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Alaska Cooperative Extension Service

University of Alaska Fairbanks Cooperative Extension Service is an outreach-based educational delivery system supported by a partnership between the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF). The UAF Cooperative Extension Service annually serves approximately 80,000 Alaskans, “providing a link between Alaska's diverse people and communities by interpreting and extending relevant university, research-based knowledge in an understandable and usable form to the public.”[1] Since 1930[2] the UAF Extension Service has partnered with many organizations across the state of Alaska in pursuit of fulfilling its land-grant university mission to disseminate agricultural research and other scientific information.

Official UAF Cooperative Extension Service logo

Organization edit

UAF Cooperative Extension Service is part of the larger Cooperative Extension Service in the United States. At UAF, Extension is organized by program area and a UAF faculty member serves as the program chair in each of the four areas: agriculture and horticulture; health, home and family development; natural resources and community development; and 4-H and youth development. The program chairs report to the director of the organization. The director also serves as vice provost of outreach for the university. In addition to the four program areas, Extension has its own business office and communications unit within the university. Each of the program chairs oversees faculty and staff across the various districts in the state. District office locations include Anchorage, Bethel, Delta Junction, Fairbanks, Juneau, Nome, Palmer, Sitka and Soldotna, and affiliate offices are located at the Tanana Chiefs Conference, Eielson Air Force Base, Kodiak and Thorne Bay.

Purpose edit

UAF Cooperative Extension Service brings research-based information to the public in an understandable and useful form.[3] Its strategic plan identifies food safety and security, health, climate change, energy, economic development, and youth, family and communities as major themes.[4] The faculty and staff of the Extension offices offer research-based expertise to the public on a wide variety of topics to a wide variety of audiences, from farmers and entrepreneurs to rural families and children.[5] In Alaska, experts in agriculture and horticulture, integrated pest management,[6] youth development, foods and nutrition, natural resources, community development,[7][8] energy and more are employed by Extension.[9] In order to make research-based information accessible to the public, UAF Extension offers many publications, from one-page fact sheets to the 482-page Master Gardener manual.[10] More than 300 publications are currently available, and most can be downloaded online.[11]

Experts with UAF Extension offer workshops and practical trainings to citizens in communities around Alaska.[12] Regular topics include pesticide applicator certifications,[13] Master Gardener and other gardening courses,[14][15] cold climate building courses,[16] food preservation classes[17] and youth camps.[18][19] Agents have worked on projects that affect Alaska statewide, such as the 1980s implementation of pest identification and management services.[20]

Fishing and hunting are popular in the state, and residents are often looking for information on how to preserve fish and game meat.[21][22] UAF Extension has produced publications on topics especially of interest to Alaskans such as canning moose and caribou meat,[23] canning walrus meat,[24] preserving fireweed[25] and harvesting and preparing Nereocystis luetkeana or bullwhip kelp from Alaska's coastal areas.[26] UAF Extension agents also offer pressure canner gauge testing to help Alaskans ensure they are preserving foods safely.[27][28]

History edit

The United States purchased Alaska from Russia in 1867. Several events before and after the Alaska Purchase laid the groundwork for Extension's beginnings in the new U.S. territory. Firstly, the Morrill Act of 1862, signed by President Lincoln, granted federal lands to each state. The proceeds from the land were to be used to fund public colleges focused on engineering and agriculture.[29] James Wickersham, judge and congressional delegate in the early 1900s,[30] became aware of the Morrill Act and pushed for the creation of a college in the interior, submitting an education bill to Congress. The cornerstone for Alaska's land-grant college, Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines, was presented in 1915.[31] The college started classes in 1922.[32] However, Alaska did not receive the full benefits of the Morrill Act. Though Alaska was entitled to about 360,000 acres (145,687 ha) of land from legislation passed in 1915, the implementation of the 1958 Alaska Statehood Act repealed the gift before 97 percent of the land could be surveyed and granted. During statehood negotiations, Congress felt that federal lands given to the state were sufficient to also provide for the university, and Alaska politicians felt that it would have more freedom in land choice by avoiding university-specific grants.[33] Luckily, before statehood, a grant of land in 1929 that is still in effect today provided tens of thousands of acres dedicated to university use.[34]

In addition to the land-grant process, the advent of agricultural research in Alaska contributed significantly to the development of Extension services. Starting at the turn of the century and continuing through 1915, seven federal agriculture experiment stations were established in Alaska. The agriculturalists from the experiment stations established the viability of farm and garden programs in Alaska. Their work was augmented by the addition of Extension agents with funding stemming from the Smith-Lever Act of 1914, fully extended to Alaska in 1929. The Alaska legislature designated the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines, which eventually became the University of Alaska, as administrator of the Cooperative Extension Service work that would be provided by experts in agriculture and home economics. Charles E. Bunnell, college president at the time, worked with USDA to organize the fledgling service in June 1930. Lydia Fohn-Hansen was made assistant director for home economics, and George W. Gasser became assistant director for agriculture. Starting in July 1930, the new appointees began working with Alaskans. They helped organize nine 4-H clubs and 12 home economics clubs.[35] Travel was completed by whatever means necessary, which sometimes meant dogsled. Fohn-Hansen was on the road for months at a time as she "toured the state carrying teaching supplies, clothing, bulletins, pressure canner, can sealer, patterns, garden seeds, needles, yarn and probably a loom..."[36]

