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Pathfinders: Climate-Smart Solutions from Rural America and Native Nations

July 16, 2021 @ 1:30 pm - 3:15 pm

The Aspen Institute
Drought and wildfire in the West, rising seas and erosion in the Mississippi River Delta, and erratic weather patterns throughout the entire country are destabilizing rural and Tribal economies and quality of life. These climate impacts are worsening the already disproportionate burdens placed on rural people and Native Nations because of a history of disinvestment and extractive natural-resource industry practices. In the face of these simultaneous global and hyper-local challenges, rural America and Native nations are essential partners in forging a different future.

Join us on July 16 at 1:30 PM ET to hear stories and glean practical tips from rural regions that are leading the way to this better future through climate-smart innovations. These pathfinders are also addressing key power-shifting challenges along the way: How can our transition to cleaner energy economies that reduce carbon emissions also strengthen community by engaging Native nations and rural communities of color? How can rural organizations build and retrofit more energy-efficient homes and offer new community energy options intentionally designed to build more financial stability for low-wealth people? How can rural climate-smart resilience efforts give those people with local and Indigenous knowledge who are most affected by planning decisions a voice in the planning process? Come explore how rural America is an essential partner in addressing climate change – and a source for innovative environmental justice initiatives that provide inspiration and useful ideas for the entire country.

Register: https://aspeninst.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_ODdNQxWITGa8Lff62wgWAA

Our Speakers

Ajulo Othow, Founder and CEO of EnerWealth Solutions. Ajulo Othow founded EnerWealth Solutions, a solar and energy storage company that seeks to advance an ecologically sustainable world, where power is held locally and decisions are made democratically, where all electricity is generated by clean distributed renewables, and where economic prosperity is shared by all, especially those who have historically been left behind by America’s success. An attorney by training, her past experience includes work with Strata Solar, Oxfam America, and the Southern Rural Development Initiative. She lives on a small farm in Oxford, North Carolina.

Curtis Wynn, CEO of Roanoke Electric Cooperative. Roanoke Electric Cooperative distributes power to 14,500 member accounts in northeastern North Carolina. Under Curtis’s 22 years of leadership, the cooperative has advanced operationally and technologically to increase its system’s efficiency and resilience while improving service to its member-owners. Recently, Roanoke Electric began a number of projects including deploying new distributed energy resources. Curtis is also president of the National Rural Electric Cooperatives Association and serves on the boards of the National Rural Utilities Cooperative Finance Corporation, North Carolina Electric Membership Cooperative, and North Carolina Association of Electric Cooperatives.

Shirell Parfait-Dardar, Traditional Tribal Chief of the Grand Caillou/Dulac Band of Biloxi-Chitimacha-Choctaw. Shirell is one of the founding members of the First People’s Conservation Council of Louisiana. She advised the development of LA H.B.660 – Act #102, which established the Louisiana Governor’s Office of Indian Affairs’ Native American Commission in 2013, and was elected its first Native American Chairwoman in 2019. She is an active advocate for coastal restoration and preservation, development and utilization of alternative energy sources, community resiliency, education and human rights. Chief Shirell is also a traditional dressmaker/clothing designer, a songwriter, and a musician in her spare time, known for the films Into the Unknown (2020) and Facing the Rising Tide: Stories from Coastal Louisiana’s Tribes (2013).

Kristina Peterson, Co-Founder of the Lowlander Center. Kristina is an applied social scientist who studies scientist/community interaction, including how to support and prepare both scientists and community members for working together and how that work transforms both parties. Her work envisions a safe, healthy, just future by rejuvenating and restoring the human and non-human community through a rights-based approach and plenty of love. She has a passion for finding new and creative ways of problem solving by hearing stories of places and people, and she believes that understandings from our past and our ancestors (human and nonhuman) can help us live into the future with gentleness of spirit and the rejuvenation of our world.

Wenix Red Elk, Public Outreach and Education Specialist for the CTUIR Department of Natural Resources. Wenix is the Public Outreach and Education Specialist for the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation’s Department of Natural Resources (DNR) where she educates the public on the First Foods management approach and coordinates and implements First Food related educational events, presentations, and cultural preservation excursions. Wenix has a AFA and BFA in Museum Studies from the Institute of American Indian Arts from Santa Fe, NM and a Masters in Organizational Management from the University of Phoenix. Wenix is an artist in many mediums and also instructs First Food and associated cultural classes such as food gathering, preparation mat making and other traditional art forms.

Colleen Sanders, Climate Adaptation Planner for the CTUIR First Foods Policy Program. Colleen has worked with the CTUIR First Foods Policy Program for over three years, and as a settler has been learning and unlearning many things about food systems and climate change for tribal people. Fascinated by the intersection between food production and wildlife conservation, her Bachelors of Science in Wildlife Ecology from the University of British Columbia, and Masters of Science in Community Food Systems has helped her approach climate change issues for the tribe by centering First Foods and its Indigenous food system in planning for adaptation. She spends her non-existent free time building a closer connection with her food, land, and her queer and autistic communities in Pendleton, Oregon.

Details

Date:
July 16, 2021
Time:
1:30 pm - 3:15 pm

Venue

Webinar