaptation, community care, and creative resistance?and transform them into collective art that honors our shared future. Follow our Luma events calendar (https://basilicabio.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ee6945dc3ad63d1698de44a9e&id=e451a79f7e&e=897eb886e7) ** We couldn?t do this without you <3 ------------------------------------------------------------ >From the bottom of our hearts, we are so grateful for this incredible community that we are building. These three climate readiness events are the biggest and most resource-full events we have ever put on. We want more than anything to share this work with you. All of our best, Quinn and Carolyn, Outreach Coordinators for Basilica Bio Basilica Bio does community outreach, organizing, and education in the ancestral and contemporary homelands of the Coast Salish People. We honor with gratitude the land of King County itself and the Duwamish, Suquamish, Stillaguamish, and Muckleshoot Tribes. We want to use our platform to call attention to the federally unrecognized Duwamish Tribe, whose ancestral and contemporary homelands are now home to Seattle itself. Below is a link to call for the federal recognition of the Duwamish, as well as an option to pay rent to the Duwamish tribe. Visit the Real Rent Duwamish Website (https://basilicabio.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ee6945dc3ad63d1698de44a9e&id=d9cf4f75a4&e=897eb886e7) https://basilicabio.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ee6945dc3ad63d1698de44a9e&id=f2ec148322&e=897eb886e7 https://basilicabio.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ee6945dc3ad63d1698de44a9e&id=da88832380&e=897eb886e7 https://basilicabio.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ee6945dc3ad63d1698de44a9e&id=4c0f629d08&e=897eb886e7 View this email in your browser (https://mailchi.mp/17b78199dea4/basilica-bio-climate-readiness-event-updates?e=897eb886e7) Copyright (C) 2025 Basilica Bio. All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website. Our mailing address is: Basilica Bio 7511 Greenwood Ave N. Suite 121 Seattle, WA 98103 USA Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences (https://basilicabio.us1.list-manage.com/profile?u=ee6945dc3ad63d1698de44a9e&id=58e9c842f1&e=897eb886e7&c=1ee43b2f1e) or unsubscribe (https://basilicabio.us1.list-manage.com/unsubscribe?u=ee6945dc3ad63d1698de44a9e&id=58e9c842f1&t=b&e=897eb886e7&c=1ee43b2f1e) https://basilicabio.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=ee6945dc3ad63d1698de44a9e&id=e1b8657b99&e=897eb886e7 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Nov 17 08:14:52 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Miriam Bertram via Pcc_all via pccgrads) Date: Mon Nov 17 08:15:29 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Invitation to join the 3rd Webinar in the National Academies AI for Weather & Climate webinar series, this Tuesday Nov 18th 6AM-7AM PST In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: The third episode of the AI for Weather & Climate webinar series is scheduled for this Tuesday, *November 18th, at 9 AM (EST) / 6 AM (PST)*. This webinar will focus on* AI for extreme weather events forecasting * and will feature technical presentations from Dr. Gabriele Messori and Dr. Amy McGovern. The agenda for this webinar is attached. Please share this event with your networks and tune in if you are available! The registration page for this event can be accessed at the following link: https://www.nationalacademies.org/event/46026_11-2025_webinar-3-ai-for-extreme-weather-events-forecasting . Welcome! -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Webinar 3 Agenda.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 322677 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Pcc_all mailing list Pcc_all@u.washington.edu http://mailman21.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/pcc_all From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Nov 17 12:44:25 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Program on Climate change Undergraduate Cohort via pccgrads) Date: Mon Nov 17 12:59:41 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Join the PCC for Smarty Pints Tonight! Message-ID: Hi Climate Friends! UCo and PCC grad students will be going to the Burke Gilman Brewery tonight for Smarty Pints, a science speaker series open to the public. Tonight?s speakers feature two UW members working on climate, Dr. Caroline Str?mberg (BIOL) and Aakash Manapat (ATMOS). Please see talk descriptions below. This event is open to all , including under 21! UCo will be meeting at 5:45pm at the Life Sciences Building entrance to take the 65 bus route to BGB. Speakers start at 6:30pm! Alcoholic and NA drinks will be available for purchase and you are welcome to bring in food. Hope to see you there! Best, The UCo Leaders ? Burke Gilman Brewery: 3626 NE 45th St, Suite 102, Seattle, WA 98105 [cid:8687912C-4E65-4F99-9EF6-400093C8AE96][cid:9148BDC0-6ADA-466A-8AEA-39300842D8D8] ? Dr. Caroline Str?mberg Professor in UW Biology & Curator of Paleobotany at the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture How grasses took over the world Grasses are all around us, whether in the form of lawns, golf courses, wheat fields or the contents of your popcorn bag. Yet few people think of grasses as an evolutionarily extremely successful group, or wonder how they came to be so ubiquitous in less than ~30 million years. This talk will explore what we know about the evolutionary history of grasses and grassland ecosystems and how it related to climate change and animal evolution. ?? Aakash Manapat Graduate student, UW Atmospheric and Climate Science How clouds control our climate Clouds are ubiquitous features of Earth's weather. However, their mundaneness hides a surprising level of complexity. Join me to learn about why scientists still struggle to understand clouds, and why clouds represent a major uncertainty when trying to understand climate change. