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January 27, 2006

Topics in today's issue of Extension Update:

SEXUAL HARASSMENT AWARENESS AND PREVENTION TRAINING
Beginning last fall, Washington State University has received its share of attention in the media around incidents of sexual harassment. It is critical to reinforce to all faculty, staff and students/learners the importance of a climate of trust and respect, education and awareness regarding sexual harassment. The Provost’s Open Letter to the University Community (November 15) can be found on his web site http://provost.wsu.edu/communications/index.html.

Comprehensive sexual harassment prevention training is now available online to WSU Faculty, staff, students, and an array of our partners. The program is a product of New Media Learning and is tailored to WSU. To access the training, go to the web site for the Center for Human Rights http://www.chr.wsu.edu/ and click on Preventing Sexual Harassment Training in the upper right corner. You may also access the online training from the WSU Extension Faculty and Staff web site under Policies and Procedures http://ext.wsu.edu/admin/.

The primary goal of this online course is to enable you to identify sexual harassment behaviors. With this knowledge, you can help keep WSU free of sexual harassment. The training is suggested to take one hour. If you need to leave the program before you finish, you can either bookmark your location or return to where you were through the Drop-Down Menu at the top of the screen. At the end of the Preventing Sexual Harassment training program, there is a 15-question mastery test. Upon successfully completing this test, you will be advised how to print a Certificate of Completion (if 80% or higher accuracy in the test). The test may be repeated to achieve mastery.

In addition to WSU employees and students, an extra benefit is that we can offer the training at no cost to companies in the state of Washington with fewer than fifty (50) employees.

Please forward this information to other faculty, staff, employees and volunteers in WSU and WSU Extension programs.

The Center for Human Rights and the Office of Equity and Diversity continue to offer educational training. If follow up training is of interest to you, contact Felicia Gaskins, 509-335-8888.

DIVERSITY PROGRAM HIGHLIGHT
This month's diversity success story comes from Chelan/Douglas County, where the 4-H program is reaching out to community members with disabilities. The Spurs and Spokes Therapeutic Horseback Riding program provides therapeutic horseback riding lessons to children and adults with disabilities. Both physical and emotional therapy are emphasized. Riders who are no longer physically able to be mounted on horseback participate in a horse driving program which uses a cart especially built to load and secure a wheel chair. Thirty-six individuals with disabilities are reached each year. Because 140 able-bodied youth and adult volunteers assist the riders, the program also provides diversity education to the larger 4-H community. The program has been successful in engaging culturally diverse participants as well. Four riders and eight volunteers are Hispanic; one rider and one volunteer are African-American. The program has its own advisory board, of which one member is American Indian.

Source: Louise Parker

PACIFIC NORTHWEST ENERGY EXTENSION INITIATIVE PILOT PROJECT
County Extension staff members are strongly encouraged to participate in the Pacific Northwest (PNW) Energy Extension Initiative Pilot Project by taking advantage of the services that the Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) Information Center provides. The EERE Information Center is managed and operated by the WSU Extension Energy Program, and marketing material is now available at http://www.energy.wsu.edu/projects/assistance/PacificNorthwestInitiative.cfm for county Extension staff to market this service to local government leaders.

This pilot project focuses on the growing need for credible, unbiased energy information to help local government officials make sound energy decisions, and it taps into the strong working relationships that county Extension staff already have with local government leaders.

In addition, the December 16, 2005 Extension Engaged program is about energy, and available as a resource. For more information and to access marketing material on the PNW Energy Extension Initiative, visit http://www.energy.wsu.edu/projects/assistance/

To view the Extension Engaged program on energy, visit http://caheinfo.wsu.edu/video/stream.html

eXtension COMMUNITIES OF PRACTICE
The next eXtension Call for Engagement for what is referred to as “Communities of Practice” will be formally released to the System on February 1, 2006. It is now posted on the Communities of Practice wiki site ( http://cop.extension.org/wiki/Main_Page ).