In 1932 a veterinarian was added to the staff. In 1935, a full-time director was appointed for Extension, the same year that the federal government established the Matanuska Colony.[35] The Matanuska Colony refers to 200 families selected from Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota to settle and farm the Matanuska Valley, building the local economy in Southcentral Alaska.[37] The first Cooperative Extension Service field office in Alaska was established in 1936 in Palmer, located in the Matanuska Valley. Extension's agricultural and home demonstration agents placed there worked closely with colonists and homesteaders to establish viable farming practices in the valley.[35] Lydia Fohn-Hansen was a key figure during this growth period. She worked out of a tent in the valley providing educational services to the colonists. In addition to teaching people how to can salmon and other Alaska resources, Fohn-Hansen was an accomplished weaver and helped women make gloves and other clothes. She was well educated, with a master's in home economics from Iowa State College, and she wrote hundreds of bulletins and circulars during her time with Extension.[36]

The Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines became the University of Alaska in 1935, and in 1937 a new joint director of experiment farms and Extension Service was appointed. With efforts centralized and appropriations to the territory increased, Extension expanded its size and reach over the next decade to include field offices in Juneau, Anchorage and Fairbanks. As World War II engulfed the nation, Extension home economists helped Alaskans learn to can food and cultivate vegetables. Over 1,300 Victory gardens were planted in Alaska.[38] The national 4-H slogan during the war was "Food for Freedom."[39] Extension's expansion efforts eventually coincided with military interests as the war brought an inquiry into the use of Alaska sites for defense against Russia. Military officials recognized that infrastructure was needed to address the fact that Alaska would be cut off from food deliveries if under attack; Alaska needed to be able to produce some of its own supplies. Thus, in 1947 as part of the Department of Agriculture Appropriation Act, $20,000 was made available for the study of agricultural development in the territory. However, the legislation also put the USDA back in control of agricultural research programs in Alaska, and the joint director position of the prior decade was dissolved. The experiment stations were put back under federal control, and Extension was directed separately.[35]

In the 1950s, Extension in Alaska focused on bringing educational resources to more remote areas of the northern and western parts of the state. During this decade, Extension collaborated with community members to determine the needs of the growing territory. In a 1956 report to the Secretary of the Interior, Governor Mike Stepovich noted that Extension was "guided by local producer and consumer committees where representatives of rural and urban groups have an opportunity to make their needs known." The consulted groups included homemaker councils, soil conservation workers, members of The National Grange of the Order of Patrons of Husbandry, dairy breeders and others. Also at this time, the former Alaska Rural Development Board provided funds to Extension to do community building in Alaska villages. More than $10,000 in territorial funds was appropriated to provide an "agent-at-large" who could reach out to remote villages and teach gardening skills. The initiative was a success in the Upper Yukon, with each viable garden generating an estimated $1,000 to $1,500 worth of produce to supplement the local diet. Money was then set aside to send an additional agent to travel to the Lower Yukon and Kuskokwim areas of the territory.[40] In 1957, a full-time 4-H leader was hired and 113 clubs reported a total enrollment of 1,182 youth. Enrollment in 1958 had risen to 1,506 youth with the addition of 28 clubs.[35] Alaska officially became the 49th state of the United States in 1959, the same year that Fohn-Hansen was presented with an honorary humanities doctorate from UAF for her many years of dedicated service.[41]

In 1975, a 4-H market livestock auction was established in southern Alaska. It began with community members from the Kenai Peninsula, Kodiak and Palmer coming together to plan a show for the sale of seven Hereford steers from Kodiak and Kenai Peninsula. Though there were some delays due to an auctioneer cancellation and a need for more bidders, the auction was a success. The Grand Champion animal, a steer from Homer, went for 95 cents a pound. The first project animal from Palmer was auctioned in 1978, and by 1980 there were 18 animals from the Mat-Su Valley entered in the program. In 1983, youth from the Delta area began participating. 1988 brought the "parade of champions" in which the top two beef, hogs, lambs, veal and goats from Kenai, Delta and Palmer were in contention for state champion.[42] The auction continues to be hosted today on the grounds of the Alaska State Fair and is one of several 4-H market livestock auctions during the fair season.

Extension invested in toll-free hotline numbers in the 1980s, offering one for food safety questions and one for energy and building questions. In the 1990s the first web page for UAF Cooperative Extension went online, providing even more exposure for its programs. Early versions not only featured a calendar of workshops and a directory, but extended to the public online access to many publications and newsletters. Images of UAF Extension's web pages from the late 1990s can be viewed using the digital archive services of the Wayback Machine.[43]

21st century UAF extension edit

 
CES building on the UAF campus, built in 1962.

