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5441 SE Belmont St
Portland, OR, 97215
United States

(503)719-6779

Confluence Environmental Center

Blog

2012-13 AmeriCorps Members Commence

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Congratulations to the 2012-13 Confluence AmeriCorps Members! 

This year our talented, intelligent and passionate members Served their communities in many ways, here are some figures to show the effect of their work.

  • 6,521 hours of professional development
  • 3,691 youth educated
  • 63% live in a low income community or a community of color
  • 89% of youth surveyed learned something new
  • 74% of youth surveyed will practice new skills in the future
  • 2,529 volunteers engaged in service
  • 17,530 volunteer hours
  • 88% of volunteers surveyed would volunteer in the future
  • 422 outreach activities led by members
  • 51% of outreach benefited low income communities and communities of color
  • 7,811 adults educated
  • 81% of adults surveyed learned something new
  • 30,235 trees + shrubs planted
  • 91 acres of invasive weeds eradicated
  • 117 greenspaces improved
  • 69% of greenspaces located in low income communities or communities of color
  • 90% of sites monitored show improved watershed health

We're sad to see them go but are glad to know they are out in the world continuing to do great things.

 

2013-14 AmeriCorps Project Partners Announced

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 Confluence is excited to announce our AmeriCorps Sponsors for the 2013-2014 program year.

Thank you to all of our community readers who read our all of the wonderful proposals that were submitted and helped guide us to choose next year's Sponsors. 

AmeriCorps Member positions will be posted in the coming weeks.  If you would like to recieve an email when our positions get posted, sign up HERE

Invasive plant workshop with Justin

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Invasive plants are a major problem for the environment and the economy. They damage property and crowd out our native, wildlife friendly species. Join us for a FREE workshop focusing on Early Detection Rapid Response (EDRR) invasive weeds. Learn to identify and report new invaders before they become a problem.

Tuesday, April 16, 7:00-8:00 pm

Gresham City Hall

1333 NW Eastman Pkwy

Gresham, Oregon 97030

Room 2A/2B

Visit http://greshamoregon.gov/weeds/ for more information and to learn about Gresham’s invasive-for-native plant swap

Please RSVP! To register online, go to www.solv.org. Click on Upcoming Events to register for this date. Call Justin Bauer at (503) 618-2604 for questions.

Confluence Chavez Day is Coming

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Cesar Chavez Day 2012Serve.gov wrote a fantastic post about our 2013 Cesar Chavez Day of Service.  Congratulations to Laura, Stephanie, Kaci Rae and Pablo for their hardwork putting this event together.

Confluence is serving this Saturday at Virginia Garcia Memorial Health Center and Adelante Mujeres.

Ceasar Chavez Day commemorates and promotes Chávez's life work for civil rights, education and the environment. Confluence is serving this Saturday at Virginia Garcia Memorial Health Center and Adelante Mujeres to support their community garden and healthy eating education programs by building raised beds, preparing gardens spaces, improving signage and removing invasive species.

Visit the Cesar Chavez Foundation to learn more about Chavez's work for civil rights, education and the environment.

 

AmeriCorps Week 2013: It's about the connections you make

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Guest Blog from Mary Meier, Natural Resources Specialist at North Clackamas Parks and Recreation

This is my third term with Americorps and over the time I have served I often end up struggling to define my motivation for Americorps service. Recently I bumped into a very simple but perfectly apt explanation. Flying over the holidays is stressful and tiring, I often find myself very introverted and, quite frankly, cranky during the experience. This December, when the pilot came over the intercom to tell us that rather than taking off we were going to be unloading, walking through the airport and re-boarding a different plane because of an equipment malfunction. Well, I don't think I was the only one a bit miffed. I found myself in a dauntingly long and snaking line of less-than-thrilled humanity surrounded by carry on bags and totes. I was trying to keep my spirits up when someone I had never met turned, and noticing an Americorps logo on my bag, asked if I had served. All of a sudden we were having a warm and pleasant conversation about our time and activities with Americorps; joking, smiling and recounting volunteer experiences despite the fluorescent surroundings.

