Featured /outreach/paces/ en Outdoor Recreation Offers a Path to Community Resilience /outreach/paces/2025/04/30/outdoor-recreation-offers-path-community-resilience <span>Outdoor Recreation Offers a Path to Community Resilience </span> <span><span>Arielle Wiedenbeck</span></span> <span><time datetime="2025-04-30T06:54:33-06:00" title="Wednesday, April 30, 2025 - 06:54">Wed, 04/30/2025 - 06:54</time> </span> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle focal_image_wide"> <img loading="lazy" src="/outreach/paces/sites/default/files/styles/focal_image_wide/public/2025-04/RTAP.png?h=1e66e246&amp;itok=YQe6v2wI" width="1200" height="800" alt="A college aged girl leans over a table, drawing sharpie dots on a map of Keystone, CO"> </div> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-categories" itemprop="about"> <span class="visually-hidden">Categories:</span> <div class="ucb-article-category-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-folder-open"></i> </div> <a href="/outreach/paces/taxonomy/term/160"> Grantee Stories </a> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-tags" itemprop="keywords"> <span class="visually-hidden">Tags:</span> <div class="ucb-article-tag-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-tags"></i> </div> <a href="/outreach/paces/taxonomy/term/211" hreflang="en">Featured</a> <a href="/outreach/paces/taxonomy/term/239" hreflang="en">Graduate School</a> <a href="/outreach/paces/taxonomy/term/217" hreflang="en">PACES original content</a> </div> <a href="/outreach/paces/arielle-wiedenbeck">Arielle Wiedenbeck</a> <div class="ucb-article-content ucb-striped-content"> <div class="container"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--article-content paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div class="ucb-article-text" itemprop="articleBody"> <div><div><h5><span lang="EN-US">CU Boulder’s Rural Technical Assistance program helps rural Colorado towns use their natural assets to strengthen local economies, deepen partnerships and define their own futures.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></h5><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">In small towns across Colorado, where economic challenges and limited resources often run deep, a new kind of planning is taking root — one that blends grassroots visioning with technical support, and centers outdoor recreation as a tool for long-term resilience.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">The Colorado Rural Technical Assistance Program, or RTAP, was informed by a growing interest in outdoor recreation as a driver for rural economic development —&nbsp;an interest reflected in national-level programming, such as the&nbsp;Recreation Economy for Rural Communities (RERC) planning assistance initiative. More than 100 communities applied for the RERC pilot program in 2019, with many Colorado communities among them. While several were strong candidates, the program aimed to achieve a broad geographic distribution with only a limited number of spots available. As a result, many Colorado applicants were not selected despite the strength of their proposals.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">This information was shared with the Colorado Outdoor Recreation Industry Office (OREC) and&nbsp;Natalie Ooi,&nbsp;a&nbsp;teaching associate professor in the Masters of the Environment Graduate Program (MENV), who&nbsp;saw an opportunity to create a Colorado-specific initiative that could support more communities across the state.&nbsp;In partnership with&nbsp;Matt Nuñez, senior program manager at the OREC, RTAP began to take shape. Using RERC as a model, they designed an accelerated timeline that enables&nbsp;MENV graduate students to co-create, facilitate and execute a community action plan with a community-driven process in a one-semester course.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">“It kind of came together sort of perfectly,” Ooi said.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">Although the course lasts one semester for students, for Ooi and her partners, it’s a yearlong endeavor. From July to December, they work closely with the selected communities to lay groundwork before students begin. This includes building relationships, forming a steering committee and completing a self-assessment.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">“Communities need time to decide if this program is right for them. This isn’t a marketing plan; it’s not a trails development plan,” Ooi said. “At a broad level, we’re really focused on what outdoor recreation means to the community and what they would like to see in terms of tying together outdoor recreation and economic development. We want to give every community the attention they need.”</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">Emily Glass, a graduate student in her final year of the MENV program, said she joined the 2025 RTAP cohort after many recommendations from peers.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">“I have always been intrigued by how durable outdoor recreation can be in the midst of the complex social and environmental issues we find ourselves facing,” Glass said. “I believe that a love of being in nature can be a universal human experience, and the joy from that helps bridge our own divides.”</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div> <div class="align-right image_style-medium_750px_50_display_size_"> <div class="imageMediaStyle medium_750px_50_display_size_"> <img loading="lazy" src="/outreach/paces/sites/default/files/styles/medium_750px_50_display_size_/public/2025-04/1710472653939.jpeg?itok=VwSUrwQB" width="750" height="500" alt="People sit around a white table and talk. On the table are a bunch of yellow sticky notes laid out in rows."> </div> <span class="media-image-caption"> <p>Community members from Lake City, CO, attend RTAP's two-day community visioning workshop in 2024. Photo credit: Natalie Ooi</p> </span> </div> <p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">In Colorado, outdoor recreation is a powerful tool for economic development, Ooi explained. Outdoor recreation assets and amenities encourage people to spend time and money in these communities — but it’s not a one-size-fits-all solution. According to Glass, this makes outdoor recreation “a great moldable option for rural communities to build resilience around.”