PortlandOnline

POL Government Bureaus & Offices Environmental Services Programs Community Watershed Stewardship
Stewardship Grant Program
Contact Us
Send a message to the CWSP Team
How To Apply For A Stewardship Grant
What you need to know to get a grant
2009 CWSP Grant Application
The deadline to submit applications was Friday, April 3, 2009
Stewardship Grant Budget Form
Download this Excel file to help develop your project budget
Sample Application
Tips on submitting a successful application
Community Watershed Stewardship Program Grant Project Sites
1,151 kb PDF
Mini-Grants
Native plants available for some projects. Download the application form here.
Mini-grant Application Form
133kb PDF
Gardening With Native Plants
Learn about the benefits of adding native plants to your landscape
Portland Plant List
2005 Annual Report
2006 Annual Report
2007 Annual Report
2008 Annual Report
Carter Award Video
Waves of Engagement
CWSP Recognition
CWSP Wins the Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Partnership Award for Campus Community Collaboration
CWSP Recognition - Printable Version

The Community Watershed Stewardship Program has won the first-ever United States National Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Partnership Award for Campus Community Collaboration. President Jimmy Carter presented the award at the World Congress Center in Atlanta, Georgia on June 4, 2008.

 

The Community Watershed Stewardship Program is a partnership between the City of Portland Bureau of Environmental Services and Portland State University. Through this partnership, more than 27,000 community volunteers have donated a quarter of a million hours planting 80,000 plants and restoring 50 acres of land along two miles of waterways. Individual projects have been led and supported by 700 students working as part of class projects, resulting in several graduate theses and faculty research publications.

 

The Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Partnership Award for Campus-Community Collaboration is one of the programs of the Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Partnership Foundation and it honors one award recipient in a state where there is a program that addresses critical areas of public need undertaken by a college or university in partnership with a community group. The award is named for President and Mrs. Carter as a tribute to their lifelong efforts to develop and support safe, healthy and caring communities throughout the world. More information about this program and other programs of the foundation is available at www.jrcpf.org.

 

 

From left: Kevin Kecskes, Barry Messer, Emily Rice (Portland State University), Jennifer Devlin (Environmental Services), April Fong (Portland Community College), Rosalynn Carter, President Jimmy Carter 

 


Questions & Comments
If you have any questions or comments, please contact our site administrator.