The University of Alaska currently maintains its land-grant endowment as a trust fund that collects various forms of income from its federal land grants.[44] The UAF Cooperative Extension Service resides within the UAF Office of the Provost. UAF's public service and community engagement role is filled in part by Extension educators, faculty and staff located across the state of Alaska. The mission to bring research to the public is pursued in a collaborative fashion, with Extension working to connect Alaskans to the university as well as bringing the issues and challenges of the public to the university. Projects are often client-driven with Extension faculty responding to community needs. In particular, Alaska requires unique attention for its specific cultural, geographic and climatological differences from the rest of the United States. Alaska is known for its mineral deposits and shorelines, and renewable resources like fish and wood, as well as nonrenewable resources like petroleum.[45] Alaska still imports the majority of the food consumed in the state.[46] These are all issues that UAF Cooperative Extension works to examine and address. In a 2012 Plan of Work, UAF Extension describes its commitment to using nonformal education services to build Alaskan communities through programming in agriculture and horticulture, sustainability, natural resources, community development, youth development, global food security, food safety, childhood obesity, climate change, ecosystem management, and sustainable energy.[47] UAF Extension also maintains its commitment to engagement by consulting with multiple advisory councils that include community members from a variety of backgrounds. Farmers, gardeners, miners, foresters, village leaders, parents, teachers and youth representatives meet regularly with Extension leadership to help inform decision making.[48]

Some villages in Alaska are only accessible by plane or boat. Extension agents do make site visits to more remote locations like Kake and Angoon when possible. The Federally Recognized Tribes Extension Program (FRTEP) also provides opportunities for agriculture education specifically to Alaska Natives through a collaboration with the Tanana Chiefs Conference. Programs include the Alaskan Growers School which aims to teach participants how to grow food to provide for themselves and 10 other families or start an agricultural business.[49]

The advent of new technologies has allowed Extension agents to interact with the public in ways that were not available in the past. As more Alaskans gain high-speed internet access, agents have investigated how to reach out to citizens through popular sites such as Craigslist.[50] Alaska is the largest state in the nation in terms of square miles, so in order to provide educational services to clients in multiple locations at once, UAF Extension personnel in Alaska also make use of videoconferencing technology.[51] The Master Gardener Program has an online version[52] in which participants can complete lessons through online learning management system software like Blackboard. Food preservation tutorials are offered in Adobe Flash modules.[53][54] Recordings of energy workshops are being shared on iTunes U.[55] The communications unit of UAF Extension also helps maintain several online communities through social media platforms, including Facebook pages, a YouTube channel[56] and Pinterest boards.[57] For example, UAF Extension sponsors Facebook pages for people interested in Alaska 4-H youth development programs,[58] Alaska Master Gardener programs,[59] integrated pest management in Alaska,[60] and Kenai Peninsula horticulture.[61]

List of directors edit

  • 1930-1933: Charles Bunnell
  • 1933-1935: Ross L. Sheely
  • 1935: Lorin T. Oldroyd
  • 1951: Lynn O. Hollist
  • 1952: Allan H. Mick
  • 1961-1971: Arthur Buswell
  • 1971-1987: James Matthews
  • 1987-1992: Irvin Skelton (acting)
  • 1992-1997: Hollis Hall
  • 1997-1999: Anthony Nakazawa (interim)
  • 1999-2007 Anthony Nakazawa
  • 2007-2009: Pete Pinney (interim)
  • 2009–2019: Fred Schlutt
  • 2019–2021: Milan Shipka (acting)
  • 2021: Pete Pinney (interim)

