Category Archives: Farming

Organizations working to develop and implement farming practices that are less carbon-intensive, more responsive and adaptable in a changing climate, and more sensitive to the climate-related functions of farmed and unfarmed land.

1000 Friends of Oregon

Mission statement: Working with Oregonians to enhance our quality of life by building livable urban and rural communities, protecting family farms and forests, and conserving natural areas.

Organization Type: Non-Government Organization

Website

Contact e-mail

Telephone

(503) 497-1000

Address

133 SW Second Ave., Suite 201, Portland, OR 97204

Just Garden Project

From Their Website: The Just Garden Project builds a just food system and a culture of gardening for all people. We do this by building gardens, educating gardeners, celebrating our community and engaging youth in our work. Through our programs we work to simultaneously end hunger and food related health issues by nurturing a culture of gardening for the generations to come.

Organization Type: Not-For-Profit Corporation

Website

Contact e-mail

Telephone

(206) 633-0451

Address

4649 Sunnyside Avenue N. Suite 100 Seattle, WA 98103

Landscape Conservation Incentives

Description:

This is a list of Landscape Conservation Initiatives that the USDA has implemented since 2009. These initiatives enable NRCS to more effectively address priority natural resource concerns by delivering systems of practices, primarily to the most vulnerable lands within geographic focus areas.

Through these initiatives, NRCS seeks to accomplish:

  • Conservation beyond boundaries—Landscape-scale natural resource concerns, such as species conservation and water quality, cannot be treated effectively based on geo-political boundaries.  NRCS recognizes that natural resource concerns transcend farm, county, and state boundaries.
  • A science-based approach—Findings from the multi-agency Conservation Effects Assessment Project (CEAP) indicate the most effective way to increase protection of natural resources is to target conservation to the most vulnerable or valuable areas and to apply a systems rather than a practice-by-practice approach.  Within individual initiatives, the best available university and government science resources are used to define initiative targeting approaches.
  • Build on existing locally-led efforts and partnerships—NRCS seeks to maximize the success of initiatives by leveraging partner interest and resources through programmatic and other tools.
  • Regulatory certainty for agricultural producers—Where applicable, NRCS is working with regulators so agricultural producers can have certainty that the voluntary conservation systems they implement are consistent with current and potential regulation, as well as sustained agricultural production.

These incentives are :

  • Bay Delta Initiative (BDI)                                                                                                     Improving water quantity and quality in the Bay Delta area of California for over 23 million people and irrigation water to four million acres of farmland.
  • Chesapeake Bay Watershed Initiative (CBWI)                                                                      Supporting rural economies, protecting wildlife habitat and improving water quality in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed.
  • Everglades Initiative (EI)                                                                                                       Improving water quality, controlling invasive plant species, improving wildlife and fish habitat and supporting rural economies in the Florida Everglades region.
  • Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI)                                                                            Restoring and protecting watersheds in eight states surrounding the Great Lakes that provide drinking water for over 40 million Americans and drive a $62 billion annual economy of fishing, boating and recreational activities.
  • Gulf of Mexico Initiative (GoMI)                                                                                         Improving water quality, increasing water conservation and enhancing wildlife habitat within watersheds draining into the Gulf of Mexico in the states of Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas.
  • Illinois River and Eucha-Spavinaw Lake Initiative (IRWI)                                                   Reducing nutrients, bacteria and sediment and enhancing the economic viability of agricultural operations within the Illinois River Sub-Basin and Eucha-Spavinaw Lake Watershed of Arkansas and Oklahoma.
  • Lesser Prairie Chicken Initiative (LPCI)                                                                              Expanding Lesser prairie-chicken habitat and benefiting the long-term sustainability of producers’ agricultural operations in high priority habitat areas in the current range in the states of Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas.
  • Longleaf Pine Initiative (LLPI)                                                                                              Enhancing critical wildlife habitat and improving the health, sustainability and profitability of privately owned Longleaf pine forests in the southeastern United States.
  • Migratory Bird Habitat Initiative (MBHI)                                                                                Providing food, water and critical habitat for bird populations, supporting local economies by attracting hunters and bird watchers, and expanding opportunities for improved wildlife management.
  • Mississippi River Basin Healthy Watershed Initiative (MRBI)                                               Improving water quality, restoring wetlands, and enhancing wildlife habitat and agricultural profitability in priority small watersheds of the Mississippi River in the states of Arkansas, Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, Tennessee, South Dakota, and Wisconsin.
  • New England / New York Forestry Initiative (NENYI)                                                               Helping keep forests as forests in the New England region that provide clean drinking water, support rural economies and protect wildlife habitat.
  • North Central Wetlands Conservation Initiative (NCWCI)                                              Protecting wetlands and improving water quality, flood water retention and fish and wildlife habitat in the Prairie Pothole Region of Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota.
  • Ogallala Aquifer Initiative (OAI)                                                                                         Reducing aquifer water use, improving water quality and enhancing the economic viability of croplands and rangelands in Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, New Mexico, Texas, South Dakota and Wyoming
  • Red River Initiative (RRI)                                                                                                Decreasing water quantity flowing into the Red River and its tributaries to reduce flooding potential, increasing water quality, and restoring wildlife habitat for migratory species.
  • Sage Grouse Initiative (SGI)                                                                                               Conserving Greater sage-grouse population by restoring its habitat and improving the productivity of ranching operations in 11 western states.
  • West Maui Coral Reef Initiative (WMCRI)                                                                        Reducing pollution to improve coastal water quality and coral reef ecosystem health in the Ka’anapali-Kahekili watershed of Hawaii.
     Temporary Places

