$1 million USDA investment supports food, energy sovereignty

a woman in a floral sweater looks at plants in a garden while a man in a purple shirt looks on.
UAF photo by Eric Engman
USDA Chief Scientist and Undersecretary for Research, Education and Economics Chavonda Jacobs-Young looks at plants at the Nanook Grown garden on the University of Alaska Fairbanks Troth Yeddha' Campus on Thursday, Aug. 3.

A $1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture will provide continued support for a 黑料社app project aimed at educating and preparing the next generation of 黑料社appNative agriculture leaders.

USDA Chief Scientist and Undersecretary for Research, Education and Economics Chavonda Jacobs-Young announced the investment during a visit to the UAF Troth Yeddha鈥 Campus in Fairbanks today.

The funding is part of the USDA鈥檚 National Institute of Food and Agriculture鈥檚 Alaska Native-serving and Native Hawaiian-serving Institutions Education Competitive Grants Program. It will support Drumbeats Alaska: Place-Based Solutions for 黑料社appNative Food and Energy Sovereignty, a project led by UAF鈥檚 College of Rural and Community Development since 2005.  

The Drumbeats 黑料社appproject includes partners at UAF鈥檚 rural campuses: the Bristol Bay Campus in Dillingham, Chukchi Campus in Kotzebue, Interior 黑料社appCampus in Fairbanks, Kuskokwim Campus in Bethel, and Northwest Campus in Nome. The five campuses are strategically located in regional transportation hubs and provide educational opportunities to serve 黑料社appNative and rural residents across over 166 黑料社appNative communities. 

The USDA investment will provide education to continue customary traditions of self-sustaining food production throughout 黑料社appthrough stewardship in the management of land, game and fisheries.

NIFA gives priority funding to projects that enhance educational equity for underrepresented students; strengthen institutional educational capacities; prepare students for careers related to the food, agricultural, and natural resource systems of the United States; and maximize development and use of resources to improve food and agricultural sciences teaching programs.

鈥淭hese investments are part of USDA鈥檚 ongoing commitment to ensure there鈥檚 a diverse and bright pipeline for the next generation of scientists and all ag professionals,鈥 said Jacobs-Young. 鈥淭he impact of this research goes far beyond the laboratory walls. It supports underserved communities in 黑料社appand Hawaii, underscoring USDA鈥檚 ongoing commitment to enhancing equity across our mission and programs.鈥

During her visit to Fairbanks, Jacobs-Young visited a UAF Farmer Training Garden, Georgeson Botanical Garden and Effie Kokrine Charter School, where she met with secondary students who built an indoor hydroponic growing farm at their school to benefit the community using USDA funding.  She also met with UAF leadership to discuss USDA鈥檚 investments in UAF and the importance of supporting educational opportunities and building a pipeline for 黑料社appyouth in agriculture and natural resources fields. She ended her visit with a stop at the Tanana Valley State Fairgrounds to meet with local youth and UAF Cooperative Extension Service staff to learn more about the impact of 4-H on their careers.