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: img-4eb41afd-be19-4e8b-be55-020f3a396fdb Type: application/octet-stream Size: 533184 bytes Desc: img-4eb41afd-be19-4e8b-be55-020f3a396fdb URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: img-029878d2-3dab-4acb-904a-56698f5dcf4e Type: application/octet-stream Size: 688168 bytes Desc: img-029878d2-3dab-4acb-904a-56698f5dcf4e URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Nov 17 14:27:10 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (PROGRAM ON CLIMATE CHANGE via Pcc_all via pccgrads) Date: Mon Nov 17 14:27:20 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Reminder! [PCC / ESS Joint Colloquium] Steig on "Water isotopes are magical..." Th Nov 20 at 3:30pm Message-ID: Dear PCC community, We are excited to continue the monthly Program on Climate Change Colloquium series. Please join us on Thursday November 20 at 3:30pm in Johnson Hall Room 075 for a presentation by Prof. Eric Steig on "Water isotopes are magical: fundamental things isotope records from ice cores tell us about climate variability and ice sheet change across timescales from decades to millennia". This event will be held jointly with the ESS Departmental Colloquium. Speaker: Eric Steig (Ben Rabinowitz Professor in the Department of Earth and Space Sciences) Title: Water isotopes are magical: fundamental things isotope records from ice cores tell us about climate variability and ice sheet change across timescales from decades to millennia. Time and Location: Th Nov 20 at 3:30 in Johnson Hall (JHN) 075 Abstract: The discovery that oxygen and hydrogen isotopes in snowfall provide a window into the past through ice cores is more than six decades old. Yet the ?old? technology of water isotopes continues to be a cornerstone of our understanding of both past and current climate in the polar regions. Recent advances include measurement methods that improve both resolution and precision; a revolution in dating of ice cores, allowing us to compare them with one another with high confidence; and the development of ways to use water-isotope data to constrain and validate climate model simulations. Three examples ? on very different timescales ? illustrate the continued magic of ice-core isotope records. First, we have long wanted to know how big the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets may have been during the last glacial maximum, how much they thinned during the Holocene, and how small they were during previous interglacial periods, when sea level was much higher than present. We now know the answer to all these questions pretty well, because only certain ice-sheet configurations are compatible with the isotope data. Second, ice-core isotope records provide essentially the only observations of climate in Antarctica prior to the late 1950s, and they show that the variability of West Antarctic climate (in particular) is greater than one might suppose from direct meteorological measurements. These observations, combined with modern numerical climate models, show how the complex interplay between winds, sea ice, ocean currents, and the geometry of the melting ice itself, all influence the efficiency with which warm water reaches and melts the ice. As a result, we are close to being able to answer the attribution question: we know the Antarctic ice sheet is melting, but is it our fault? Third, I?ll touch on recent work showing how isotope records from ice cores have something new to teach us about the basic radiative physics of the polar atmosphere. The PCC Colloquium will rotate to other topics and units in the winter quarter. Program on Climate Change University of Washington Ocean Sciences Building, Room 335A Phone: 206-543-6521 PCC Private Linkedin Group : UW Program on Climate Change Connector -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Pcc_all mailing list Pcc_all@u.washington.edu http://mailman21.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/pcc_all From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Nov 17 15:43:59 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (PROGRAM ON CLIMATE CHANGE via pccgrads) Date: Mon Nov 17 15:44:03 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] The Daily looking for students to interview on climate as an issue for voters Message-ID: Hey PCC grads, Have something to say about climate advocacy and the thought that climate change is becoming less of an issue for voters? Please email Nirja from The Daily (see email ask below for interviewees) nchuri@uw.edu! Best, Miriam From: Nirja Churi > Sent: Saturday, November 15, 2025 1:36 PM To: Climate Impacts Group > Subject: The Daily Climate Change Article Hello, I hope this email finds you well. My name is Nirja Thaler, and I'm a writer at The Daily. I'm currently writing an article about