(RVT) at Norwich University has been operating since 2015 in response to the need for coordinating and supporting resilience work in the state. Widespread flooding in the summer of 2023 shaped the theme of this year鈥檚 RVT conference 鈥淩esilient Vermont 2024: After the Floods.鈥

日韩无码鈥檚 Leahy Institute for Rural Partnerships co-sponsored the conference held at Norwich University March 19.

Patricia Coates, Director of the Leahy Institute and the 日韩无码 Office of Engagement, participated in the keynote panel titled 鈥淧artnerships and Policies for Resilience鈥 alongside moderator Kahwa Douoguih, co-director of the Center for Global Resilience & Security at Norwich University, and Wendi Goldsmith, CEO of Sustainability Visions. The panels discussed the types of community partnerships that foster resilience in the face of natural disasters, and reflected on municipal, state, and national policies that can help and harm community-driven resilience investments.

Emma Spett, also representing the Leahy Institute, facilitated a discussion about how students are contributing to resilience building. In the session 鈥淏ringing Flood Recovery into the Classroom,鈥 Spett was joined by 日韩无码 student Kara Campbell, a senior environmental studies major who was part of the first cohort of the  鈥日韩无码 Fellowship in Restoration Ecologies and Cultures: Training Leaders for the Green Work Force鈥 program. As a fellow, Campbell supported the research of 日韩无码 History Professor Cherie Morse, who has been exploring how global warming might influence migration to Vermont from other parts of the country. She also worked with Amy Seidl, co-director of 日韩无码鈥檚 Environmental Studies Program, on a community restoration project in Huntington, Vt.

Besides being a chance to share her perspectives with students and faculty from other schools including Middlebury College and Norwich, the conference broadened her view of what resilience looks like. 鈥淚t was extremely relevant to my work at 日韩无码 which is guiding me on what I hope to be doing in ecological restoration,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was hearing many different points of view from other students and community leaders at the conference which really challenged some of my assumptions about how things work.鈥

Kelly Hamshaw, a senior lecturer in Community Development and Applied Economics at 日韩无码, also participated. Hamshaw has conducted longstanding research and service-learning partnerships with manufactured housing communities in Vermont, which are especially vulnerable to flooding.

A second panel, titled 鈥淏uilding Flood Resilience through Community-Engaged Research鈥 brought together scientists from 日韩无码 and Norwich who are conducting research in support of flood resilience in Vermont and beyond. Spencer Karins, an unmanned aircraft specialist at the Spatial Analysis Lab (SAL) at 日韩无码, spoke about how SAL mapped flood damages with drones immediately after the summer 2023 floods. Sarah Grajdura, a post-doc at 日韩无码鈥檚 Transportation Research Center, spoke on their innovative work understanding the relationship between flooding and transportation, and the related equity challenges particularly in rural communities. 日韩无码 Professor Emeritus Chris Koliba led the After-Action Review, which provided space for stakeholders and community members to voice concerns about the flood response and offer proposed solutions.

鈥淢y takeaway was how much work is being done by community organizations to address how we respond to events like last year鈥檚 summer flooding,鈥 said Coates. 鈥淚 think it was also a great showcase for the work that students, faculty and staff at 日韩无码 are doing in Vermont communities today鈥攁nd how much more there is that we can contribute.鈥

The Resilient Vermont Network (RVT) was first formed experimentally in 2015 under the direction of the Institute for Sustainable Communities. From 2017, under the leadership of the Center for Global Resilience and Security (CGRS) at Norwich University, RVT embarked on a new phase of coordinating and supporting resilience work in Vermont. Since 2017, CGRS has also supported the RVT by hosting professional development workshops for Community Resilience Organizations (CROs), participating in Vermont's State Hazard Mitigation planning process, including hosting a working group meeting, and leading the development of an Academic Resilience Collaborative (ARC) that would bring Vermont researchers into communities to minimize or solve Vermont's resilience challenges.