Program Provisions. A. This MOU delineates areas where the parties intend to work together on specific projects and endeavors, including the tentatively-titled Ocean Careers educational opportunities and site development for the Ocean Collective. B. This MOU establishes the general terms of this collaboration between the parties. Cooperative work on specific projects may be undertaken by subunits of the parties, in which case subsequent agreements will be executed for these specific projects under this umbrella MOU. These project-specific agreements will include the following elements' 1. Designation of the participating institutional subunits (e.g., colleges, schools, departments, programs). 2. Designation of one or more persons in each institution who will serve as program leader(s) for the agreements, and, 3. Description of the kinds of cooperative work and activities undertaken, timelines and deliverables, and financial responsibilities when appropriate. 4. The identification and execution of additional agreements as necessary, such as student learning agreements and student teaching placements. C. For each working agreement, the program leaders will be responsible for developing a project plan, including a description of the work and activities to be undertaken, the financial arrangements to support them, how the outcomes of the project will be assessed, and associated deliverables and means of dissemination. Copies of these plans shall be filed with the Chief Administrative Officer of SBCC and CFSB, or the Officer's designated representative. D. The aforementioned work agreements may be developed for, but are not limited to, the following areas of cooperation: 1. Possible New programs in Sustainable Ocean Careers at SBCC: Faculty-led development of a new Associate's Degree and/or career tech Certificate at SBCC, based on available Labor Market Information (LMI) data and other economic development indicators, to ▇▇▇▇▇▇ career paths in the local ‘Blue Economy,’ including, for example, small-boat commercial fisheries, small-scale aquaculture, applied marine science, coastal restoration, climate adaptation, renewable energy R&D, desalinization R&D, and ocean tourism and recreation, among other sustainable uses of our renewable ocean resources. These industries are on growth trajectories for the Santa ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ region, with many State and/or Federal initiatives to expand domestic production, job growth and spending in these areas. New programs may include education and mentoring of SBCC students by CFSB members and other maritime professionals, through guest lectures, seminars, field trips, internships, apprenticeships, networking events, and other job training opportunities, with a particular focus on bringing underrepresented groups and tribal youth into fisheries and the Blue Economy. 2. Locating the Ocean Collective at SBCC: The Ocean Collective envisions a multi- faceted facility designed to address the fishing, seafood and other maritime industries’ outstanding needs for harbor-adjacent space for maritime enterprise, as well as programs to ▇▇▇▇▇▇ expansion of maritime enterprise. A survey of over 46 commercial fishermen and 28 other maritime businesses in Santa ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ conducted by CFSB in 2022 identified the following priority components of the Maritime Collective: trailered boat parking, gear storage containers, a fabrication workshop, cold storage and commercial kitchen space, career training in fabrication, seafood handling, marketing, finance and business, co-working and convening space, and live tank storage. Each component will be incorporated if and when feasible. If a facility is ultimately funded and built as the result of this cooperative agreement between the parties, the operation and management of the building will be determined with the agreement of both parties. If space is available, co-locating multiple small businesses as sub-leasees of this space, within and across sectors of the Blue Economy and on a college campus, optimizes cross sector collaboration to realize innovations and economic opportunities for our coastal economy.
Appears in 1 contract
Sources: Memorandum of Understanding
Program Provisions. A. This MOU delineates areas where the parties intend to work together on specific projects and endeavors, including the tentatively-titled Ocean Careers educational opportunities curricula and site development for the Ocean Collective.
B. This MOU establishes the general terms of this collaboration between the parties. Cooperative work on specific projects may be undertaken by subunits of the parties, in which case subsequent agreements will be executed for these specific projects under this umbrella MOU. These project-specific agreements will include the following elements'
1. Designation of the participating institutional subunits (e.g., colleges, schools, departments, programs).
2. Designation of one or more persons in each institution who will serve as program leader(s) for the agreements, and,
3. Description of the kinds of cooperative work and activities undertaken, timelines and deliverables, and financial responsibilities when appropriate.
4. The identification and execution of additional agreements as necessary, such as student learning agreements and student teaching placements.
C. For each working agreement, the program leaders will be responsible for developing a project plan, including a description of the work and activities to be undertaken, the financial arrangements to support them, how the outcomes of the project will be assessed, and associated deliverables and means of dissemination. Copies of these plans shall be filed with the Chief Administrative Officer of SBCC and CFSB, or the Officer's designated representative.
D. The aforementioned work agreements may be developed for, but are not limited to, the following areas of cooperation:
1. Possible New programs in Sustainable Ocean Careers at SBCC: Faculty-led development Development of a new Associate's Degree and/or career tech Certificate at SBCC, based on available Labor Market Information (LMI) data and other economic development indicators, SBCC to ▇▇▇▇▇▇ career paths in the local ‘Blue Economy,’ including, for example, including small-boat commercial fisheries, small-scale aquaculture, applied marine science, coastal restoration, climate adaptation, renewable energy R&D, desalinization R&D,, and ocean tourism and recreation, among other sustainable uses of our renewable ocean resources. These industries are on growth trajectories for the Santa ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ region, with many State and/or Federal initiatives to expand domestic production, job growth and spending in these areas. New programs may include will incorporate education and mentoring of SBCC students by CFSB members and other maritime professionals, through guest lectures, seminars, field trips, internships, apprenticeships, networking events, and other job training opportunities, with a particular focus on bringing underrepresented groups and tribal youth into fisheries and the Blue Economy.
2. Locating Sighting the Ocean Collective at SBCC: The Ocean Collective envisions a multi- faceted facility designed to address the fishing, seafood and other maritime industries’ outstanding needs for harbor-adjacent space for maritime enterprise, as well as programs to ▇▇▇▇▇▇ expansion of maritime enterprise. A survey of over 46 commercial fishermen and 28 other maritime businesses in Santa ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ conducted by CFSB in 2022 identified the following priority components of the Maritime Collective: trailered boat parking, gear storage containers, a fabrication workshop, cold storage and commercial kitchen space, career training in fabrication, seafood handling, marketing, finance and business, co-working and convening space, and live tank storage. Each component will be incorporated if and when feasible. If a facility is ultimately funded and built as the result of this cooperative agreement between the parties, the operation and management of the building will be determined with the agreement of both parties. If space is available, coCo-locating multiple small businesses as sub-leasees of this space, within and across sectors of the Blue Economy and on a college campus, optimizes cross sector collaboration to realize innovations and economic opportunities for our coastal economy.
Appears in 1 contract
Sources: Memorandum of Understanding