how climate change is becoming increasingly less of an issue to voters, reflected in the fact that there were no direct climate-related issues on the ballot this year. I'm looking at the impact this has on the UW community. Would you be able to put me in touch with any students who are involved with advocating for climate change? Thank you, Nirja Thaler Program on Climate Change University of Washington Ocean Sciences Building, Room 335A Phone: 206-543-6521 PCC Private Linkedin Group : UW Program on Climate Change Connector -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Tue Nov 18 15:57:23 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Program on Climate Change via pccgrads) Date: Tue Nov 18 16:41:11 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Reminder: PCC Grad events this Thursday! Message-ID: Hello PCC grads, Just a quick reminder that there are several events this Thursday that may be of interest! On Thursday, November 20 we have: 2:30-3:30pm: Feedback meeting on the PCC Director search with members of P-GraSC and a member of the PCC Director search committee. Meeting will be on Zoom, feel free to join for part or all: https://washington.zoom.us/j/93637140624 3:30-5:00pm: PCC/ESS Joint Colloquium (Eric Steig, presenting Water isotopes are magical: fundamental things isotope records from ice cores tell us about climate variability and ice sheet change across timescales from decades to millennia) in Johnson Hall (JHN) 075 5:00-7:00pm: PCC Third Thursday. Happy hour with food and drink hosted by the PCC Graduate Steering Committee (P-GraSC); if you haven't already, RSVP here. We particularly recommend coming to November's Third Thursday if you might be interested in joining P-GraSC this year! Applications are open through November 26 (apply here). Members of P-GraSC will be available to answer any questions you might have about joining. We hope to see you then! Best, Kayla Morton 2025-2026 PCC Graduate Steering Committee -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Wed Nov 19 13:21:05 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Miriam Bertram via pccgrads) Date: Wed Nov 19 13:21:36 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fwd: [Environment_advisers] NOW HIRING: TA in FISH/Q SCI 454 in Winter 2026 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: *The School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences (SAFS) is hiring a Teaching Assistant for duties in Winter Quarter 2026:* *Course: *FISH 454 Intro to Quantitative Ecology *Instructor: *Tim Essington *Dates: *December 15, 2025 ? March 15, 2026 *Compensation*: Position is 50% FTE; salary is commensurate with academic standing (ASE salary schedule: https://facstaff.grad.uw.edu/advising-resources/funding-management/administering-assistantships/ta-ra-salaries/ ) *NOTE: This opening is in place of the Reader Grader RFS that was circulated on November 14 - we are no longer hiring a Reader Grader so that application is now closed.* *Deadline to Apply: *November 30. Priority consideration given to applications received by this date. Applications will be accepted after this date if the position remains unfilled. *Course description*: Examines concepts in ecological modeling focusing on the rationale, interpretation, and motivation for modeling in ecological sciences. Explores individual, population, and ecosystem-based models. Excel-based computer exercises, model building and interpretation, readings. Prerequisite: MATH 125, MATH 135, or Q SCI 292; and Q SCI 381 or STAT 311. Offered: jointly with Q SCI 454 *TO APPLY:* To apply, complete application form* at https://tinyurl.com/ApplySAFSTA and upload the following additional documents (under one cover, with course name and number and your full name in the document?s title): 1. Cover letter ? include description of your general background, why you are applying for this ASE position, strengths and any abilities directly related to the specific course(s) that you would bring to the position, etc. 2. Current resum? 3. Name, title, and contact information (email, phone number) for three references who are familiar with your teaching abilities and/or knowledge and experience relevant to the content of the course(s) for which you are applying. **To access the form, log in using your @**uw.edu* * address (**https://mail.google.com/a/uw.edu* *).* Full position description attached. -- Samantha Scherer (she her), Director, Academic Services and DEI UW School of Aquatic & Fishery Sciences https://fish.uw.edu/students/advising/ Fishery Sciences Bldg, Suite116 ( map ) | 206-543-7457 Office Hours: 9:00 - 3:00 Mon-Thurs (Monday remote only) *Schedule a Meeting:* https://calendly.com/safsgrad *The University of Washington acknowledges the Coast Salish peoples of this land, the land which touches the shared waters of all tribes and bands within the Suquamish, Tulalip and Muckleshoot nations. In support of Indigenous communities, I commit to protecting the environment; investing in tribal economies; electing officials that understand/support tribal governments, relationships, and laws; challenging and rejecting stereotypes about Indigenous people; educating myself and my family about the histories, cultures, and issues impacting Indigenous communities.* _______________________________________________ Environment_advisers mailing list Environment_advisers@u.washington.edu http://mailman22.