How to Save at Any Age
We often hold onto the false thinking that it’s too late to save money. That just isn’t the case. While we cannot change the past, we can embrace and take hold of our future.
We often hold onto the false thinking that it’s too late to save money. That just isn’t the case. While we cannot change the past, we can embrace and take hold of our future.
Last year, the Salazar Center for North American Conservation launched the Peregrine Accelerator for Conservation Impact to help address complicated environmental challenges like those found in the Rio Grande River basin. The program provides project teams with $10,000 in seed-funding to accelerate the pace and scale of their proposed conservation innovations, helping them improve ecological and human health.
The Colorado State University Colorado Water Center is addressing the state's most difficult water challenges by helping provide over half a million dollars in potential funding for CSU faculty, graduate students, and Extension professionals to conduct solutions-oriented research, education, and engagement.
As associate director for CSU's Colorado Water Center, Karen Schlatter will lead the development and implementation of the Center’s outreach and engagement strategy, and support faculty in the development of integrated research, outreach and education grants addressing critical water management issues.
More than 150 top conservation researchers, practitioners, policymakers, and philanthropic partners gathered in Denver and online earlier this month for the fourth annual International Symposium on Conservation Impact, hosted by the Salazar Center for North American Conservation.
Earlier this month at the fourth annual International Symposium on Conservation Impact, the Salazar Center for North American Conservation announced the launch of its Peregrine Accelerator for Conservation Impact, a new program designed to spur innovative solutions for ecological and human health in the Rio Grande River basin, known as the Rio Bravo in Mexico.
Join the Colorado Water Center next Monday, September 26, at the CSU Lory Student Center for a one-day symposium, Living with the Colorado River Compact: Past, Present and Future.
As drought, climate change, wildfire and population growth threaten Colorado’s already strained water resources, a new report authored by researchers from Colorado State University and the University of Colorado Boulder is laying out a path for increasing innovation and improving statewide water conservation efforts.
Jane Zelikova, executive director for Colorado State University’s Soil Carbon Solutions Center, explains how we can harness the powers of soils & microbes to help address the intersecting challenges of a rapidly changing climate, soil erosion, and sustainably feeding a growing population.
Colorado State University has been named the new institutional partner for Landscape For Life, a program that provides education on sustainable landscaping practices.