</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">In the workshops, which were held in mid-March, topics such as community-identity, sustainable development and responsible recreation, environmental concerns and infrastructure capacity often underpinned the conversations about outdoor recreation development. Sometimes, the focus was on better aligning economic development and tourism initiatives to avoid duplicative efforts.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">“In Leadville, one of their biggest challenges was that it’s a really dedicated bunch of people. But … it’s the same group of 20 to 30 people who do everything,” Ooi said. “Some of our focus was on how do we better coordinate [everyone] to come together and identify who is doing what?”</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">In La Junta, RTAP helped connect community organizations with regional partners working toward similar goals, like the broader Regional Partnerships Initiative from Colorado Parks and Wildlife. In Rangely and Dinosaur, RTAP facilitated a joint effort to organize a clean-up day and strengthen the towns’ relationships with the Bureau of Land Management.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">“Part of the work we did was bringing key stakeholders from across the two communities into the same room … and realize, ‘Hey, we have common aims and interests and previous misunderstandings,’” Ooi said. “It’s helped to establish kind of this precedent of ‘we work together out here, even if we’re in different counties.’”</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">Now in its third year, Ooi said she is blown away by how communities have shown up to the workshops.&nbsp;</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">“We’ve had the best attendance at our community workshops than we’ve had historically,” Ooi said. She credits the rise in attendees to improvements in RTAP’s process and more engaged community contacts.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">Despite strong engagement, Ooi said gaining community trust remains an ongoing challenge — one RTAP is uniquely positioned to meet.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">“The key point of difference [for RTAP] is this plan is entirely community-driven,” Ooi said. “The graduate student team and our partners, we’re just facilitators. We’re not here to say, ‘this needs to go in the plan.’ Nothing should be in there that the community or someone in the community isn’t passionate about.”</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">Although not every community member attends the meetings, Ooi said the steering committees are composed to provide a “broader and more representative cross-section" than what is typical in community planning.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">One of the most frequent questions RTAP gets is about funding. While RTAP currently doesn’t have the capacity to provide funds to implement the community action plans, the team hopes to work with OREC to establish seed funding in the future. For now, representatives from Great Outdoors Colorado, Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s&nbsp;Regional Partnership Initiative and other state agencies attend workshops to help guide long-term funding strategies. In addition, the community action plans developed by students include tools and tips for finding funding and resources, setting priorities, measuring impact and identifying timelines. Colorado State University Extension has recently partnered with RTAP to provide implementation support for the following 12-24 months.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">Despite the challenges, community feedback has been overwhelmingly positive.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">“It has brought communities together. It has gotten them to understand what meaningful stakeholder engagement can look like, and it’s helped them go for other grants in areas they otherwise wouldn’t have,” Ooi said.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">Like the communities they serve, RTAP has had a lasting impact on students.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">“The RTAP project directed my career after school,” said Conner Borkowski, former MENV student who worked with Leadville in 2023.&nbsp;Borkowski now works as the program and special projects coordinator with the Pikes Peak Outdoor Recreation Alliance.&nbsp;</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">Glass shared that working with the Beulah community shaped her understanding of what impactful community-engaged scholarship looks like.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><span lang="EN-US">“When designed meaningfully, community-engaged work is an opportunity to weave together different perspectives, ideas and expertise that otherwise may not have come together … the backbone of community-engaged work is collaboration.”</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div><div><p lang="EN-US"><a href="https://oedit.colorado.gov/about/oedit-divisions/colorado-outdoor-recreation-industry-office/orec-rural-technical-assistance" rel="nofollow"><span lang="EN-US">The Colorado Rural Technical Assistance Program</span></a><span lang="EN-US"> is funded in part by the Office for Public and Community-Engaged Scholarship. Applications for the 2025–26 cohort open Summer 2025.</span><span>&nbsp;</span></p></div></div></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div>CU Boulder’s Rural Technical Assistance program helps rural Colorado towns use their natural assets to strengthen local economies, deepen partnerships and define their own futures. </div> <h2> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--ucb-related-articles-block paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div>Off</div> </div> </h2> <div>Traditional</div> <div>0</div> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle large_image_style"> <img loading="lazy" src="/outreach/paces/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/2025-04/1741977539708_0.jpeg?itok=eVjJxDXI" width="1500" height="1000" alt="Three colleged aged girls point to sticky notes on a window to the left of them "> </div> </div> <div>On</div> <div>White</div> <div>MENV graduate students Abigale Purvis, Emily Palanjian, Jessica Hertzberg and Sarah McLaurin help facilitate the Keystone Workshop, March 12-13, 2025. Photo Credit: Natalie Ooi</div> Wed, 30 Apr 2025 12:54:33 +0000 Arielle Wiedenbeck 455 at /outreach/paces