Now is the time to involve your tamarki/children in protecting the whenua and preparing for the impacts of climate change and natural hazards.
Bay of Plenty Regional Council’s School Sustainability and Resilience Fund is open and is seeking applications from schools, kura, kohanga, kindergartens, early childhood education centres across our rohe/region.
Bay of Plenty Regional Council Engagement Team Leader Steph Macdonald says there's a fund of $35,000 available for education providers to help kick off environmental projects.
“We want to get more kids with their fingers in the ground taking care of our whenua, biking to school, and knowing what to do in case of a tsunami. This fund can help support all of that and more.
“We have set up this fund so local education providers can design their own environmental project and see it through.”
Steph says the projects that have been funded in the past included building wetlands, bike racks, tsunami evacuation signs, fruit forests and vege gardens, composting bins and worm farms, weather monitoring stations and more.
Over the last two years Regional Council has had more than 80 applications and has been able to fund $100,000 towards a range of projects across the region.
The projects must contribute to one or more of the following categories, she said. Raising awareness of and understanding natural hazards and/or climate change risks, improving long-term resilience and sustainability and reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
“The fund was also a way to get the community involved with participatory budgeting, where community decide which projects should be funded,” she says.
“Bringing together the community to vote for their favourite projects, no matter how big or small the projects are, this is the success of this project - the participatory budgeting.
“By empowering the community, we are empowering them do their own voting, marketing, and projects for long term sustainability and resilience.
“The kids and the schools do the thinking about how they want to be more environmentally sustainable and resilient to climate change, and we support them to do that.”
As part of last year’s round for applications, there was a total of 2150 votes from the community.
Last year, Regional Council empowered 16 young people to help allocate $15,000 through the fund too.
“We supported a youth panel to weigh up the options and make tough choices through participatory budgeting and empowered them to make their own decisions on who they thought needed an extra boost.
The School Sustainability and Resilience Fund is open now with applications closing on March 15. Please head to www.participate.boprc.govt.nz/ssrf for more information.
1 comment
The Master
Posted on 08-03-2024 15:38 | By Ian Stevenson
Yes, environmentally, it is vital that nature be sustainable and in fact vibrant and even expanding. Plant life is essential to any and all life on planet earth, CO2 is 100% cornerstone to that. More plant life = more food etc.
For that to happen then what is really needed is more CO2 available in the atmosphere so as all plant life will thrive and flourish a lot better than now. World wide CO2 levels are almost at record low levels so do need a huge boost.
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