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Assessing and Educating about Flood Risks and Building Resilience: Empowering Vermont’s Refugee and Immigrant Community

South Burlington, Vermont

Featured image for the project, Assessing and Educating about Flood Risks and Building Resilience: Empowering Vermont’s Refugee and Immigrant Community

This project addresses the critical flooding challenges facing refugee and immigrant communities in South Burlington, Vermont due to climate change, where relocation is not viable. The project team will develop a comprehensive flood risk assessment toolkit that empowers residents with preparedness strategies and recovery plans while providing educational resources about climate change impacts. Through this initiative, community members will gain vital knowledge and practical tools to enhance their resilience against flooding, ultimately creating a more informed and better-prepared community. This project will establish a sustainable model for climate adaptation that can be replicated in other vulnerable refugee communities, fostering long-term resilience and community empowerment.

Description

About the Community

The community served by this project is the Islamic Society of Vermont, a grassroots group located in Chittenden County that supports approximately 5,000 immigrants and refugees from Middle East Asian countries such as Syria, Iraq, Sudan, Palestine, and Yemen. Most members reside in the urban areas of Winooski, Burlington, and South Burlington, where they face unique challenges stemming from socio-economic vulnerabilities and language barriers. Following the devastating floods of 2023, many families witnessed damage to their homes, lost essential garden plots, and suffered significant financial hardships—highlighting their urgent need for targeted support and effective climate resilience strategies. The Islamic Society of Vermont’s key priority is to strengthen the community’s ability to prepare for and recover from climate-related disasters. By partnering with the Thriving Earth Exchange, they hope to tap into scientific expertise and co-develop practical tools that address flood preparedness, recovery, and long-term climate resilience. Historically, while state and municipal climate offices have engaged the community through listening sessions, direct assistance and sustainable solutions have been limited. This project seeks to build on that momentum, ensuring that the community’s voices are heard and translated into actionable plans.

About the Project

The community would like to learn and implement practical flood prevention and recovery strategies and share these methods with over 5,000 refugee and immigrant members, so they can safeguard their homes and food security from climate disasters, which will result in a more resilient and informed community. To advance this goal, the project will focus on creating accessible flood prevention guidelines, developing emergency preparedness kits, establishing community education programs, and organizing hands-on training sessions. These efforts will be driven by refugee community members themselves, alongside volunteer scientists from the Thriving Earth Exchange, the Nurture Nature Center, local climate experts, and community leaders who understand the specific needs of immigrant populations.

Key outputs of this project include multilingual emergency preparedness guides, home protection tutorials, community workshops, and straightforward educational materials on climate change and flood mitigation. The outcomes will be twofold: first, community members will gain the practical skills needed to mitigate flood risks and recover quickly after disasters; second, they will deepen their understanding of broader climate change impacts, enabling them to respond proactively to issues like mold, mosquito-borne diseases, and future extreme weather events.

Ultimately, this initiative will have a significant impact by providing a replicable model for supporting vulnerable refugee communities in achieving climate resilience. In doing so, it will help bridge gaps between government disaster response plans and real community needs, ensuring that local voices and experiences guide sustainable, scientifically informed solutions.

Timeline and Milestones

Phase 1: Community Assessment and Planning (February – March 2025)

  • February 2025: Recruit and onboard scientific partners with expertise in flood prevention and climate resilience
  • March 2025: Hold initial community meetings and needs assessment; establish working groups and begin collaborative planning with scientists

Phase 2: Tool Development and Education (April – June 2025)

  • April 2025: Scientists and the community co-create a draft emergency preparedness toolkit
  • May 2025: Develop multilingual educational materials with scientific guidance
  • June 2025: Launch hands-on training sessions for home flood protection and recovery

Phase 3: Implementation and Community Engagement (July – September 2025)

  • July 2025: Pilot testing of flood prevention strategies with scientific support
  • August 2025: Expert-led garden protection workshop series
  • September 2025: Conduct emergency response drills; gather community feedback; refine toolkit and resources

Phase 4: Evaluation and Sustainability (October – December 2025)

  • October 2025: Assess program effectiveness with scientists and community members
  • November 2025: Finalize revisions to materials and resources
  • December 2025: Conclude the project and develop a sustainable action plan to maintain and expand the initiative

Project Team

Community Leader

Dr. Mona Tolba is originally from Egypt and speaks both Arabic and English. She holds two PhDs—one in Veterinary Medicine and another in Food Science—and currently serves as a Public Health Inspector at the Vermont Department of Health. Over the past 12 years, she has worked closely with refugees and immigrants as an interpreter, translator, and cultural broker, fueling her passion for raising cultural awareness.