People feel good about their time with Americorps; even if days are often long and experiences are sometimes emotionally or physically tiring. These are experiences that bring people together and connect them to their community and natural environment while providing concrete benefits to non profit organizations working to make our society more equitable and sustainable.

But it is clearly not just about making us feel good. It is important to make sure we are having an impact on the ground and in the lives of others. I was leading a volunteer work party and educational event for a group of high school-aged young adults a couple months ago. The attention and interest of a group of volunteers can vary immensely and there are days where I’m not sure that I’m really connecting. I was having one of those days. One of the students took a particular interest in the native plants we were working around and asked me a question. I stopped worrying about the event and took a little time to answer her question, prompt a couple more and share a snippet of my own love of botany. At the end of the work party my site supervisor brought everyone together, thanked them for coming and asked a simple question, "Did anyone learn something they want to share today?". The same student once again pulled me out of my own logistical concerns. Her hand shot up and she said "sedges have edges and rushes are round", which is a familiar little rhyme I had mentioned while we were talking about identifying wetland plants. I felt like I had connected.

Work parties and volunteer events can be a lot of things. They can be an introduction to restoration and community involvement, an ongoing way for people to give back, or a fun way to spend the day outside, but they are always about connections. Sometimes the simplest way to value them is to revel in these connections and appreciate that this Americorps experience makes us, and the people we interact with, more likely to find, instigate and pass on connections within our communities and the natural world.

AmeriCorps Week 2013: Making strides in the real world

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Making strides in the real world: My experience being a Confluence AmeriCorps Member

Guest Blog by Dain Alferes, Recycling Outreach Specialist with Washington County, Solid Waste & Recycling

 

I found myself in the same position that I assume many of my fellow Portland State graduates were in: now that I am an official college graduate, how do I utilize my education to give me a chance to climb the job ladder past the point of just struggling to get by? The well known truth of the matter is that the real world is a tough place with limited job opportunities that are even further limited if you want to do something that would justify your Environmental Studies degree. For the first couple of months post-school my hopes began to dwindle as I kept coming up empty in my job search, finding only work that I had gone to school to move beyond or jobs looking for specific skills and field experience that I didn't have. As time went by I got very close to giving up on looking for a job where I could utilize my degree, ready to accept the fact that my only chance for work was in the low wage, low-skill fields. Fortunately for myself around this time I was tipped by a friend to opportunities posted by Confluence Environmental Center and sponsored through AmeriCorps.

The position that I applied for and later received was for a Recycling Outreach Coordinator, working with Washington County in the Solid Waste and Recycling department. This was an ideal opportunity for me to utilize my education. Not only did the job directly relate to what I had focused on in school but they were looking to hire candidates that did not have the experience and needed to get their foot in the door. Already excited by the fact that I was going to utilize my education, my contentment only grew when I went to Confluence Environmental Center for my first training. The staff who work at the center were nothing but personable and helpful on that first meeting and have kept those positive and appreciable attitudes throughout my service. My fellow Confluence AmeriCorps Members have also been a very positive and important part of my experience. Being able to work with and share experiences with a group of cool and open-minded individuals has helped me acclimate to my new position and given me the opportunity to make some new friends. The Professional Development trainings offered by Confluence have been key to helping me become a better worker and work-mate at my job, giving me skills that I will be able to apply through out my future work experiences. Being a Confluence AmeriCorps Member has not only given me trainings that will help in work and life, it has also given me the great opportunity to further my career chances in a field that I care deeply about.

