1 / 17

Green Industry

Green Industry. Planning to Continue Business Following a Disaster. Virginia Morgan, Co-leader Communications Alabama Cooperative Extension System. What We Proposed. A tool to help Gulf coast green industry through emergencies or disasters

moswen
Télécharger la présentation

Green Industry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Green Industry Planning to Continue Business Following a Disaster Virginia Morgan, Co-leader Communications Alabama Cooperative Extension System

  2. What We Proposed • A tool to help Gulf coast green industry through emergencies or disasters • One-day workshop during the 2006 Gulf States Horticultural Expo • Expert presentations, peer interaction, hands-on activities

  3. Work Starts • Conducted a listening session, August 2005 SNA convention • Hired a graduate student and a Web developer • Interviewed producers in south AL • Built a basic free Web site

  4. www.greenindustryemergencyplan.com

  5. Plan Goes Awry • Only three people registered for the workshop • Re-think approach • SNA

  6. Next Steps • 2006 • June presentation • August SNA show • Publication production • New presentation for 2007 GSHE

  7. Production Facilitator’s Guide • http://www.aces.edu/pubs/docs/E/EX-0068-A/ Participant Workbook with Plan • http://www.aces.edu/pubs/docs/E/EX-0068-B/ Agency Emergency Numbers • http://www.aces.edu/pubs/docs/E/EX-0068-C/

  8. 2007 GSHE Education Day • Twenty-two of twenty-six participants completed the pre-session assessment Seven participants already had a plan in place

  9. GSHE Education Day, cont’d • Seven had a plan in place • Last reviewed (2 had reviewed one year ago) • Last exercised (2 had exercised one year ago)

  10. GSHE Education Day, cont’d • Size of operation (employees) and importance of a written plan

  11. GSHE Education Day, cont’d • Twenty-six participants completed the session evaluation • About the course: • All participants thought the course was helpful (20 (77 percent) thought it was good or excellent) • The majority said they would recommend the course (24 said yes, 1 said no, and 1 said maybe)

  12. GSHE Education Day, cont’d • Twenty-six participants completed the session evaluation • Risk to their operations • Top hazards listed: Fire, hurricanes, floods, power outage, ice, wind, tornado, thunderstorm, injury

  13. GSHE Education Day, cont’d • Twenty-six participants completed the session evaluation • Functions most critical to their operations • Irrigation, customer service, generate $

  14. Project Status • Learning materials are posted to the ACES Web site (www.aces.edu) and cataloged on the EDEN site (www.eden.lsu.edu). • The www.greenindustryemergencyplan.com site has not been used by producers yet, but SNA has expressed interest in taking it over. • An on-line survey has been distributed to eight of the GSHE participants.

  15. Did We Help? Maybe.

  16. Project Team • Deacue Fields III, Extension Economist, ACES • Jim Novak, Extension Economist, ACES • Ken Tilt, Extension Horticulturist, ACES • Virginia Morgan, Co-leader Communications, ACES, team leader

  17. Project Collaborators • Jackie DiPofi, Director, Small Business Development Center, Auburn University • Jan Winter, Executive Secretary, MS Nursery and Landscape Association • Allen Owings, Executive Secretary, LA Nursery and Landscape Association

More Related