References edit

  1. ^ UAF Cooperative Extension, "About", Retrieved June, 2012
  2. ^ Capital City Weekly, "Cooperative Extension Celebrates 75 Years of Service to Alaskans", September 14, 2005
  3. ^ UAF Cooperative Extension, "Mission Statement" 2011-06-06 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved June, 2012
  4. ^ UAF Cooperative Extension, "Strategic Plan", Retrieved June, 2012
  5. ^ National Institute of Food and Agriculture, "About Us: Cooperative Extension System Offices" 2012-06-06 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved June, 2012
  6. ^ Smith, B., "Weed Wars" 2013-06-09 at the Wayback Machine, Peninsula Clarion, June 24, 2012
  7. ^ Alaska Sea Grant Newsroom, "Business 101 for Kodiak’s Hispanic women aims to inspire entrepreneurship", December 16, 2008
  8. ^ AK SourceLink, "Resource Directory", Retrieved August, 2012
  9. ^ UAF Cooperative Extension, "Directory" 2012-04-28 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved June, 2012
  10. ^ Staciokas, L., "Alaska Cooperative Extension Service releases master gardener manual", Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, February 20, 2011
  11. ^ UAF Cooperative Extension, "Publications Catalog", Retrieved June, 2012
  12. ^ UAF Northwest Campus, "Cooperative Extension" 2010-06-09 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved August, 2012
  13. ^ Alaska DEC Division of Environmental Health, "Certified Pesticide Applicators" 2012-06-30 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved June, 2012
  14. ^ Sitka Local Foods Network, "UAF Cooperative Extension Service’s Bob Gorman to teach series of free classes on gardening in Sitka", March 1, 2011
  15. ^ Delta News Web, "Master Gardener Class Being Offered" 2015-06-28 at the Wayback Machine, January 24, 2012
  16. ^ Cold Climate Housing Research Center, "Making Houses Work", Retrieved June, 2012
  17. ^ Sitka Local Foods Network, "SEARHC, UAF Cooperative Extension Service to host ‘Basics of Food Preservation’ classes", August 29, 2011
  18. ^ Juneau Empire, "Spots available at summer 4-H camp" 2015-12-04 at the Wayback Machine, June 21, 2002
  19. ^ Sitka Outdoor Recreation Coalition, "Sitka 4H club to offer four new programs this summer", Retrieved August, 2012
  20. ^ Vandre, W. G., "Urban IPM–Alaska Style!", Journal of Extension 32(1), 1994
  21. ^ Alaska Department of Fish and Game, "Benefits of Fishing to Alaska", Retrieved August, 2012
  22. ^ Alaska Department of Fish and Game, "Hunting, Trapping and Shooting", Retrieved August, 2012
  23. ^ UAF Cooperative Extension, "Canning Moose and Caribou", Retrieved July, 2012
  24. ^ UAF Cooperative Extension, "Canning Walrus in Pint Jars", Retrieved July, 2012
  25. ^ UAF Cooperative Extension, "Fireweed", Retrieved July, 2012
  26. ^ UAF Cooperative Extension, "Bullwhip Kelp", Retrieved July, 2012
  27. ^ Anchorage Daily News, "Mat-Su events calendar" 2012-06-16 at the Wayback Machine, June 12, 2012
  28. ^ KMXT 100.1 FM, "Cooperative Extension helps preserve the Bounty of the Sea", Retrieved August, 2012
  29. ^ Library of Congress Digital Reference Section, "Morrill Act: Primary Documents", Retrieved July, 2012
  30. ^ Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, "Wickersham, James" Retrieved July, 2012
  31. ^ University of Alaska, "History and Facts, The Cornerstone: Wickersham Selects a Site" Retrieved July, 2012
  32. ^ University of Alaska, "CES Outreach Began in Matanuska Valley" Retrieved July, 2012
  33. ^ University of Alaska, "Land Grant History", December 1, 2010
  34. ^ National Archives, Electronic Code of Regulations, "Title 43: Public Lands, Subpart 2627-Alaska" 2007-11-17 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved July, 2012
  35. ^ a b c d e Buswell, A. S., "Evolution of the Cooperative Extension Service in Alaska"[permanent dead link], 1959
  36. ^ a b University of Alaska, "Lydia Fohn-Hansen", Retrieved July, 2012
  37. ^ Anchorage Daily News, "Thriving at 75: Mat-Su marks Colony anniversary" 2011-11-05 at the Wayback Machine, June 4, 2010
  38. ^ Durner, F., "Q & A with Jill Shepherd" 2010-07-02 at the Wayback Machine, Anchorage Daily News, December 16, 2009
  39. ^ Van Horn, B. E., Flanagan, C. A., & Thomson, J.S., "The First Fifty Years of the 4-H Program", Journal of Extension, 36(6), 1998
  40. ^ Stepovich, M.A., "Annual Report of the Governor of Alaska to the Secretary of the Interior", 1956
  41. ^ University of Alaska, "Honorary Degree Recipients 1950-1959", Retrieved July, 2012
  42. ^ Veal, N. & Hecimovich, L., "A Short History of 4-H Junior Market Livestock in Alaska", Retrieved July, 2012
  43. ^ Internet Archive Wayback Machine, , Retrieved July, 2012
  44. ^ University of Alaska Land Management, "Land Grant Trust Fund", Retrieved July, 2012
  45. ^ Alaska Department of Natural Resources, "Mining, Land & Water", Retrieved July, 2012
  46. ^ Lewis, C. E. & Schlutt, F., "With some help Alaska could produce more" 2011-03-23 at the Wayback Machine, Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, March 19, 2011
  47. ^ USDA Research, Education, Economics and Information System, "University of Alaska Combined Research and Extension Plan of Work", Retrieved July, 2012
  48. ^ UAF Cooperative Extension Service, "Advisory Councils" 2013-03-13 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved July, 2012
  49. ^ UAF Cooperative Extension, "Alaskan Growers School", Retrieved July, 2012
  50. ^ Brown, S. C., "Extension Program Marketing and Needs Evaluation Using Craigslist", Journal of Extension Alaska, 47(2), 2009]
  51. ^ Delta News Web, "Video Conference Classes Offered" 2012-07-05 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved August, 2012
  52. ^ UAF Cooperative Extension, "Master Gardener Program Online", Retrieved July, 2012
  53. ^ United States Department of Agriculture, "Food Preservation Tips and Resources" 2012-08-16 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved August, 2012
  54. ^ UAF Cooperative Extension, "Preserving Alaska's Bounty" 2012-05-12 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved August, 2012
  55. ^ iTunes, "iTunes Preview: Cold Climate Building Course", Released February 29, 2012
  56. ^ YouTube, "UAFExtension YouTube channel", Retrieved July, 2012
  57. ^ Pinterest, "UAF Cooperative Extension", Retrieved July, 2012
  58. ^ Facebook, "Alaska 4-H", Retrieved July, 2012
  59. ^ Facebook, "Alaska Master Gardeners", Retrieved July, 2012
  60. ^ Facebook, "Alaska IPM", Retrieved July, 2012
  61. ^ Facebook, "UAF CES Kenai District Horticulture", Retrieved July, 2012