Organization Type:

Farm Power

About:

Farm Power is a Washington and Oregon company that works towards sustainable agriculture and renewable energy. Their facilities use an anaerobic manure digester that harvests methane gas from manure. They use the methane to create electricity and send the manure to their partnered farms to use as an organic fertilizer. Their goal is to build manure digesters for as many dairy farms in the Pacific Northwest as possible. They work with groups of dairy farmers to design regional digesters that can serve multiple farms. By using their digesters they reduce thousands of tons of greenhouse gas emissions per year.

Organization Type:

Website

Contact e-mail

Telephone

(360) 424-4519

Full Circle Farms

We’ve been passionate about growing delicious produce free of herbicides and pesticides and farming in a way that preserves our soil and environment. And we’ve made a sizable difference – bringing organic and natural food to thousands of tables over the years. But we knew one farm couldn’t do it all. So, we now work with some of the best organic and family farms and producers on the West Coast – folks we know and trust – to bring you wholesome, healthy, real food.
-From the About Us page of their website

Organization Type: For-Profit Corporation

Website

Telephone

866.EAT.WELL

Address

800 Maynard Ave, Ste 208, Seattle, WA 98134 PO Box 608 Carnation, WA 98014

Portland Permaculture Guild

The Portland Permaculture Guild is an informal group dedicated to permaculture as a system of conscious, sustainable, ecological design.  They offer classes, workshops and other activities based on public interest.  They often work with other like-minded organizations in the region to promote sustainability education and implementation.

Organization Type:

Inland Northwest Land Trust

The official website indicates that Inland Northwest Land Trust (INTL) is “a local, non-profit, non-political organization with over 450 members. Through easements, acquisitions, and by working with other conservation partners we have helped preserve 14,694 acres of wetlands, shorelines, farmlands, and forests in eastern Washington and northern Idaho for present and future generations.”

Mission Statement:  Inland Northwest Land Trust protects the regions natural lands, waters and working farms and forests for the benefit of wildlife, our community and future generations.

INTL works with private landowners and other partners to protect this region’s quality of life. Their focus is on the conservation of natural open spaces to preserve wildlife, clean air and water, and scenic beauty.

Organization Type: Not-For-Profit Corporation

Website

Contact e-mail

Telephone

(509) 328-2939

Address

Inland Northwest Land Trust, 35 West Main Avenue, Suite 210, Spokane, WA 99201

USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service

Description:

NRCS offers voluntary programs to eligible landowners and agricultural producers to provide financial and technical assistance to help manage natural resources in a sustainable manner.  Through these programs the agency approves contracts to provide financial assistance to help plan and implement conservation practices that address natural resource concerns or opportunities to help save energy, improve soil, water, plant, air, animal and related resources on agricultural lands and non-industrial private forest land.

Financial Assistance Programs:

  • The Agricultural Management Assistance(AMA) provides financial and technical assistance to agricultural producers to voluntarily address issues such as water management, water quality, and erosion control by incorporating conservation into their farming operations.
  • The Agricultural Water Enhancement Program (AWEP) is a voluntary conservation initiative that provides financial and technical assistance to agricultural producers to implement agricultural water enhancement activities on agricultural land to conserve surface and ground water and improve water quality.
  • Conservation Innovation Grants (CIG) is a voluntary program intended to stimulate the development and adoption of innovative conservation approaches and technologies while leveraging Federal investment in environmental enhancement and protection, in conjunction with agricultural production.
  • The Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) is a voluntary program that provides financial and technical assistance to agricultural producers through contracts up to a maximum term of ten years in length.
  • The Wildlife Habitat Incentive Program(WHIP) is a voluntary program for conservation-minded landowners who want to develop and improve wildlife habitat on agricultural land, nonindustrial private forest land, and Indian land.

 USDA Washington State Office

Organization Type: Government Agency

Website

Telephone

(509) 323-2900

Address

316 W. Boone Ave., Suite 450 Spokane, WA 99201-2348

Northwest Environmental Defense Center

The Northwest Environmental Defense Center is based in Oregon and is dedicated to preservation and promotes sustainable agriculture.  “NEDC students currently work as members of one or more of our project groups, including: Lands and Wildlife, Water, Air, and Sustainable Agriculture”.  Their ongoing projects include air quality patrolling to ensure no violations of current air standards take place, sustainable land use and raising awareness on sustainable food operations, and many other practices.

Organization Type:

Website

Contact e-mail

Telephone

(503) 768-6673

Address

10015 SW Terwilliger Blvd. Portland, OR 97219

Oregon Environmental Council

“Founded in 1968, Oregon Environmental Council is a nonprofit, non-partisan, membership-based organization. The Oregon Environmental Council advances innovative, collaborative solutions to Oregon’s environmental challenges for today and future generations.” The Oregon Environmental Council works for clean air and water, a healthy climate, an unpolluted landscape and sustainable food and farms

Organization Type:

Website

Telephone

(503) 222-1963

Address

222 NW Davis Street, Suite 309 Portland, Oregon 97209