Written by University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff
The Sustainable Forestry and African American Land Retention (SFLR) Network recently hosted its 10th Anniversary SFLR Landownersā Conference in the seaside town of Brunswick, Georgia, Kandi Williams, Extension program aide and SFLR program coordinator for the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff (UAPB), said. The conferenceās theme was āLand, Legacy and Family: Celebrating a Decade of African American Land Protection.ā
āThe conference highlighted some of the remarkable accomplishments of the network, which is comprised of eight Black-led organizations that work with African American forest owners,ā Williams said. āAs part of the celebration, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced that through the Inflation Reduction Act, the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service will invest $150 million to assist underserved forest landowners participating in emerging voluntary climate markets. These markets have the potential to provide significant economic opportunities to improve forest health.ā
During a pre-conference tour, the SFLR site staff and landowners visited the McIntosh S.E.E.D. Community Forest, Georgiaās first Black-owned community forest. The 1,150-acre community forest provides educational opportunities to engage the community and stakeholders in outdoor activities related to forest management practices, wildlife habitats and natural resources.
The conference included sessions and resources on forest management and estate planning. The different SFLR site leaders shared their programsā mission, highlights and updates as they help Black forest landowners retain their family land by promoting healthy management practices to create generational wealth. Federal and state agency representatives served as panelists. SFLR landowners from Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas and Virginia shared stories about their family legacies.
āThe Sustainable Forestry and African American Land Retention 10th Anniversary Conference was world class,ā said Dr. Debra E. Thrower, an Arkansas forest landowner who participates in UAPBās SFLR programming. āThe presenters were engaging, and I learned about the resources needed for my certified tree farm. The facility was also ideal for networking. I have followed up with several attendees. I look forward to applying my newly acquired knowledge.ā
UAPBās āKeeping it in the Familyā Program is part of the SFLR Network. Since 2016, the UAPB program has worked to address historic barriers to African American success in forestry. The program provides educational resources and technical assistance to African American forest landowners to protect and retain their family land for future generations.