External links edit

  • UAF Cooperative Extension official website
  • UAF Institute of Agriculture, Natural Resources and Extension website
  • UAF Cooperative Extension Alaska Wood Heating website

alaska, cooperative, extension, service, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, sc. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Alaska Cooperative Extension Service news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2013 Learn how and when to remove this message University of Alaska Fairbanks Cooperative Extension Service is an outreach based educational delivery system supported by a partnership between the United States Department of Agriculture USDA and the University of Alaska Fairbanks UAF The UAF Cooperative Extension Service annually serves approximately 80 000 Alaskans providing a link between Alaska s diverse people and communities by interpreting and extending relevant university research based knowledge in an understandable and usable form to the public 1 Since 1930 2 the UAF Extension Service has partnered with many organizations across the state of Alaska in pursuit of fulfilling its land grant university mission to disseminate agricultural research and other scientific information Official UAF Cooperative Extension Service logo Contents 1 Organization 2 Purpose 3 History 4 21st century UAF extension 5 List of directors 6 References 7 External linksOrganization editUAF Cooperative Extension Service is part of the larger Cooperative Extension Service in the United States At UAF Extension is organized by program area and a UAF faculty member serves as the program chair in each of the four areas agriculture and horticulture health home and family development natural resources and community development and 4 H and youth development The program chairs report to the director of the organization The director also serves as vice provost of outreach for the university In addition to the four program areas Extension has its own business office and communications unit within the university Each of the program chairs oversees faculty and staff across the various districts in the state District office locations include Anchorage Bethel Delta Junction Fairbanks Juneau Nome Palmer Sitka and Soldotna and affiliate offices are located at the Tanana Chiefs Conference Eielson Air Force Base Kodiak and Thorne Bay Purpose editUAF Cooperative Extension Service brings research based information to the public in an understandable and useful form 3 Its strategic plan identifies food safety and security health climate change energy economic development and youth family and communities as major themes 4 The faculty and staff of the Extension offices offer research based expertise to the public on a wide variety of topics to a wide variety of audiences from farmers and entrepreneurs to rural families and children 5 In Alaska experts in agriculture and horticulture integrated pest management 6 youth development foods and nutrition natural resources community development 7 8 energy and more are employed by Extension 9 In order to make research based information accessible to the public UAF Extension offers many publications from one page fact sheets to the 482 page Master Gardener manual 10 More than 300 publications are currently available and most can be downloaded online 11 Experts with UAF Extension offer workshops and practical trainings to citizens in communities around Alaska 12 Regular topics include pesticide applicator certifications 13 Master Gardener and other gardening courses 14 15 cold climate building courses 16 food preservation classes 17 and youth camps 18 19 Agents have worked on projects that affect Alaska statewide such as the 1980s implementation of pest identification and management services 20 Fishing and hunting are popular in the state and residents are often looking for information on how to preserve fish and game meat 21 22 UAF Extension has produced publications on topics especially of interest to Alaskans such as canning moose and caribou meat 23 canning walrus meat 24 preserving fireweed 25 and harvesting and preparing Nereocystis luetkeana or bullwhip kelp from Alaska s coastal areas 26 UAF Extension agents also offer pressure canner gauge testing to help Alaskans ensure they are preserving foods safely 27 28 History editThe United States purchased Alaska from Russia in 1867 Several events before and after the Alaska Purchase laid the groundwork for Extension s beginnings in the new U S territory Firstly the Morrill Act of 1862 signed by President Lincoln granted federal lands to each state The proceeds from the land were to be used to fund public colleges focused on engineering and agriculture 29 James Wickersham judge and congressional delegate in the early 1900s 30 became aware of the Morrill Act and pushed for the creation of a college in the interior submitting an education bill to Congress The cornerstone for Alaska s land grant college Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines was presented in 1915 31 The college started classes in 1922 32 However Alaska did not receive the full benefits of the Morrill Act Though Alaska was entitled to about 360 000 acres 145 687 ha of land from legislation passed in 1915 the implementation of the 1958 Alaska Statehood Act repealed the gift before 97 percent of the land could be surveyed and granted During statehood negotiations Congress felt that federal lands given to the state were sufficient to also provide for the university and Alaska politicians felt that it would have more freedom in land choice by avoiding university specific grants 33 Luckily before statehood a grant of land in 1929 that is still in effect today provided tens of thousands of acres dedicated to university use 34 In addition to the land grant process