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Code of Conduct
OpenTEAM Code of Conduct Drafted and approved by OpenTEAM Secretariat, 10/13/2020A more detailed Code can be found here. Open Technology Ecosystem for Agricultural Management (OpenTEAM)
OpenTEAM Statement on racial equity in agriculture
OpenTEAM Statement on racial equity in agriculture Developed by: OpenTEAM Secretariat 10/25/2020 OpenTEAM is a collaborative network supporting the emergence and continued viability of a
Hub & Network Working Group Call – June 9, 2020
https://vimeo.com/437227576/e4682cbf39https://vimeo.com/437231334/accabe8e9a Chat transcript 00:04:32 Laura Demmel: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Vm_TGGu8w19FfYedbsnx2HHNsEr_lBaztm_QYi2Py34/edit?usp=sharing 00:12:12 Laura Demmel: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Vm_TGGu8w19FfYedbsnx2HHNsEr_lBaztm_QYi2Py34/edit?usp=sharing 00:34:06 Laura Demmel: We’re very grateful for your participation, Mollie and Hannah! 00:35:03 Mollie
All-Hands Meeting – June 25, 2020
Hey OpenTEAM Community, Thanks again to those who participated in the All Hands Meeting last week. We hope that it provided more insight into how all
Wolfe’s Neck announces new initiative to improve soil health, combat climate change
FREEPORT– As part of a $10 million collaboration, Wolfe’s Neck Center for Agriculture and the Environment is attempting a “farming revolution” to combat carbon emissions
Global collaboration creates open source climate solutions
FREEPORT, Maine —Wolfe’s Neck Center for Agriculture & the Environment, together with founding collaborators Stonyfield Organic, the USDA’s LandPKS project and Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research (FFAR), today announced the
Global Collaborative Launches OpenTEAM to Address Soil Health and Mitigate Climate Change
FREEPORT, MAINE and WASHINGTON, D.C. — Wolfe’s Neck Center for Agriculture & the Environment, together with founding collaborators Stonyfield Organic, the USDA’s LandPKS project and Foundation
Wolfe’s Neck and partners launch open-source soil health platform
A new agriculture software platform co-developed by a Freeport nonprofit is expected to result in critical information about millions of acres of farmland by 2024.