The Department of the Interior, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Office of Subsistence Management, administers the Fisheries Resource Monitoring Program, Catalog of Federal and Domestic Assistance Number 1 5. 636 Alaska Subsistence Management.
The Fisheries Resource Monitoring Program is seeking
credit:
technically sound projects that gather information to manage and conserve subsistence fishery resources in Alaska.
The program also is directed at supporting meaningful involvement in fisheries management by Alaska Native and rural organizations and promoting collaboration among Federal, State, Alaska Native and local organizations.
The Fisheries Resource Monitoring Program encompasses awards made through Federal financial assistance under the authority of the Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act, 16 USC 661 to 667d, and the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act, ANILCA, 16 USC 3101 323 3. This Funding Opportunity is the single designated biennial competition through which multiple awards will be made.
Investigation plans will gather, analyze, and report information needed for subsistence fisheries management on Federal public lands in Alaska, National Wildlife Refuges, National Forests, National Parks and Preserves, National Conservation Areas, National Wild and Scenic River Systems, National Petroleum Reserves, and National Recreation Areas, to be considered.
For information pertaining to evaluation criteria, please see the full Funding Opportunity at the URL listed below.
Investigation Plans are evaluated on Strategic Priorities, Technical Scientific Merit, Investigator Ability and Resources, and Partnership Capacity Building.
A community need for the program.
A quality environmental education experience.
In other words, the environmental education opportunity must offer learning opportunities which support behavioral objectives that compliment management and outreach objectives of the refuge.
A partnership with other Fish and Wildlife Service programs or private partners to not only leverage dollars to maximize impacts but to, where possible, combine staff efforts to achieve common goals and remove duplicative efforts in communities.
For additional information please contact, Kathleen Orzechowski, Grants Management Specialist, Fisheries Resource Monitoring Program, Alaska, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Office of Subsistence Management, 1011 E.
Tudor Road, MS 121, Anchorage, Alaska 99503, Phone 907 786 3645