Oregon Invasive Species Council Awards $170,000 in Invasive Species Education & Outreach Grants

MEDIA RELEASE | January 21, 2025 | For immediate release

Contacts

Josh Emerson | 2025 Oregon Invasive Species Council Chair | ​Joshua.EMERSON@deq.oregon.gov 

Robyn Draheim | OISC Coordinator | ​coordinator@oregoninvasivespeciescouncil.org ​

Tristen Berg | OISC Grant Administrator | Tristen.BERG@oda.oregon.gov 

Oregon Invasive Species Council Awards $170,000 in Invasive Species Education & Outreach Grants

The Oregon Invasive Species Council (OISC) is pleased to announce the Invasive Species Education and Outreach Grant recipients. The Invasive Species Education and Outreach Grant is the first-ever state-funded grant program overseen by the OISC and is dedicated to supporting projects that increase awareness of the impacts, spread, prevention, detection, and management of invasive species issues in Oregon.

The OISC received over $700,000 in requested funds from 34 qualified applications representing all regions of the state. Proposed projects included awareness efforts encompassing numerous high-priority invasive species, from terrestrial weeds and insect pests to aquatic invasive species, pathogens, and invasive wildlife. 

“We wanted to encourage a variety of applicants,” said Sam Chan, aquatic invasive species expert with Oregon Sea Grant and 2024 chair of the OISC. “The Council is interested in collaborative projects that demonstrate large-scale impacts as well as smaller, meaningful opportunities to engage diverse communities.”

The ten projects selected for funding showcase the outstanding collaboration and coordination efforts of entities across Oregon working on invasive species issues. To award as many high-priority projects around the state as possible, the OISC revised the scope of some applications and added $20,000 to the initial grant announcement of $150,000. Grantees and their partners are collectively providing more than $149,000 in matching funds - nearly a 1:1 match - toward the state’s investment in invasive species awareness. 

“The Oregon Invasive Species Council is thrilled to acknowledge the diversity of collaborative projects proposed by the successful applicants,” said Josh Emerson, ballast water program manager for the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality and current chair of the OISC. “The Council looks forward to highlighting these education and outreach efforts at future meetings.


Grant Awardees:

Clackamas Soil and Water Conservation District

$16,902

Coquille Watershed Association 

$15,000

Crooked River Weed Management Area 

$5,000

High Desert Museum 

$19,965

Klamath Soil and Water Conservation District

$15,000

Malheur County

$19,624

Oregon State University

$24,966

Rogue Valley Council of Governments 

$19,347

Tri-County Cooperative Weed Management Area 

$24,196

Wheeler Soil and Water Conservation District 

$10,000

Supported by one-time funds received from the Oregon Legislature in 2024 through SB5701, this competitive grants program provides financial resources to implement outreach and education efforts crucial to engaging and activating a wide network of Oregonians to protect the state from harmful invasive species. Successful applicants demonstrated high-priority project goals tied to the OISC Education and Outreach Strategies outlined in Oregon’s Statewide Strategic Plan for Invasive Species.

For more information about the Oregon Invasive Species Council Education and Outreach Grant Program and the awardees, please visit the 2024 OISC Education & Outreach Grant Announcement.

ABOUT THE OREGON INVASIVE SPECIES COUNCIL

The Oregon Invasive Species Council (OISC) is a coordinating group of state and public agencies, tribes, scientists, land managers, industry leaders, educators, and members of the public who lead the effort to protect Oregon from invasive species. The OISC’s mission - to protect Oregon's natural resources and economy by planning and leading a coordinated and comprehensive effort to keep invasive species out of Oregon and to eliminate, reduce, or mitigate the impacts of invasive species already established in Oregon - requires effective, collaborative, cross-agency participation. As a result, Oregon’s Statewide Strategic Plan for Invasive Species was adopted in 2017 and outlines the long-term and short-term strategies for the state’s invasive species control and includes the following objectives: 1) Prevention; 2) Early Detection & Rapid Response; 3) Control & Management; 4) Education & Outreach; 5) Coordination & Leadership.