WSU TODAY AND EXTENSION TODAY
The January 13 issue of WSU Today contained the special insert Extension Today. It is available online http://www.wsutoday.wsu.edu/pdfs.asp

Calendar of WSU President's, Provost's Dialogues Available
Faculty, staff and students have opportunities to hear from and interact with President V. Lane Rawlins and with Provost Robert C. Bates in upcoming months. An updated calendar of their Dialogues is now online here for easy reference: http://www.wsu.edu/dialogues-forums/ For spring semester 2006, the Provost's Dialogue is Tuesday, February 14, in the CUB Cascade Rooms on the first floor. The President's Dialogue is Tuesday, March 7, in the CUB Regency Room on the second floor. The dialogues are also available via videostreaming on the Web.

NW REGIONAL RURAL HEALTH CONFERENCE: “DARE TO PREPARE”
The Northwest Regional Rural Health Conference - incorporating Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana & Alaska - celebrates its 19th year in 2006. This year’s conference, March 23-24, 2006, at the Red Lion Hotel at the Park, Spokane, WA is designed to focus on opportunities, to highlight new programs and new ways of doing business, to discuss collaborative relationships in rural communities, and to reflect how the rural healthcare system fits into the processes of creating change in communities. The conference always strives to stay abreast of the current policy and regulatory developments at the federal, regional, state and local levels which impact healthcare delivery. This conference is the largest rural health conference in the region and draws more than 250 attendees plus exhibitors.

The conference is designed to be of interest to a wide range of rural health advocates including providers, community leaders, administrators, board members, commissioners, policy makers, public health professionals, and others.

Conference objectives include:

  • Provide information on the effects of various system changes from state, regional and national perspectives.
  • Equip workshop participants with the tools to decide on the best course of action for their situation.
  • Disseminate information and strategies on rural health policy, research, management and practice issues.
  • Provide a forum for discussion and idea exchange on rural health issues.

Detailed conference information is available http://www.ahec.spokane.wsu.edu/content/docs/CAH_RHC%20Broch%20FINAL.pdf.

For more information or to exhibit for either conference, please contact the conference office at ahec@wsu.edu or (509) 358-7640.

Source: Kaarin Appel, Conference Manager

NATIONAL PUBLIC POLICY EDUCATION CONFERENCE
Public policy issues related to the 21st Century food system will be the focus of Farm Foundation’s National Public Policy Education Conference, Sept. 17-19, 2006, in Fayetteville, Ark. Northwest Arkansas is home to the corporate headquarters of Wal-Mart and Tyson Foods, two major food system players whose actions and leadership are influencing the future of the food system.

To learn more about the conference program or registration, the history of the National Public Policy Education Conference and Farm Foundation, go to www.farmfoundation.org.

This year’s conference, Consequences of the 21st Century Food System, will include sessions on ethics, economic development, community impacts, immigration and labor, food safety, nutrition issues and federal agricultural policies. Conference participants will have the opportunity to tour Tyson and Wal-Mart operations and research facilities, meeting with company officials to discuss food safety, labor/grower issues, customer issues, community impacts and radio frequency identification systems (RFID). A poster session is also planned, for which participants are eligible to submit proposals.

The sessions at this conference will have special appeal to Extension educators working in community and economic development, food safety and health/obesity issues, agricultural policy and ethics, and local controversial issues with national implications. Preceding the conference will be one-day workshop designed for Extension professionals with limited experience in public policy and public issues education. National Public Policy Education Conference, organized by Farm Foundation for more than 50 years, provides Extension professionals with information on diverse public policy issues related to agriculture and the food system.

CHOICES MAGAZINE
A new issue of Choices has been released by the American Agricultural Economics Association,www.choicesmagazine.org. Featured in this issue (Volume 20, No. 4, 2005) are articles addressing:

  • Consumer acceptance, perceptions and reaction to genetically modified (GM) agricultural commodities
  • Economic factors of supply chains--why supply chains are becoming more prevalent, food safety implications and management issues.

The Washington DC Scene--trade, farm bill, energy and budget reconciliation

This issue of Choices also offers two single papers--"Perspectives on Traceability and BSE Testing in the U.S. Beef Industry", and "Made in China: Is it Over for the U.S. Textile Industry?" If you find aspects of these topics of interest, the entire set of papers is available at www.choicesmagazine.org.

National 4-H Council Names Senior VP of Resource Development
The National 4-H Council, announces the appointment of Jennifer Sirangelo to the position of Senior Vice President of Resource Development. Sirangelo, currently Vice President of Resource Development, Boys & Girls Clubs of America, will lead National 4-H Council in its pursuit to raise $25 million per year for the 4-H youth development movement by 2010. She joins National 4-H Council in mid-February.

