Location: West Long Branch,NJ, USA
Monmouth University Urban Coast Institute Environmental Justice Fellow
This position is part of the , supporting the Climate Resilience Regional Challenge (CRRC) projects. The fellow will support the project: .
Host Organization: Monmouth University Urban Coast Institute (UCI) Location of Position: West Long Branch, New JerseyDuration of Position: Two yearsAnnual Salary: $50,576 (June 2025-June 2027)Benefits: Medical insurance, 11 paid federal holidays per year, 15 paid personal days per year, professional development training, travel funding, relocation allowance
Work Environment: Office space will be provided at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, New Jersey, a historic college campus just one mile from the beach. The fellows office will be in or nearby the Urban Coastal Institute (UCI) suite, where the project mentor and other UCI colleagues sit. The fellow will have access to the library, gym, and all common campus facilities. The work will be hybrid on a schedule coordinated with the project mentor. It is anticipated that the fellow will be in the office 23 days per week and out in the field regularly to meet with communities and with project colleagues at the New Jersey Sea Grant Consortium whose offices are located 12 miles from campus in Sandy Hook.
Fellowship Position Description:
The fellow will support Dr. Tom Herrington, associate director of the Urban Coastal Institute, in coordinating the projects Resilience Project Design Pipeline work. The fellow will work under the supervision of the project mentor to ensure that multiple education, engagement, and training activities are planned and implemented in conjunction with the other core activities of the Climate Ready New Jersey project. The fellows primary responsibility will be to work closely with the project mentor and Rachel Forbes, the UCIs Disadvantaged and Overburdened Communities (DOBC) community engagement specialist (DOBC specialist), to engage DOBC in the development of resilience projects for inclusion in the design pipeline. A brief description of the DOBCrelated major tasks, deliverables, milestones, and timelines that will be supported over the two-year fellowship are listed below.
Major Tasks:
Major Deliverables and Time Frames:
Anticipated Travel:
Regular local travel is anticipated to meet with local communities and attend coordination meetings with other partners on the Resilient NJ project, including the New Jersey Sea Grant Consortium and Rutgers University EduCATE project collaborators. The fellow will work with the project mentor to identify other opportunities to travel for professional networking and development, including to New Jerseybased, regional, and national conferences and workshops. Relevant conferences could include opportunities hosted by the New Jersey Coastal Resilience Collaborative (comanaged by the project mentor) and the New Jersey and National Association of Floodplain Management. The fellow is required to attend the peer-to-peer sharing event in 2027. NOAA will provide the fellow with professional development funds to use for activities identified by the fellow, funds to travel to the peer-to-peer sharing event in 2027, and a set amount of travel funds for the project.
Desired Qualifications:
Fellow Mentoring: Tom Herrington, Ph.D., is associate director of the Urban Coast Institute. Dr. Herrington is a coastal engineer with more than 30 years of experience in coastal resilience, shoreline processes and resilience research, and community engagement. He also serves as the New Jersey Sea Grant Consortiums resilient communities and economies specialist and co-managing director of the New Jersey Coastal Resilience Collaborative. As part of this project, Dr. Herrington will work with the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection as overall coordinator of the resilience project design pipeline work. The project will provide these services by coordinating the resilience project design pipeline work, directly engaging with disadvantaged and overburdened communities, and providing community coastal restoration technical assistance and training. The fellow will primarily support DOBC community engagement while coordinating with other workflows under the supervision of the project mentor. The mentor will ensure the fellow receives the resources and support needed to accomplish Climate Resilience Regional Challenge project goals as well as the fellows individual and professional goals. The mentor will also establish a mentoring plan and set of guidelines and expectations with the fellow upon the start of the fellowship.
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