Call for NEXUS Mentorship Application - Year 2

See the Flyer with QR Codes

Are you curious about topics such as work/life balance, salary negotiations, avoiding being pigeonholed and dealing with difficult clients, peers, bosses? Join us for NEXUS Year 2, pairing AIA Fellows with Emerging Professionals for a 6 month cross-generational connection.

We as an Institute are fortunate to have successful mentorship program models in a number of major populated areas (AIA Chicago’s Bridge Program and AIA New York’s Torch Program are examples). These programs have empowered many seasoned and emerging professionals by fostering symbiotic relationships between generations.

In an effort to expand beyond existing mentorship programs and reach members that are not currently connected, NEXUS strives to create an opportunity for emerging professionals in communities across the nation to connect with experienced practitioners on a fully virtual platform. Each one-on-one connection is an invaluable opportunity for both Mentees and Mentors to become more effective practitioners and better human beings navigating a complex world.

This “Call for Mentee/Mentor Applicants” is being sent to all Continental US AIA/AIAS chapters with the hope that it will quickly be forwarded via local databases to interested emerging professionals - “Mentees” (0-5 years experience) as well as Fellows/seasoned practitioners - “Mentors” (15+ years experience).

The program aims to have a class of 25-30 pairs in three - four cohorts meeting on Fridays at 1pm (est), beginning May 27, 2022 and continuing every last Friday of the Month through December. (We also plan to gather in Chicago at this year’s Conference for those of you who are attending.) Confirm your interest by emailing us to begin the registration process.

Mentors: As you consider participating, you will be encouraged to ask a lot of questions and to listen carefully to help the emerging professional benefit from your knowledge and experience.

Mentees: As you consider participating, you will be encouraged to be confident, assertive, and ready to ask a lot of questions.

The pairing process begins with “speed dating”. All participants are encouraged to be ready with their elevator pitch, which includes asking questions, uncovering aspirations, finding cultural alignments and what you hope to get out of the program.

A positive mentoring relationship can have a profound impact on one’s career. So Mentees, what’s the hesitation- sign up today! And Mentors, can you think of anything better than giving back to the profession? Join us for NEXUS 2022.

Sincerely,
The NEXUS Team

New Emergency Preparedness Councils Looking for Members

Two new councils (HB 2927 & HB 4068) that have a relationship to emergency preparedness, emergency management, homeland security and resiliency efforts, are looking for members.

Emergency Preparedness Advisory Council (EPAC).

This council is established within the Office of the Governor. The mission of the council is to facilitate policy recommendations for catastrophic disaster preparedness, mitigation, response and recovery planning, procedures and protocols with special emphasis on outreach to representatives of designated state and federal emergency support functions. The council may research international and national best practices and make formal recommendations to the Governor or the State Resilience Officer, with special emphasis given to connecting statewide policy recommendations.

 The council shall advise and make policy recommendations to the Oregon Homeland Security Council regarding federal emergency support functions.

 The council consist of 16-members, of those, nine of the members will be appointed by Directors from the following agencies:

  • Oregon Military Department

  • Oregon Department of Emergency Management

  • State Fire Marshall

  • State Police

  • Department of Public Safety Standards and Training

  • Oregon Health Authority

  • Oregon Department of Transportation

  • Department of Justice

  • Oregon Department of Forestry

 The remaining positions are appointed by the Governor:

  • Association of Oregon Counties

  • League of Oregon Cities

  • EM Preparedness Regional Organizations

  • EM Preparedness Local Organizations

  • Private Sector

  • Nonprofit Community – EM Support Functions Responsibility

  • Indian Tribes in Oregon

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Local Government Emergency Management Advisory Council (LGEMAC).

 This council is established within the Oregon Department of Emergency Management. The mission of the council is to provide advice and recommendations to the Oregon Department of Emergency Management regarding its emergency preparedness and response functions.

 The council consist of 11 members, all members will be appointed by the Governor:

  • Association of Oregon Counties

  • League of Oregon Cities

  • EM Medical Service Providers

  • Fire Departments

  • Statewide Association of EM, Responders, Gov agencies & Elected Officials

  • County Sheriffs

  • 9-1-1 EM Dispatchers

  • Volunteer EM Medical Service Providers

  • 3-Public Members Experience EM/Prep/Mgmt.

 The policy advisor for these councils is Mr. Mike Harryman, the State Resilience Officer. Administrative support will be provided by the Oregon Department of Emergency Management.

How to apply:

To submit an application, please visit the main State of Oregon- Boards and Commissions Website and follow the instructions to apply. You will note that there are two different links- please use the correct link to apply (you will either need to create a Workday account or log in using your OR number). If you have any questions, please contact Executive.Appointments@oregon.gov

Please note that only completed applications will be processed and considered for appointment. A complete application includes the following:

  • Uploaded Resume (PDF only)

  • Uploaded Short Personal Bio (PDF only)

  • Responses to the three General Application Questions

  • Responses to Background Questions

  • Responses to the subsequent Gender Identity, Personal Information, and Public Records Disclosure tasks that come up directly after you submit your application

 

University of Oregon DAE Lecture Series - Updated

The University of Oregon Department of Architecture and Environmental Studies invites you to the next presentation in their 2021-22 Lecture Series:

May 17, 5:00pm
Symposium: On Spacial [In]justice: An Interdisciplinary Exchange
Lawrence Hall 115, 206

Opening Notes | 5-5:20pm | LA 115
Session ONE | Presentations | 5:20-6:30pm | LA 115
Session TWO | Conversations | 6:30-7:30pm | LA 206

This in-person symposium, organized and hosted by the School of Architecture & Environment, as part of its Design for Spatial Justice (DSJ) Initiative, will explore conceptions and practices of spatial [in]justice by inviting voices and synthesizing knowledge from multiple disciplines, thereby creating an exchange across and beyond disciplinary boundaries. It features short inputs by ten speakers (Session One) from diverse disciplinary and research backgrounds, and also includes roundtable discussions (Session Two) led by the School of Architecture & Environment’s current cohort of Design for Spatial Justice Fellows.

Speakers include Robert Clarke (Architecture), Sophia Ford (Environmental Studies / Geography), Elisandra Garcia (Architecture), Julieta Gil (Art & Technology), Yekang Ko (Landscape Architecture), Laura Pulido (Indigenous, Race, and Ethnic Studies), Junichi Satoh (Architecture), Emily Eliza Scott (History of Art and Architecture / Environmental Studies), Sarah Wald (Environmental Studies / English), and Jean Yang (Landscape Architecture).

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May 20-21
2022 Reynolds Symposium: Aalto : Light
White Stag Blocks & Mt. Angel Library
Learn More

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May 26, 5:30 | Eugene and Zoom
Marshall Brown 
Recurrent Visions

 Marshall Brown is an architect, artist, and scholar. Among other accomplishments, he has represented the United States at the Venice Architecture Biennale. His work is in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Museum of Contemporary Photography, and Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. Marshall Brown is also an Associate Professor at the Princeton University School of Architecture where he directs the Princeton Urban Imagination Center. His first book, Recurrent Visions: The Architecture of Marshall Brown Projects will be published in June 2022 by Princeton Architectural Press, and his second book, The Architecture of Collage, will be published in October 2022 by Park Books in conjunction with a solo exhibition at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art.