With nearly 15 years of experience as a front-line fundraiser in both higher education and non-profit organizations, Sirangelo has a proven track record of success in private sector fundraising. She has provided strategic leadership for significant comprehensive fundraising campaigns including a $200 million campaign currently underway at Boys & Girls Clubs of America. Sirangelo, who is responsible for Boys & Girls Clubs’ northeast region, has already gained commitments for $41 million of her team’s $65 million goal. Her personal fundraising portfolio of $13 million includes significant national multi-year, multi-million dollar corporate, and foundation relationships that engage local affiliates. Prior to joining Boys and Girls Clubs of America, Sirangelo helped lead a $65 million campaign at William Jewel College in Missouri, where she partnered with faculty, financial aid, and college alumni to build the endowment and elevate individual giving levels. In addition to youth development and higher education fundraising, Sirangelo is experienced with community-based programming. She served as executive director for Hillcrest Ministries, Inc., a transitional homeless shelter in Liberty, Missouri, where she partnered with local Cooperative Extension programs.

4-H is a community of more than seven million young people across America learning leadership, citizenship, and life skills. National 4-H Council is the national, private sector, non-profit partner of the 4-H Youth Development Program and its parent, the Cooperative Extension System of the United States Department of Agriculture.

Source: Pat BoyEs

STATE LIAISON PROGRAM BEING ESTABLISHED BY CSREES
At its July meeting, the Land-Grant Partnership Working Group recommended that Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service (CSREES) assign one or more national program leaders (NPLs) to each state to act as liaisons between the state’s land-grant institutions and CSREES in order to improve communication, enhance collaboration and strengthen the Land-Grant Partnership. CSREES administrators are developing a plan to implement the program in 2006.

For WSU Extension, our NPL liaisons are:

  • Dr. Tom Bewick (NPL, Plant and Animal Systems)
  • Maurice Dorsey (NPL, Economic and Community Systems).

Liaisons will review state plans-of-work and annual reports and will serve as a point of contact for the institution with CSREES, USDA and, where appropriate, other federal agencies. Their goal will be to make it easier to do business with CSREES and to take a better advantage of the unique CSREES/Land-Grant University Partnership. NPL liaisons in each region will meet regularly with a CSREES liaison to the regional associations to discuss regional issues and facilitate multi-state activities and coordination. As an important element to make this program successful, these liaisons are not intended to lobby or advocate on behalf of the state. Their purpose is to facilitate intercommunication and to enhance mutual understanding between the state and federal partner.

We will ask liaisons to visit campus(s) at least once every 2 years. In some states with multiple land-grant institutions, this may not be possible, but we will try. During campus visits, we are suggesting that liaisons give a seminar on CSREES describing who we are and what we do; meet with extension faculty, research faculty, academic faculty (separately or together), administrators, and students; and, in particular, ask every group, “How are we doing? What can CSREES do to serve you better? How can we improve?” We expect our liaisons to make every effort to become familiar with the programs, goals, and capabilities of the institutions.

I will be grateful for your assistance in making this a successful effort. Please let us know if there are specific topics that you would like liaisons to be able to address or if you have suggestions on strengthening this program.

PERSONNEL
New Hire:
R. Troy Peters, Ph.D. Extension Irrigation Specialist E-2, and Assistant Scientist
Location: Biological Systems Engineering at Prosser IAR&EC
Funding: 80% Extension, 20% Research
Effective: March 1, 2006

Separation:
Thomas Lumpkin, Professor, Crop and Soil Sciences
Retired Effective: March 1, 2006

SCHEDULE
Next week Linda will be in Pullman Monday, Tuesday, and Friday. On Tuesday and Wednesday she will be in Seattle and Puyallup. Next week Ed will be in Puyallup on Wednesday and in Spokane the other days of the week.

******************************
Linda Kirk Fox, PhD 
Dean and Director
Washington State University Extension
PO Box 646230, 411 Hulbert Hall 
Pullman WA 99164-6230
(509) 335-2933  Office
(509) 335-9223 Desk/Voicemail  
FAX  (509) 335-2926
lkfox@wsu.edu

         
                         
 

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