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Photo by Jerry DeWitt. What is SARE?. Grants and outreach to advance sustainable innovations to the whole of American agriculture. Something New and Different. SARE was started in 1988, conceived as a
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What is SARE? Grants and outreach to advance sustainable innovations to the whole of American agriculture.
Something New and Different SARE was started in 1988, conceived as a decentralized, science-based, grassroots, practical, problem solving – and inclusive – competitive grant making and outreach program. Photo by Jerry DeWitt
The SARE Model • Four regional councils set priorities and make grants • SARE Outreach produces practical info • USDA-NIFA supports SARE • Other USDA agencies and land-grant universities are partners
People – who depend on agriculture Stewardship – of the nation’s land and water Profit – over the long term The SARE Model • Successful SARE grantees are engaged in projects that simultaneously address the • 3 pillars of sustainability: Photo by Ted Coonfield
The SARE Model SARE has educationpartnerships with Extension and other ag professionals in every state and island protectorate. Photo by Bob Nichols, USDA NRCS
SARE Grant Types Since 1988, SARE has invested in 5,000 projects nationwide • Farmer/Rancher • Research & Education • Professional Development • Graduate Student • Sustainable Community Development • Ag Professional/Producer Partnerships Go to www.sare.orgfor your region’s contact information. Photo by Carol Flaherty
The SARE Portfolio • Sustainable pest and weed mgmt • Clean energy • Marketing • Stewardship of land and water • Systems research • Community development • Crop diversification • Soil quality • Nutrient management • Rotational grazing • …and much more Photo by Troy Bishopp
SARE Outreach a library of practical, how-to books (in print or download for free) media outreach a portfolio of in-depth reports on current topics conference sponsorships countlessonline resources, including project reports
20 Years ofImpact 79 percent of producers said they improved soil quality through their SARE project 64 percent of producers said their SARE project helped them achieve higher sales 75 percent of educators surveyed led at least one program to share innovations Photo courtesy Karl Kupers
Supporting Tomorrow’s Experts 75 percentof Research and Education grant projects employ graduate students Up to 50 percentof those students co-author scholarly papers Shoshanah Inwood, SARE Graduate Student Grantee
New and Future Directions • “Ratcheting up”with a proposed federal-state matching grants program • Broadening outreachto the whole of American agriculture – sponsoring conferences, tailoring information • Strengthening trainingfor • ag professionals at the state level Photo by Mary Kempfert
New and Future Directions • Helping other grant making institutions incorporate sustainability approaches • Working with universities to integrate sustainable • ag curricula Photo by Helenna Bratman
Other USDA-Supported Information Programs Alternative Farming Systems Information Center Collects and distributes information. Provides searching from National Ag Library's collection and databases. www.nal.usda.gov/afsic ATTRA National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service Provides information and other technical assistance to farmers, ranchers, educators and others. www.attra.org Photo courtesy NRCS