the advent of agricultural research in Alaska contributed significantly to the development of Extension services Starting at the turn of the century and continuing through 1915 seven federal agriculture experiment stations were established in Alaska The agriculturalists from the experiment stations established the viability of farm and garden programs in Alaska Their work was augmented by the addition of Extension agents with funding stemming from the Smith Lever Act of 1914 fully extended to Alaska in 1929 The Alaska legislature designated the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines which eventually became the University of Alaska as administrator of the Cooperative Extension Service work that would be provided by experts in agriculture and home economics Charles E Bunnell college president at the time worked with USDA to organize the fledgling service in June 1930 Lydia Fohn Hansen was made assistant director for home economics and George W Gasser became assistant director for agriculture Starting in July 1930 the new appointees began working with Alaskans They helped organize nine 4 H clubs and 12 home economics clubs 35 Travel was completed by whatever means necessary which sometimes meant dogsled Fohn Hansen was on the road for months at a time as she toured the state carrying teaching supplies clothing bulletins pressure canner can sealer patterns garden seeds needles yarn and probably a loom 36 In 1932 a veterinarian was added to the staff In 1935 a full time director was appointed for Extension the same year that the federal government established the Matanuska Colony 35 The Matanuska Colony refers to 200 families selected from Michigan Wisconsin and Minnesota to settle and farm the Matanuska Valley building the local economy in Southcentral Alaska 37 The first Cooperative Extension Service field office in Alaska was established in 1936 in Palmer located in the Matanuska Valley Extension s agricultural and home demonstration agents placed there worked closely with colonists and homesteaders to establish viable farming practices in the valley 35 Lydia Fohn Hansen was a key figure during this growth period She worked out of a tent in the valley providing educational services to the colonists In addition to teaching people how to can salmon and other Alaska resources Fohn Hansen was an accomplished weaver and helped women make gloves and other clothes She was well educated with a master s in home economics from Iowa State College and she wrote hundreds of bulletins and circulars during her time with Extension 36 The Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines became the University of Alaska in 1935 and in 1937 a new joint director of experiment farms and Extension Service was appointed With efforts centralized and appropriations to the territory increased Extension expanded its size and reach over the next decade to include field offices in Juneau Anchorage and Fairbanks As World War II engulfed the nation Extension home economists helped Alaskans learn to can food and cultivate vegetables Over 1 300 Victory gardens were planted in Alaska 38 The national 4 H slogan during the war was Food for Freedom 39 Extension s expansion efforts eventually coincided with military interests as the war brought an inquiry into the use of Alaska sites for defense against Russia Military officials recognized that infrastructure was needed to address the fact that Alaska would be cut off from food deliveries if under attack Alaska needed to be able to produce some of its own supplies Thus in 1947 as part of the Department of Agriculture Appropriation Act 20 000 was made available for the study of agricultural development in the territory However the legislation also put the USDA back in control of agricultural research programs in Alaska and the joint director position of the prior decade was dissolved The experiment stations were put back under federal control and Extension was directed separately 35 In the 1950s Extension in Alaska focused on bringing educational resources to more remote areas of the northern and western parts of the state During this decade Extension collaborated with community members to determine the needs of the growing territory In a 1956 report to the Secretary of the Interior Governor Mike Stepovich noted that Extension was guided by local producer and consumer committees where representatives of rural and urban groups have an opportunity to make their needs known The consulted groups included homemaker councils soil conservation workers members of The National Grange of the Order of Patrons of Husbandry dairy breeders and others Also at this time the former Alaska Rural Development Board provided funds to Extension to do community building in Alaska villages More than 10 000 in territorial funds was appropriated to provide an agent at large who could reach out to remote villages and teach gardening skills The initiative was a success in the Upper Yukon with each viable garden generating an estimated 1 000 to 1 500 worth of produce to supplement the local diet Money was then set aside to send an additional agent to travel to the Lower Yukon and Kuskokwim areas of the territory 40 In 1957 a full time 4 H leader was hired and 113 clubs reported a total enrollment of 1 182 youth Enrollment in 1958 had risen to 1 506 youth with the addition of 28 clubs 35 Alaska officially became the 49th state of the United States in 1959 the same year that Fohn Hansen was presented with an honorary humanities doctorate from UAF for her many years of dedicated service 41 In 1975 a 4 H market livestock auction was established in southern Alaska It began with community members from the Kenai Peninsula Kodiak and Palmer coming together to plan a show for the sale of seven Hereford steers from Kodiak and Kenai Peninsula Though there were some delays due to an auctioneer cancellation and a need for more bidders the auction was a success The Grand Champion animal a steer from Homer went for 95 cents a pound The first project animal from Palmer was auctioned in 1978 and by 1980 there were 18 animals from the Mat Su Valley entered in the program In 1983 youth from the Delta area began participating 1988 brought the parade of champions in which the top two beef hogs lambs veal and goats from Kenai Delta and Palmer were in contention for state champion 42 The auction continues to be hosted today on the grounds of the Alaska State Fair and is one of several 4 H market livestock auctions during the fair season Extension invested in toll free hotline numbers in the 1980s offering one for food safety questions and one for energy and building questions In the 1990s the first web page for UAF Cooperative Extension went online providing even more exposure for its programs Early versions not only featured a calendar of workshops and a directory but extended to the public online access to many publications and newsletters Images of UAF Extension s web pages from the late 1990s can be viewed using the digital archive services of the Wayback Machine 43 21st century UAF extension edit nbsp CES building on the UAF campus built in 1962 The University of Alaska currently maintains its land grant endowment as a trust fund that collects various forms of income from its federal land grants 44 The UAF Cooperative Extension Service resides within the UAF Office of the Provost UAF s public service and community engagement role is filled in part by Extension educators faculty and staff located across the state of Alaska The mission to bring research to the public is pursued in a collaborative fashion with Extension working to connect Alaskans to the university as well as bringing the issues and challenges of the public to the university Projects are often client driven with Extension faculty responding to community needs In particular Alaska requires unique attention for its specific cultural geographic and climatological differences from the rest of the United States Alaska is known for its mineral deposits and shorelines and renewable resources like fish and wood as well as nonrenewable resources like petroleum 45 Alaska still imports the majority of the food consumed in the state 46 These are all issues that UAF Cooperative Extension works to examine and address In a 2012 Plan of Work UAF Extension describes its commitment to using nonformal education services to build Alaskan communities through programming in agriculture and horticulture sustainability natural resources community development youth development global food security food safety childhood obesity climate change ecosystem management and sustainable energy 47 UAF Extension also maintains its commitment to engagement by consulting with multiple advisory councils that include community members from a variety of backgrounds Farmers gardeners miners foresters village leaders parents teachers and youth representatives meet regularly with Extension leadership to help inform decision making 48 Some villages in Alaska are only accessible by plane or boat Extension agents do make site visits to more remote locations like Kake and Angoon when possible The Federally Recognized Tribes Extension Program FRTEP also provides opportunities for agriculture education specifically to Alaska Natives through a collaboration with the Tanana Chiefs Conference Programs include the Alaskan Growers School which aims to teach participants how to grow food to provide for themselves and 10 other families or start an agricultural business 49 The advent of new technologies has allowed Extension agents to interact with the public in ways that were not available in the past As more Alaskans gain high speed internet access agents have investigated how to reach out to citizens through popular sites such as Craigslist 50 Alaska is the largest state in the nation in terms of square miles so in order to provide educational services to clients in multiple locations at once UAF Extension personnel in Alaska also make use of videoconferencing technology 51 The Master Gardener Program has an online version 52 in which participants can complete lessons through online learning management system software like Blackboard Food preservation tutorials are offered in Adobe Flash modules 53 54 Recordings of energy workshops are being shared on iTunes U 55 The communications unit of UAF Extension also helps maintain several online communities through social media platforms including Facebook pages a YouTube channel 56 and Pinterest boards 57 For example UAF Extension sponsors Facebook pages for people interested in Alaska 4 H youth development programs 58 Alaska Master Gardener programs 59 integrated pest management in Alaska 60 and Kenai Peninsula horticulture 61 List of directors edit1930 1933 Charles Bunnell 1933 1935 Ross L Sheely 1935 Lorin T Oldroyd 1951 Lynn O Hollist 1952 Allan H Mick 1961 1971 Arthur Buswell 1971 1987 James Matthews 1987 1992 Irvin Skelton acting 1992 1997 Hollis Hall 1997 1999 Anthony Nakazawa interim 1999 2007 Anthony Nakazawa 2007 2009 Pete Pinney interim 2009 2019 Fred Schlutt 2019 2021 Milan Shipka acting 2021 Pete Pinney interim References edit UAF Cooperative Extension About Retrieved June 2012 Capital City Weekly Cooperative Extension Celebrates 75 Years of Service to Alaskans September 14 2005 UAF Cooperative Extension Mission Statement Archived 2011 06 06 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved June 2012 UAF Cooperative Extension Strategic Plan Retrieved June 2012 National Institute of Food and Agriculture About Us Cooperative Extension System Offices Archived 2012 06 06 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved June 2012 Smith B Weed Wars Archived 2013 06 09 at the Wayback Machine Peninsula Clarion June 24 2012 Alaska Sea Grant Newsroom Business 101 for Kodiak s Hispanic women aims to inspire entrepreneurship December 16 2008 AK SourceLink Resource Directory Retrieved August 2012 UAF Cooperative Extension Directory Archived 2012 04 28 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved June 2012 Staciokas L Alaska Cooperative Extension Service releases master gardener manual Fairbanks Daily News Miner February 20 2011 UAF Cooperative Extension Publications Catalog Retrieved June 2012 UAF Northwest Campus Cooperative Extension Archived 2010 06 09 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 2012 Alaska DEC Division of Environmental Health Certified Pesticide Applicators Archived 2012 06 30 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved June 2012 Sitka Local Foods Network UAF Cooperative Extension Service s Bob Gorman to teach series of free classes on gardening in Sitka March 1 2011 Delta News Web Master Gardener Class Being Offered Archived 2015 06 28 at the Wayback Machine January 24 2012 Cold Climate Housing Research Center Making Houses Work Retrieved June 2012 Sitka Local Foods Network SEARHC UAF Cooperative Extension Service to host Basics of Food Preservation classes August 29 2011 Juneau Empire Spots available at summer 4 H camp Archived 2015 12 04 at the Wayback Machine June 21 2002 Sitka Outdoor Recreation Coalition Sitka 4H club to offer four new programs this summer Retrieved August 2012 Vandre W G Urban IPM Alaska Style Journal of Extension 32 1 1994 Alaska Department of Fish and Game Benefits of Fishing to Alaska Retrieved August 2012 Alaska Department of Fish and Game Hunting Trapping and Shooting Retrieved August 2012 UAF Cooperative Extension Canning Moose and Caribou Retrieved July 2012 UAF Cooperative Extension Canning Walrus in Pint Jars Retrieved July 2012 UAF Cooperative Extension Fireweed Retrieved July 2012 UAF Cooperative Extension Bullwhip Kelp Retrieved July 2012 Anchorage Daily News Mat Su events calendar Archived 2012 06 16 at the Wayback Machine June 12 2012 KMXT 100 1 FM Cooperative Extension helps preserve the Bounty of the Sea Retrieved August 2012 Library of Congress Digital Reference Section Morrill Act Primary Documents Retrieved July 2012 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Wickersham James Retrieved July 2012 University of Alaska History and Facts The Cornerstone Wickersham Selects a Site Retrieved July 2012 University of Alaska CES Outreach Began in Matanuska Valley Retrieved July 2012 University of Alaska Land Grant History December 1 2010 National Archives Electronic Code of Regulations Title 43 Public Lands Subpart 2627 Alaska Archived 2007 11 17 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved July 2012 a b c d e Buswell A S Evolution of the Cooperative Extension Service in Alaska permanent dead link 1959 a b University of Alaska Lydia Fohn Hansen Retrieved July 2012 Anchorage Daily News Thriving at 75 Mat Su marks Colony anniversary Archived 2011 11 05 at the Wayback Machine June 4 2010 Durner F Q amp A with Jill Shepherd Archived 2010 07 02 at the Wayback Machine Anchorage Daily News December 16 2009 Van Horn B E Flanagan C A amp Thomson J S The First Fifty Years of the 4 H Program Journal of Extension 36 6 1998 Stepovich M A Annual Report of the Governor of Alaska to the Secretary of the Interior 1956 University of Alaska Honorary Degree Recipients 1950 1959 Retrieved July 2012 Veal N amp Hecimovich L A Short History of 4 H Junior Market Livestock in Alaska Retrieved July 2012 Internet Archive Wayback Machine Alaska Cooperative Extension 1997 Retrieved July 2012 University of Alaska Land Management Land Grant Trust Fund Retrieved July 2012 Alaska Department of Natural Resources Mining Land amp Water Retrieved July 2012 Lewis C E amp Schlutt F With some help Alaska could produce more Archived 2011 03 23 at the Wayback Machine Fairbanks Daily News Miner March 19 2011 USDA Research Education Economics and Information System University of Alaska Combined Research and Extension Plan of Work Retrieved July 2012 UAF Cooperative Extension Service Advisory Councils Archived 2013 03 13 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved July 2012 UAF Cooperative Extension Alaskan Growers School Retrieved July 2012 Brown S C Extension Program Marketing and Needs Evaluation Using Craigslist Journal of Extension Alaska 47 2 2009 Delta News Web Video Conference Classes Offered Archived 2012 07 05 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 2012 UAF Cooperative Extension Master Gardener Program Online Retrieved July 2012 United States Department of Agriculture Food Preservation Tips and Resources Archived 2012 08 16 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 2012 UAF Cooperative Extension Preserving Alaska s Bounty Archived 2012 05 12 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 2012 iTunes iTunes Preview Cold Climate Building Course Released February 29 2012 YouTube UAFExtension YouTube channel Retrieved July 2012 Pinterest UAF Cooperative Extension Retrieved July 2012 Facebook Alaska 4 H Retrieved July 2012 Facebook Alaska Master Gardeners Retrieved July 2012 Facebook Alaska IPM Retrieved July 2012 Facebook UAF CES Kenai District Horticulture Retrieved July 2012External links editUAF Cooperative Extension official website UAF Institute of Agriculture Natural Resources and Extension website UAF Cooperative Extension Alaska Wood Heating website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alaska Cooperative Extension Service amp oldid 1095750931, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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