As a member of the Just Transition Subcommittee on climate, Dr. Tolba has consistently advocated for centering the voices of underprivileged communities, emphasizing how climate change disproportionately affects immigrants and refugees in poor housing conditions. She believes true resilience starts with empowering community members to prepare for climate disasters rather than relying solely on governmental plans and post-disaster relief. Her vision is to cultivate a stronger, more resilient community—one that is ready for the next flood or extreme weather event, instead of waiting to address its devastating impacts after the fact.

Community Science Fellow

Dr. Kyungsun Lee is an assistant professor of Geography in the Department of History at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. As an interdisciplinary environmental social scientist, she investigates the governance of socio-technical systems for urban water sustainability transitions, with a particular focus on the social and political dimensions of unconventional freshwater resources such as desalination, wastewater reuse, and stormwater management. Her recent work explores how desalination technology is developed, diffused, and implemented, as well as the roles of key stakeholders and their networks in these processes. Dr. Lee earned her Ph.D. in Environmental and Natural Resources Policy from the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry, completed her postdoctoral training at Texas A&M University, and holds both a master’s degree in the History of Science and a bachelor’s degree in Chemical and Biological Engineering from Seoul National University.

Scientist Wanted

We seek up to three volunteer scientists with complementary expertise to help our refugee and immigrant community in Vermont bolster resilience to climate disasters. Specifically, we need:

  1. A Flood Risk Specialist to conduct flood risk assessments, including mapping high-risk areas using GIS or similar tools,
  2. A Disaster Management Expert to co-develop culturally tailored preparedness toolkits and emergency plans, and
  3. An Outreach & Education Specialist to design and deliver community-focused workshops, training sessions, and user-friendly resources—ideally with Arabic language skills.

All scientists will collaborate closely with local leaders to ensure solutions meet the specific needs of refugees from Syria, Iraq, Sudan, Palestine, and Yemen. We welcome graduate students or professionals, and while in-person engagement is strongly preferred for hands-on sessions, we are also open to remote collaboration.

Desired Skills and Qualifications:

  • Flood Risk Specialist
    • Proficiency with GIS or equivalent mapping software
    • Knowledge of hydrology, flood modeling, or water resource management
  • Disaster Management Expert
    • Experience in emergency preparedness, risk reduction, or community disaster planning
    • Ability to co-create culturally appropriate toolkits and strategies
  • Outreach & Education Specialist
    • Strong background in community education, workshop design, and public engagement
    • Ability to tailor communication for wide-ranging audiences; Arabic language skills preferred
  • General Qualities (All Roles)
    • Collaborative spirit and willingness to work with wide-ranging audiences  
    • Public speaking and facilitation skills
    • Commitment to connecting scientific knowledge to local concerns

Thriving Earth Exchange asks all scientific partners to work with the community to help define a project with concrete local impact to which they can contribute as pro-bono volunteers and collaborators. This work can also position the scientists and communities to seek additional funding, together, for the next stage.

Interested in volunteering as a scientist? Apply now!

Collaborating Organization(s)

The Nurture Nature Center

The Nurture Nature Center is a non-profit located in Easton, PA, that supports building community resiliency to environmental risk by leveraging the power of informal science education, art-centered approaches to learning, and community dialogue and networking. Started in response to flooding in Easton, NNC has over a decade of work related to flood outreach, education, and social science research. NNC is currently an AGU TEX Community Science Hub and Dr. Kathryn Semmens is the AGU TEX Community Science Hub coordinator. Dr. Semmens is also the Science Director at NNC with a background in earth and environmental sciences and 10 years of experience with social science research related to risk communication.

Dr. Lesley-Ann Dupigny-Giroux: Advisor 

Dr. Dupigny-Giroux is a Distinguished Professor of Climatology in the Department of Geography & Geosciences, the Vermont State Climatologist since 1997, and the President of the American Association of State Climatologists from 2020-2022. In 2020, she was appointed by the Vermont House of Representatives to the Vermont Climate Council as a member with expertise in climate change science. An applied climatologist by training, Dr. Dupigny-Giroux’s research interests intersect a number of interdisciplinary fields including hydroclimatic natural hazards and climate literacy, climate services, geospatial climate and land-surface processes, all within the context of our changing climate. She is an expert in floods, droughts and severe weather and the ways in which these affect the landscape and peoples of Vermont and the US Northeast. A Fellow of both the American Association of Geographers, as well as the American Meteorological Society, Dr. Dupigny-Giroux is currently serving 3-year terms on three committees/boards of the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine, including the Board of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate.