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Community Action Training School for WRIA 8

Community Action Training for All Ages

Are you ready to make real change in your watershed? Do you feel more knowledge on key environmental issues would allow you to focus your passions on habitat restoration and ecosystem protections and resilience for salmon, wildlife, and humans?

Join us for our upcoming Community Action Training School! No prior experience or background in course topics necessary. 

CATS empowers community members to become change makers in their communities. This free, all-ages, program will guide participants through a robust series of classes and field experiences focusing on scientific, social, cultural, and political issues important to watershed health and salmon recovery. We will hear from community members, non-profit organizations, and local and Tribal governments to learn about the work they are doing throughout the watersheds. Participants will be supported in designing and implementing a stewardship action project that helps make a difference for salmon in their watershed.

Community Action Training School is designed for residents of Watershed Resource Inventory Areas (WRIA) 8 (the Lake Washington/Cedar/Sammamish Watershed). You can look up your WRIA here.

Applications

 
Applications for 2024 are closed. We’ll be launching our application for 2025 in the spring. To sign up for our application announcement, please fill out the form below:

Schedule & Course Topics

Classroom & Field Excursions will take place May – September 2025. CATS program consists of 7 virtual, evening (6-8 pm), classroom experiences with guest speakers from throughout the watersheds, and 4 Saturday field experiences guided by local ecologists and restoration professionals.

Your Commitment
We ask for your commitment to attend at least 80% of the sessions and complete a minimum of 50 hours toward a Stewardship Action Project. Stewardship Action Project hours can be put in from May to September and may, for some people, be ongoing beyond the end of the program depending on their project and how it is structured.

Stewardship Action Project 

CATS participants will gain the knowledge necessary to create meaningful change as a community leader in your watershed. You will also receive mentoring to create and implement your Stewardship Action Project and engage other community members in watershed stewardship. Projects may include elements of community education and engagement, habitat restoration, water quality monitoring, advocacy efforts, and more. The 50+ hour project is a REQUIRED component of CATS.

Frequently Asked Questions

Applications will be open in late winter. Applications are due on April 30, 2025 by 11:59 pm. 

Notifications will be sent out on a rolling basis until May 1, 2025. Check your inbox!

Yes! Space allowing, we will review applications through the first week of the program start date. Please apply even if you’ve missed the deadline. We would love to meet you!

CATS is FREE! We ask for your commitment to attend at least 80% of the sessions and complete a minimum of 50 hours toward your Stewardship Action Project.

We will host virtual classroom sessions via Zoom. Field experiences are in person and located around the Central Puget Sound region.

You’ll hear from local educators, activists, policy makers, and people who have worked in the restoration field for decades. We’ll have scientists who are experts in their fields cover a variety of topics like how rain flowing off roads adds up to a water quality crisis affecting our Southern Resident Killer Whales. You’ll meet community members like you who have been in the trenches fighting to restore salmon in their communities. And we’ll pull together tangible actions you can champion in your own community.

Sometimes giving back takes support! We mentor you through the development and execution of your Stewardship Action Project, helping you make your ideas and dreams a reality in your community. Past Stewardship Action Projects have included creating the Student Salmon Stewards program at a high school in Edmonds, developing a virtual field trip of a Puget Sound dive excursion with a live stream to a local classroom, conducting a forage fish survey of a local beach, and revegetating several local parks and public spaces. Stewardship Action Projects can be done as individuals, as groups with other participants, and/or in partnership with local organizations. Our staff will be available to help you in various ways, including helping you make connections with people in your field of interest, assisting with the design of your project, coming up with ideas for funding, or connecting youth local organizations in need of support.

Thanks to generous funding from the King County Flood Control District and WRIA 8 Salmon Recovery Board we are able to offer CATS as a free course. All we ask in return is your commitment to attend at least 80% of the sessions and complete a minimum of 50 hours toward your Stewardship Action Project. Our ultimate hope and dream (and goal!) is that you remain active in making your community a better place–for people, for habitats, for wildlife, and for salmon.


Still have more questions?

Great! We would love to answer them! Please contact us with any questions.

Community Action Training School is funded by the King County Flood Control District.