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/environment_advisers -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: FISH 454A WIN26 TA RFS.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 59532 bytes Desc: not available URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Wed Nov 19 14:42:34 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (PROGRAM ON CLIMATE CHANGE via Pcc_all via pccgrads) Date: Wed Nov 19 14:42:41 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Going to AGU? Let us know! Message-ID: We want to know your AGU plans! The PCC is collecting attendee and presentation information to share with PCC community members attending the annual meeting. Every year, many members from the UW Program on Climate Change community attend and present at the annual AGU meeting. With recognition of how large and interdisciplinary this meeting can be, we are looking to connect people and events related to the PCC. We hope this shared information will help facilitate connection, engagement, and planning. If you complete the form, you will receive our list of attendees and events (posters/sessions/presentations) in early December. Share events and your plans to attend: https://forms.gle/busUaKi8WVSFENiR6 If you haven't already, please also create a UW PCC directory profile for our online directory: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe5SzVYIaAavD6RA3YObRvC7rNq3XiMSE-Wv-zLwsuOuCac7A/viewform -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Pcc_all mailing list Pcc_all@u.washington.edu http://mailman21.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/pcc_all From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Wed Nov 19 15:28:58 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (PROGRAM ON CLIMATE CHANGE via pccgrads) Date: Wed Nov 19 15:29:16 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fw: You're Invited - College Symposium: 12/1, 12:00 pm-6:00 pm, please register In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hi PCC Grads and Postdocs- We would like to strongly encourage you to participate in the poster session at the College Symposium on 12/1. The invitation is below, and I registered today, so I know there is still space....note posters are pretty undefined in their size. You will have a choice of attaching to a wall or using a tripod. Let me know if you are going, as I'm going to cheer you all on. I attached the PCC logo?if you want to let others know you are connected to the PCC community! Best, Miriam Program on Climate Change University of Washington Ocean Sciences Building, Room 335A Phone: 206-543-6521 PCC Private Linkedin Group : UW Program on Climate Change Connector ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: College of the Environment Associate Dean of Research via Environment_staff > Date: Tue, Nov 18, 2025 at 10:12?AM Subject: [Environment_staff] You're Invited - College Symposium: 12/1, 12:00 pm-6:00 pm, please register To: environment_postdocs@uw.edu >, environment_staff@uw.edu >, environment_grads@uw.edu > Dear CoEnv Community, You are cordially invited to attend the College Symposium on Monday, December 1, from 12:00 pm-6:00 pm in the South Campus Center. The symposium is intended to showcase some of the outstanding scholarship by researchers across our College, as well as to provide people with the opportunity to discover new avenues of interdisciplinary collaboration. With this email, we invite you to register for the symposium - please click here to register The first half of the symposium will highlight the work of the recipients of last year's seed grants, and will showcase the CRESST research projects that were made possible by the recent, generous $10M gift to the College by the Fund for Science and Technology (FFST). In addition, we will also be inviting FFST leadership to participate in the event. The second half of the symposium will focus on focus on brainstorming new avenues of interdisciplinary research. This section will include two plenary talks: * Vikram Iyer, Co-Director, Computing for the Environment (CS4ENV) - "Innovative Sensor Networks" * Chris Bretherton, Lead of Climate Model Development Group, Ai2 - "AI to Link Earth and Environmental System" The symposium will begin with a lunch and poster-viewing session and will conclude with a wine and beer bar reception, all of which is complimentary for symposium registrants. Even if you are only able to attend part of the event, your participation is still welcome. We are limited as to capacity, so we participation in this event is offered on a first-come, first-served basis. If you would like to attend, please click here to register. We will follow up at a later date with logistics and a formalized agenda. In the meantime, please mark your calendars and register for this important event. Best, Ginger ----------------------------------------------------- E. Virginia Armbrust Karl M. Banse Endowed Professor School of Oceanography Center for Environmental Genomics Associate Dean of Research, College of the Environment University of Washington Box 357940 Seattle, WA 98195 Tel: 206-616-1783 http://armbrustlab.ocean.washington.edu/ https://simonscmap.com/ http://www.ocean.washington.edu/ _______________________________________________ Environment_staff mailing list Environment_staff@u.washington.edu http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/environment_staff -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: pcc illlustration rectangle.