Soil to Seed to Snack! Urban Agricultural Systems: a 4-week class opportunity for Seattle Promise students

 

Professor Eli Wheat, a faculty member in the Program on the Environment and Food Systems Nutrition and Health Program, alongside UW Farm manager and class co-instructor, Perry Acworth, will co-teach a Seattle Promise Academic Introduction Seminar titled Soil to Seed to Snack! Urban Agricultural Systems offered this summer from August 22 to September 14, 2023.

Highlights include: Students spend class time outdoors learning about the UW Farm, sustainable food production processes, and the intersection of science and technology in the agriculture industry.

“The question of ‘what to eat?’ plagues well informed eaters from all walks of life! We will explore in practice together what makes an urban farm sustainable, how sustainable food is grown and what questions consumers can ask to learn more about their foods. We will consider and grapple with the ‘right size and appropriate scale for sustainable farms, we will reflect on equity and justice issues that are at the heart of our food production systems, and we will explore alternatives. This class will in literal and figurative ways – ‘give you a lot to chew on!'”
 

One of several 4-week class seminar opportunities for Seattle Promise students, first priority enrollment is for Seattle Promise students, and then students participating in TRiO, MESA, LSAMP, and other Seattle Colleges campus support programs. This opportunity may be especially beneficial to consider for those who identify as first-generation college students.

For more information, please visit: Path to UW>Academic Introduction Seminars 


Corey Garza to serve as Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion

Corey Garza will serve as the Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion

Corey Garza has agreed to serve as the UW College of the Environment’s Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, effective September 1.

In this role he will work closely with Dean Maya Tolstoy, College leadership, faculty, postdocs, staff, students and other community members to integrate an equity and justice lens into the College’s work, and advance our shared vision that excellent science, teaching and scholarship can only be achieved in a community which is inclusive and supportive of people of all backgrounds and identities.

“I’m very excited to join the College of the Environment and help support this important work,” said Garza. “Centering equity and justice in our culture and the research we do is essential to building a sustainable future, both for our institution and our planet.”

Currently a professor in the Department of Marine Science at California State University, Monterey Bay, Garza is a marine ecologist studying spatial dynamics in species-habitat associations in marine systems. He is the campus lead for the NOAA Center for Coastal and Marine Ecosystems, directs the Monterey Bay Regional Ocean Science Research Experiences for Undergraduates Program, and serves on the Board of Directors of the American Geophysical Union and the Board of Trustees of the California Academy of Sciences.

Garza is a longtime advocate of diversity, equity and inclusion in the sciences, driven in part by his own experience as a first-generation student and member of a group historically underrepresented in STEM. In addition to his work building research and education infrastructure at CSU Monterey Bay, a Hispanic-serving institution, Garza previously served a three-year term on the National Board of Directors of the Society for the Advancement of Chicanos/Hispanics and Native Americans in Science (SACNAS).

The College would like to thank the members of the Advisory Search Committee for their contributions to the hiring process:

  • Peter Abe, Director, Seattle MESA
  • Tim Essington, Director and Professor, Aquatic and Fishery Sciences
  • Stephanie Harrington (Chair), Associate Dean for Administration, College of the Environment
  • Bryce Lewis-Smith, Graduate Student, Marine and Environmental Affairs
  • Julia Parrish, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, College of the Environment; Professor, Aquatic and Fishery Sciences and Biology
  • Karen Thomas-Brown, Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, College of Engineering
  • LuAnne Thompson, Professor, Oceanography; Interim Director, Program on Climate Change

‘Wildcat’ Documentary Features PoE Alumni Samantha Zwicker

‘WILDCAT,’ a documentary featuring our UW PoE alumni Samantha Zwicker, focuses on her ecological wild cat conservation work in the Amazon rainforest. ‘WILDCAT’ has won multiple documentary awards including Best Documentary (San Diego Film Critics Society Awards 2023; Iowa Film Critics Awards 2023; National Board of Review Top Five Documentaries 2022; Utah Film Critics Association Awards) and Audience Award (Montclair Film Festival 2022; Santa Fe International Film Festival 2022) and includes numerous nominations. University of Washington Magazine recently highlighted Samantha’s inspiring, tenacious, and heartening work!

 


UW Farm Annual Plant Sale Fundraiser and Festival: Saturday May 20th 10am-2 pm

Land Acknowledgement

The UW Farm stands on the lands of the Coast Salish peoples, whose ancestors resided here since time immemorial. Many Indigenous peoples thrive in this place—alive and strong.

UW Farm Annual Plant Sale Fundraiser and Festival

Hosted by the UW Farm and Dirty Dozen Farm Club RSO

May 20th, 10am-2pm

On the campus farm  just west of the Center for Urban Horticulture

Help support the UW Farm and Student Dirty Dozen Farm Club on May 20th by visiting our our annual Plant Sale. We hope this event will cover our seed costs for the year.

Stroll through the farm, talk to student gardeners, and bring your gardening questions. The UW Farm team will be there to help!

The UW Farm is a WSDA certified organic student farm. All our plants are organic and started from seed at the campus farm.

This year we also will have a festival with family friendly games, face painting, music, and a DIY Worm Composting demonstration!

Some of the plants in the sale are:

Gigantic tomato plants including: cherry, saladette, paste, and beefsteak
peppers – hot and sweet
eggplant – asian and italian
zucchini
cucumbers
cabbage
cardoon
pac choy
winter squash, pumpkins, delicata, butternut and more
cantaloupe
annual flowers
honeysuckle vine
dahlias


2023 Undergraduate Dean’s Medalist Award: Congratulations to Lillian Williamson, UW PoE student!

 

The prestigious 2023 College of the Environment Dean’s Medalist award goes to our Program on the Environment student, Lillian Williamson, a double-major in Environmental Studies and Political Science. Lillian’s extraordinary academic and civic accomplishments include being named a Rhodes Scholarship finalist, a Mitchell scholarship semi-finalist, a Husky 100 student, and now, the Dean’s Medalist 2023 award! Lillian is the recipient of several University of Washington awards including, but not limited to the Husky Union Building Hall of Fame, Honors Pillow Scholar, Husky 100, and Robinson Center Mentor of the Year. She is a current member of the UW College of the Environment Strategic Plan committee, and in 2019, was invited to serve on the Washington State School Safety and Student Well-Being Youth Advisory council and soon thereafter became chair. Currently, she is serves as the Associated Students of the University of Washington (ASUW) Student Body Vice President. 

UW PoE Professor Kristi Straus writes: 

“Lillian’s early experience with the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction’s School Safety and Student Well Being Legislative Advisory Committee’s Youth Advisory Council taught her that investing her time and talent in political and legislative work can lead to valuable changes. Since 2019, Lillian has sought opportunities to improve policy at the city, state, and federal level. For example, Lillian is a Commissioner for the City of Seattle where she advises the Mayor and City Council about issues affecting the LGBTQ community, she is the Sub-group Lead on the Children and Youth Behavioral Health group for the Washington State Health Care Authority, she was a Lead volunteer on the Fur Free Washington campaign, and most recently, she served as a Congressional Intern for congresswoman Kim Schrier. Lillian is proud that in the 2022 Washington State Legislative Session, she collaborated on nine bills and provisos addressing issues she cares about: improving environmental regulation, addressing youth homelessness, and improving access to health care. When I talk with Lillian, she is most proud of the bills she has co-written that have passed and become law. In contrast, I am most impressed with Lillian when she talks about the work she has done to ban the fur industry in Washington State. 

 Lillian joined the #FurFreeWashington campaign when she learned about fur industry pollution damaging water quality in rural communities.  As a lead volunteer on this campaign, Lillian worked tirelessly to introduce a bill (HB 1718) in the state legislature to ban fur production in Washington.  She co-authored and promoted the petition to support the bill, managed the social media campaign, lobbied for the bill, and delivered testimony in support of the bill.  This bill, that Lillian spent so much time and effort on, did not pass.  Lillian inspires me when she talks about this bill because she doesn’t see this as a failure but instead as one step closer to the bill being passed, saying things like “the petition got 140,000 signatures!”, “we got much closer the second time than we did the first time” and “I can’t wait to try again to pass this legislation next year.”  This example so clearly demonstrates Lillian’s work ethic, tenacity, and commitment and could not better exemplify “Fail Forward”. I would be thrilled to have Lillian lead any important project that I wanted to move forward. I am confident that any project she is committed to will eventually succeed. 


In addition to the work and honors mentioned above, Lillian has extensive campus leadership experience. Currently, she is serving as the Associated Students of the University of Washington (ASUW) Student Body Vice President. In this role she acts as the Chief Internal Officer and Board of Directors Chief of Staff for UW Student government, supervising 75+ employees and overseeing a 1.4 million dollar budget.  Simultaneously, she is serving as the President of the Young Democrats of the University of Washington. Lillian is brilliant in the classroom, hard-working and tenacious in her policy/politics/and leadership positions at levels from the UW to the State, and is a passionate advocate for underserved communities.”

 


Congratulations, Hannah Whobrey, 2023 Husky Sustainability Award Recipient!

Congratulations to Hannah on being one of eight recipients of the 2023 Husky Sustainability Awards!

As the food recovery coordinator with the UW Food Pantry, Hannah Whobrey has been directly responsible for coordinating the recapture of around 7,000 pounds of food from campus partners for use by the campus community this year, which is about a 60% increase from the previous year. The UW Food Pantry supplies UW students, staff, and faculty who are experiencing food insecurity with no-cost groceries, including ready-to-eat meals from campus partners. These meals from campus partners are just outside their expiration date and cannot be sold, but are still safe to eat when handled appropriately. Whobrey has coordinated the recovery of these meals, and also worked to improve pantry practices and led outreach efforts to campus dining partners while managing a student team of volunteers. Her work has ensured the recapturing of food waste will continue long after she exits the role.

2023 Husky Sustainability Award winners was recognized at an award ceremony on Tuesday May 9th at 3 pm in the Kane Hall Walker-Ames room.


College of the Environment SPRING CELEBRATION May 25th 2023

Come join the College of the Environment for an afternoon of games, food, and merriment to celebrate an outstanding College community! All College faculty, staff, students, postdocs, and their guests are invited to attend.

  • Thursday, May 25, 2023, 2:30 – 4 pm:
  • Fishery Sciences (FSH) lobby

Please register by Friday May 19th, 2023. We hope to see our POE students at the Spring Celebration!

Register Now