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Alabama Cooperative Extension System educators are always looking for new and unique ways to provide resources that help improve the lives of Alabama residents. When Janice Hall, the county Extension coordinator for Macon County, saw a need to educate senior citizens in her community on Medicare and Medicaid, she partnered with local groups to bring a new twist to senior-citizen education.

Through the Let’s Celebrate and Educate: Preparing for the Future program, Hall and the Macon County Extension office celebrates residents ages 55 and up with a traditional birthday party. In addition to the party festivities, Hall invites medical and legal experts to talk to the seniors about many of the topics that affect those living in their golden years. Thanks to Hall’s leadership, Macon County senior citizens now have an avenue to get out of the house, have some fun, and learn more about all of the resources that are available to them.

Janice Hall speaking to a group of seniors.Celebrate & Educate

Alabama Extension Helps Seniors Prepare for the Future.

  • Medicaid & Medicare information
  • Free legal aid: wills, power of attorney, advance health directives
  • Free health screening by AU & Tuskegee Colleges of Nursing
  • Handy medical record notebooks
  • Statewide resources for diabetes, financial literacy, identity theft, independent living, and more for seniors.

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The Alabama Cooperative Extension System is committed to creating healthy, profitable, and sustainable forests in Alabama. Adam Maggard, an Alabama Extension forestry specialist, is doing his part by making connections with forestland owners to better understand their goals and objectives and then providing education and resources to help them accomplish those goals.

From an early age, Maggard witnessed firsthand the impact Extension has on forestland owners in terms of education and assistance. Now, through his Extension programs, Maggard is making impacts of his own. Through the Forest Business Resources project, Alabama Extension looks to enhance the livelihoods of forestland owners by improving forest management, business practices, and increased opportunities for producing income. Thanks to Maggard’s work as the project’s leader, Forest Business Resources made a direct estimated impact of $4.3 million in 2022. This impact came in the form of improved forestland value, recovered loss, economic development, and financial decision-making based on information learned through the project.

Extension Promotes Forestland Health & Wealth

Adam MaggardForest Business Resources Program: Working Directly with Landowners

  • Business management and planning
  • Forest resources education
  • Key topics: market trends, supplemental income opportunities, portable sawmilling, forest products, decision-making

Alabama Forestry Facts

  • $28 billion economic output
  • 71% of land forested
  • Third in timberland among contiguous states; second in private timberland
  • 93% privately owned, largely by families

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The Alabama Cooperative Extension System is hard at work helping rejuvenate Alabama’s coastline. One of the professionals leading this charge is Andrea Tarnecki, an Alabama Extension assistant professor. Her and the team at the Auburn University Shellfish Laboratory on Dauphin Island are using science and research on shellfish habitats to rebuild oyster reefs that have been depleted in recent years.

Through her role as a researcher and Extension specialist, she works directly with those in Alabama’s oyster community to understand the areas of research the team needs to address. She then works to convey the findings and solutions back to the stakeholders. One of the lab’s current projects is returning oysters back to Little Dauphin Bay. This bay once harbored a healthy oyster population, but it has experienced significant decline over the years. Thanks to the leadership and work from Tarnecki, the lab is growing oysters in small clusters and returning oysters to Little Dauphin Bay to help restore the historic reefs.

Shoring Up Shellfish

A picture of Andrea Tarnecki on the beachAlabama Extension supports the Gulf Coast oyster industry.

Auburn University Shellfish Lab: Extension and Outreach Hub for Seafood Stakeholders

  • Extension specialists
  • Oyster aquaculture
  • Oyster enhancement & restoration
  • Seafood safety

Commercial Oyster Farming

  • 10 farms
  • 45 production acres
  • Nearly 4.5 million single-market oysters sold
  • $3.2 million market value

Wild Oyster Harvest

  • 619 licensed commercial harvesters
  • More than 44,000 sacks harvested
  • $3 million+ dockside value

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