Working with Washington County’s Solid Waste and Recycling department as a Recycling Outreach Coordinator has been an amazing opportunity to utilize my degree and earn real world experience in the field that I am passionate about. Before this opportunity, I had never worked in an office setting before. Through the opportunity that AmeriCorps has afforded me, I have been able to finally work in a setting that I had previously felt was not open to me. It has been an enjoyable and very valuable experience working in a government office and learning how everything works in an environment that had been foreign to me up until now. The best parts of my work have been the responsibility given to me to develop my outreach skills and being able to interact with the public. The freedom that I have been given to organize my outreach opportunities and to work with people at all levels has been very beneficial. From meeting with management companies to directly engaging the public, this job has allowed me to develop the skills and comfort level to work with all types of people and to continuously improve at managing multiple projects at the same time. Working directly with the public has been very rewarding. Talking with apartment residents during "knock and talks" has allowed me to meet a wide variety of characters with an assortment of beliefs that they passionately support. Meeting all these different people has been a great experience in itself, but the comfort and skill in talking to the public that these experiences offer has proved to be very valuable work skills training.

Connecting with AmeriCorps through Confluence Environmental Center has been one of the most valuable experiences that I have had in my life. They have not only offered me a path to a career in a field that I am passionate about, but also given me numerous invaluable training experiences and connections that I will be able to utilize for the rest of my life. AmeriCorps has also given me the opportunity to meet and network with many people from all walks of life. This has allowed me to hear the view points of many people that I would probably not cross paths with in other contexts, make new friends who share my passions and connect with people working in the fields that I would like to work in some day. AmeriCorps and Confluence have been an awesome experience.  To anyone considering applying for it, I would be the first to say, "that’s a great idea".

 

AmeriCorps Week 2013: Meet the BES Confluence AmeriCorps Members

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A guest blog post from Svetlana Pell and Lea Wilson, Confluence AmeriCorps Members with City of Portland Bureau of Environmental Services

Seventy-two green streets adopted, fifty trees planted, and more than 1500 adults and youth educated…. We’re the AmeriCorps-Confluence members at BES and we’re rolling up our sleeves and getting it done!

AmeriCorps represents an orchestrated and monumental effort to bridge the gap between top-down organization and bottom-up community needs by engaging volunteers in non-military national service.  Here at BES, we channel our AmeriCorps energy through the mission of Confluence Environmental Center to engage low-income and ethnically diverse communities in Portland, OR.  We empower community members to be the kind of stewards they want to be in their urban ecosystem through education, face-to-face communication, hands-on activities, special events, and old-fashioned networking.  We work to create partnerships between BES and members of the community including citizens, businesses, community action groups, and non-profit organizations, connecting interest with action.

Svetlana Pell, Green Street Steward Coordinator

Hello, my name is Svetlana and I love all plants… well almost all.  I serve as a Green Street Steward Coordinator with BES.  In my work I get to talk to lots of people, make great connections, and share information about Green Streets with the community.  In addition to volunteering as a crew leader with Friends of Trees and freeing the soil from concrete and asphalt with Depave, I serve on the boards of the Intertwine Alliance and Green Lents. 

 

In March, I  partnered with the Community Watershed Stewardship Program (CWSP) to teach a rain garden class at the Franciscan Montessori Earth School. Students from the school shared their creative garden- and rain-themed poetry, which was superb.  Afterward, we held a native planting event to solve erosion problems at a local apartment complex.  Thank you to Mark Boucher-Colbert (Garden Specialist at Franciscan Montessori Earth School) and CWSP for making this great event possible and inviting me to be a plant geek and play with the kids.  I will be teaching classes this April and May so feel free to stop by and learn about your watershed and Green Street Steward Program.

Lea Wilson, Community Urban Forest Coordinator

Hi!  My name’s Lea and I love trees!  I also love cities and I am stoked to serve as your Community Urban Forest Coordinator with the Grey to Green Program.  I am halfway through my service term, and focused on empowering citizens to get to know their urban forest personally.  I work in existing relationships with Friends of Trees and Neighborhood Tree Stewards (NTS) while also seeking out new opportunities.  I’m especially excited to bring NTS to Multnomah County Libraries for tree education workshops and to engage students at David Douglas High School (Go Scots!) planting and monitoring trees on their grounds to shade classrooms, manage stormwater, and provide critical urban habitat.  In my own time, I volunteer with the Portland Fruit Tree Project and the Tualatin River National Wildlife Refuge.

If you see me around, don’t be shy – I’d love to talk to you about your urban forest!  Catch me at the Arbor Day celebration April 20th at the PSU Farmers Market.  I’ll also be leading tree walks this summer at Lents Park.  Stay tuned on Green Lents for more info. 

An individual has not started living until he can rise above the narrow confines of his individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.”  - Dr. MLK Jr.  What does your community need? Check out http://www.serve.gov/ for ways to volunteer and templates for community action.

AmeriCorps Week 2013: Spring is Coming to Springwater Environmental Sciences School

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A guest blog from Kaci Rae Christopher, School Garden Coordinator at Springwater Environmental Science School

When I began my AmeriCorps term as Garden Coordinator for Springwater Environmental Sciences School, the rhetoric about the garden was so despairing, so “othering.” It was “that” space, described with a dismissive wave of one’s hand, a space filled with intense and prickly weeds, a place where the students were afraid to tread.

I spent my first few weeks eating lunch out in the garden, imagining what the space could look like come spring and summer. Slowly, students wandered in. They were nervous about the immense size of the weed forest, but driven in by their curiosity and the possibility of finding woolly-bear caterpillars. With the help of my hardy boots, we built trails through the weeds together, collecting a myriad of insects and wondering aloud what the garden could produce.

With the help of the students and staff at Springwater, we are working to make this experimental school garden one that produces a diverse yield, while also connecting the school and local community together in partnership and dirty hands. This is a garden of inspiration. Springwater students have been busy designing and building compost structures, worm bins, and rain gardens. In garden class, students have learned to take care of the soil by analyzing soil samples and learning how it is a living thing. They have taste tested raw parts of “plants we eat,” exploring roots, stems, and fruits as scientists.  And they have weeded, mulched, and reimagined the garden space during every class and recess. 

The work we’ve accomplished so far at building a lasting garden program in Springwater wouldn’t have been possible without the support and enthusiasm of the Confluence Environmental Center staff. By connecting the school with AmeriCorps, Confluence has offered this school the opportunity to begin developing a flexible but integrated garden curriculum that will grow in future years.

AmeriCorps has provided the chance for this garden space to actually connect students to garden science by supporting my position as Garden Coordinator. Students and staff who have seen the weeds take over the garden year after year, who have seen efforts to grow food fall through because of the lack of a garden program, no longer use the despairing rhetoric used six months ago. Now we use words like “diligence,” “yield,” and “experiment.” 

Spring is well on the way. This is a time to appreciate the efforts it has taken to come this far, to plan for the future months, and to look at the steps it will take to grow a thriving garden/school relationship. My goals are to get each student engaged in planting a part of the garden so that they can each connect and be in ownership of the space, individually and as a community.  I look forward to continuing our partnership with Food Waves, a local non-profit focused on garden education in schools, and with Friends of Family Farmers, Naomi’s Organic Farm Supply, and TLC Gardens.  I also look forward to our growing partnerships with nearby schools, Redland and Lent, and the opportunities they provide for student immersion and the exchange of ideas and learning through positive communal experiences in the garden.

Overall, I hope that this will become a communal space where students, staff, parents, partners, and volunteers explore together through positive experiences, hard work, and a fulfilling yield. I want students to return next fall to a space that is ripe for inspiration, gathering, eating, sharing, and learning.

Please enjoy this slideshow of the garden developments and activities at Springwater over the past few months.

AmeriCorps Week 2013

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AmeriCorps Week 2013 has begun!

Every year at this time AmeriCorps Members across the country share their stories of service with the world. Be on the look out for dispatches from the frontline of Service in the coming week and we invite you to join us in thanking our AmeriCorps Members for their hard work and dedication to service!

 

Confluence Granted 501(c)3 Status

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A note from the Confluence Board

 

Confluence was just informed by the IRS that we’ve been granted tax-deductible status as a public charity under section 501(c)(3). This means that we can now accept tax-deductible contributions retroactive to July 14, 2011.