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 1049394 bytes Desc: pcc illlustration rectangle.jpg URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Mon Nov 24 16:51:11 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (PROGRAM ON CLIMATE CHANGE via Pcc_all via pccgrads) Date: Mon Nov 24 16:51:19 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] PCC AGU Plans: Share by 12/1 Message-ID: We want to know your AGU plans! The PCC is collecting attendee and presentation information to share with PCC community members attending the annual meeting. Please share your plans by December 1st to be included. Every year, many members from the UW Program on Climate Change community attend and present at the annual AGU meeting. With recognition of how large and interdisciplinary this meeting can be, we are looking to connect people and events related to the PCC. We hope this shared information will help facilitate connection, engagement, and planning. If you complete the form, you will receive our list of attendees and events (posters/sessions/presentations) in early December. Share events and your plans to attend: https://forms.gle/busUaKi8WVSFENiR6 If you haven't already, please also create a UW PCC directory profile for our online directory: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe5SzVYIaAavD6RA3YObRvC7rNq3XiMSE-Wv-zLwsuOuCac7A/viewform -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Pcc_all mailing list Pcc_all@u.washington.edu http://mailman21.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/pcc_all From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Tue Nov 25 14:13:06 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (PROGRAM ON CLIMATE CHANGE via pccgrads) Date: Tue Nov 25 14:13:17 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fw: CSUN seeking tenure-track appointment in Environmental Earth Science In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: The Department of Geological Sciences at California State University, Northridge is seeking to fill a tenure-track appointment in Environmental Earth Science at the rank of Assistant Professor beginning in the 2026-2027 academic year. For consideration by interested faculty, post-docs, or doctoral candidates who will complete their degrees by August, 2026. Sincerely, Environmental Earth Science Hiring Committee Department of Geological Sciences California State University Northridge _________________________________________________________ Mari Flores-Garcia | Administrative Analyst | Geological Sciences | Live Oak 1202 18111 Nordhoff St. MD: 8266 California State University, Northridge | (Tel) 818.677.3541 | mari.flores@csun.edu [cid:image001.png@01DC5DED.EA9B4970] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 9190 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Assistant Professor of Environmental Earth Science - Department of Geological Science #26-13.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 393629 bytes Desc: Assistant Professor of Environmental Earth Science - Department of Geological Science #26-13.pdf URL: From pccgrads at u.washington.edu Fri Nov 28 13:00:00 2025 From: pccgrads at u.washington.edu (Guillaume Mauger via pccgrads) Date: Fri Nov 28 13:01:39 2025 Subject: [pccgrads] Fwd: Job Announcement: Invest Appalachia - Rural Resilience Specialist In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Guillaume Mauger Pronouns: he/him/his Director | Washington State Climate Office 206.685.0317 | gmauger@uw.edu | @WAstateclimate EarthLab | College of the Environment | University of Washington ---------- Message transf?r? --------- De : Chelsea Combest-Friedman - NOAA Federal < chelsea.combest_friedman@noaa.gov> Date : mer. 26 nov. 2025 ? 7:17?AM Objet : Fwd: Job Announcement: Invest Appalachia - Rural Resilience Specialist ? : , _NOAA RISA PM , _NOAA RISA PI CC : _OAR CPO CAP Hi all, Please see below for an exciting new position opening up in the CAP/RISA network through Invest Appalachia and their partners. It is rewarding to have the opportunity to partner with an amazing group of individuals and organizations working hard to support resilience and disaster recovery in Central Appalachia. We appreciate you sharing with your relevant networks. Best, Chelsea ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Baylen Campbell Date: Tue, Nov 25, 2025 at 5:26?PM Subject: Job Announcement: Invest Appalachia - Rural Resilience Specialist To: Hello Friends/Colleagues, I am very excited to share that IA's Rural Resilience Specialist job posting is now live. I greatly appreciate all of your all's support, partnership, and innovative work that has inspired the design of this role. Needless to say, without the ecosystem of partners informing IA's work - we would not have gotten to this point. I am very excited to partnering alongside all of you all to build a more robust and collaborative regional ecosystem to advance climate resilience in Central Appalachia. We would greatly appreciate it if you could share the posting with folks in your network! Please let me know if you have any questions in the meantime. Onwards, Baylen Campbell Director of Programs & Partnerships He/Him/His (828) 407-0514? Scheduling requests: https://calendly.com/baylencampbell/ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: