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Growing Greenup - UK Extension Develops Weather Disaster Strike Teams

Growing Greenup

UK Extension Develops Weather

Disaster Strike Teams

Anne Stephens

For The Ashland Beacon

 

 

 

Do you find yourself getting anxious when the weather is predicted to be severe in our area? If you have personal experience with natural disasters, you know how dangerous it can be. As an Extension Agent, I have been part of meetings and training about disaster preparedness and educational information based on research data that can be used to help communities before, during, and after a natural disaster.

Our Greenup County Extension Office is planning programming on this topic that will be made available over the next five years. We have partnered with local emergency management professionals as well as specialists from the Extension network.

The following article is about the strike teams that have been formed to help communities in Kentucky. This will give you an understanding of how our organization responds to community needs and pulls together to offer assistance when and where it is needed.

Kentuckians have experienced several recent weather-related disasters, causing significant damage to infrastructure and communities across the state. “Kentucky has experienced an increase in ‘billion dollar’ weather disasters — a total of 92 impacting the area since 1980, with seven of those devastating events occurring in 2024 alone,” said University of Kentucky senior meteorologist Matt Dixon.

Kayla Watts, who was previously a UK Extension agent in Breathitt County, remembers watching the North Fork Kentucky River in Jackson, Kentucky, in 2022 continue to rise as the flooding began to make its way into town.

“It looked like a wall of water — it was scary because we didn’t know how high it would get, and parts of town were evacuated due to the rising river water,” said Watts, now a UK Area Extension director. “Many folks said that they didn’t have time to get their possessions. Everything was just gone. We just weren’t prepared for something like this.”

Along with ongoing damage caused by recent storms this year in Kentucky, this sparked Watts and other extension leaders to begin assessing local and statewide needs to determine what communities and individuals needed to better prepare, respond and recover. 


Kentucky Extension Strike Team is Formed


The UK Cooperative Extension Service at the Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment (CAFE), in collaboration with Kentucky State University, has launched a new initiative to help advance the state’s disaster preparedness and recovery capabilities — developing strike teams to better respond and reduce the impact of disasters through research-based education.

Made possible through a partnership and grant from the Extension Disaster Education Network (EDEN), this initiative is helping address the pressing need for a more coordinated and effective disaster response in Kentucky and beyond.

“This initiative will allow Extension leaders to learn from established strike team models and, crucially, implement a pilot strike team program within Kentucky Cooperative Extension,” said Jeff Young, Kentucky Extension Strike Team project leader and Director of Urban Extension at Martin-Gatton CAFE. “Furthermore, the development of a national toolkit provides a roadmap for other states to build their own resilient disaster response networks.”

These specialized strike teams, composed of trained county agents and staff in Kentucky, will provide crucial on-the-ground support to communities impacted by disasters.

Watts, who worked with Young in writing the EDEN grant proposal and is one of the approximately 40 strike team members in Kentucky, believes that organization is key. 

“Many people want to help, but it must be streamlined,” Watts said. “These strike teams are a ready-made, trained group who are ready to help and provide relief. As a strike team member, you are working in coordination with your county’s emergency plan. In our trainings, we are now stressing the importance of preparedness, support and recovery.” 

Kentucky strike team member Danielle Hagler, Nelson County Cooperative Extension agent for UK Family and Consumer Sciences, adds that collaboration and working with community leaders is essential.

“Our extension agents that are strike team members all have different passions, skills and talents. Based on everyone’s area of expertise, we can all help each other in areas where we need support,” Hagler said. “Working with our city officials, first responders and emergency management is also crucial to be better prepared and organized. We all must work together.”

Kentucky EDEN is a collaborative multi-state effort supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture and Cooperative Extension Services across the country to reduce the impact of disasters through research-based education. Kentucky Emergency Management and the Kentucky Department of Public Health are also collaborative partners with the Kentucky EDEN project team.

Visit https://anr.ca.uky.edu/extensionhelps to learn more about the Kentucky EDEN initiative, along with education resources in disaster recovery and preparedness.

To learn more about the UK Cooperative Extension Service programs, visit https://extension.ca.uky.edu or contact your local County Extension Office.

For more information, contact Anne Stephens, Agent for Community Arts and Development in Greenup County. 606.836.0201 anne.stephens@uky.edu 35 Wurtland Avenue, Wurtland, KY 41144 The Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment is an Equal Opportunity Organization with respect to education and employment and authorization to provide research, education information and other services only to individuals and institutions that function without regard to economic or social status and will not discriminate on the basis of race, color, ethnic origin, national origin, creed, religion, political belief, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, pregnancy, marital status, genetic information, age, veteran status, physical or mental disability or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil rights activity.  University of Kentucky, Kentucky State University, U.S. Department of Agriculture, and Kentucky counties, cooperating.

 

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The Ashland Beacon’s owners, Philip and Lora Stewart, Kimberly Smith, and Jason Smith, established The Greater Ashland Beacon in 2011 and over the years the Beacon has grown into what you see now… a feel-good, weekly newspaper that brings high quality news about local events, youth sports, and inspiring people that are important to you. The Greater Ashland Beacon prides itself in maintaining a close relationship with the community and love nothing more than to see businesses, youth, and civic organizations in the surrounding areas of Boyd and Greenup counties thrive. 

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