 

Thanks to everyone who contributed to our efforts to submit our application to the IRS, and to raise the funds needed for the application. This clears one more hurdle in establishing Confluence as a sustainable and robust organization.

 

The Confluence Board is currently engaged in a planning and visioning process to develop our future goals. This process will define new initiatives that Confluence may launch in the future.

 

Thanks again to everyone for being a part of Confluence’s efforts.

We Love Our AmeriCorps Members!

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We just want to take a moment to publicly, enthusiastically and honestly appreciate all of the amazing AmeriCorps Members who serve with Confluence. They are the love and the blood of our organization and we couldn't do any of the work we do without their charm, intellect, snappy dressing and dedication to service, .  Thank you from the bottom of our hearts!

Growing Gardens Volunteer Garden Mentors

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Confluence AmeriCorps sponsor Growing Gardens is recruiting Volunteer Garden Mentors for the 2013 growing season!

Mentors will work with one or more beginning gardeners enrolled in the Home Garden and Growing Huertos Programs. They will assist Home Gardener(s) with:

  • Garden care
  • Planning for spring/summer/winter gardening
  • Planting, problem-solving, maintenance
  • Worm & compost bin construction
  • Garden winterization

 To find out more visit Growing Gardens’ webpage or email Katie at Katie@growing-gardens.org.

MLK Day of Service 2013

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This Martin Luther King Jr Day of Service was an extra special event this year because we had the pleasure of partnering with Playworks of Portland to plan and coordinate our MLK Day Service project.  A committee of hard working AmeriCorps members from Confluence and Playworks worked to develop this fun and meangingful Service opportunity.

AmeriCorps members and staff from Confluence and Playworks joined with Woodlawn Methodist Church community members to pack bags of food for the Portland Backpack Lunch Program.  The Portland Backpack Lunch Program provides healthy weekend lunches to students who otherwise wouldn't be able to afford a healthy meal while school is out of session.

Confluence, Playworks and 200+ community members packed over 650 lunches that will be distributed in the coming weeks to 164 students at King, Woodlawn, and Scott elementary schools.  

Thank you to New Seasons, St. Johns Coffee Roaster, Random Order, and Grand Central Bakery for donating tasty food and delicious coffee!

Check out more pictures from the day.

Ray Warren Multicultural Symposium

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"The annual Ray Warren Multicultural Symposium is a three-day series of events examining issues of race and ethnicity. Each year a team of students, with faculty and staff involvement, organizes an array of workshops, lectures, readings, panels, and performances, as well as an art show, to bring people together for conversations about issues such as immigration, public health, civil liberties, and education. All students are invited to participate in the planning process, and the interdisciplinary nature of the symposium appeals to students from across the College."

November 7-9

http://college.lclark.edu/programs/ethnic_studies/symposium/

Welcome Stephanie!

rob loucks

A warm welcome to Stephanie Levine, our newest AmeriCorps memeber to join us here at Confluence. Stephanie is the Community Outreach Specialist at CUB.

$10 Fundraiser Dinner for Portland Fruit Tree Project

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Whole Foods on Fremont (3535 NE 15th Ave) is hosting a fundraiser for Portland Fruit Tree Project (PFTP) on Thursday Oct. 25th from 5-7pm.

The theme is "Build a Bowl: Beans, Greens, and Lean Proteins". For only $10 you'll get a delicious dinner, PLUS all of your $10 will go towards PFTP!
Whole Foods is asking that you RSVP to erin.rosvold@wholefoods.com, with the subject "PFTP Dinner" and the number of adults/kids in your party, so they know how much food to make.

Portland Fruit Tree Project is the sponsoring site of Confluence AmeriCorps Member Spencer Masterson

 

 

 

 

New AmeriCorps Position

rob loucks

Just announced: an AmeriCorps position for a Community Outreach Coordinator with CUB.  This 11 month position is open for immediate filling.

This position will expand and engage in extensive community outreach around Electric Vehicle Education with a specific focus on the environmental and consumer issues in underserved communities.

Download the full Position Description and begin your application process.