The WATER Institute develops innovative, science-based solutions for communities and the environment to address the legacy of hydrologically destructive land use practices and policies on California’s watersheds and the urgent need to address the impacts of climate change on the water cycle.
“The water cycle
and the life cycle
are one.”
Jacques Cousteau
In 2004, the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center (OAEC) established the WATER Institute (Watershed Advocacy, Training, Education, & Research) to promote understanding of the importance of healthy watersheds to healthy communities. Through demonstration, education, watershed community organizing, and advocacy leadership, the WATER Institute empowers community-based watershed literacy and action by
- reframing the policy debate around water quality and supply at the city, county, and California state levels;
- educating and empowering all sectors of regional economies to implement restoration, conservation, and policy changes for water security in their communities; and
- implementing climate change-responsive land use and water management practices at the watershed scale.
For general WATER Institute inquiries, please contact .
WATER News
Report Back From Another Successful Build Like a Beaver Training (BLAB)
The WATER Institute’s Kate Lundquist and Brock Dolman have returned from an amazing four days of beaver and process-based restoration field tours, discussions, and onsite building opportunities at the California … Read more
California’s “Beaver Bill” Signed by Governor
Assembly Bill 2196 codifies the state’s new Beaver Restoration Program. SACRAMENTO – Unanimous votes of both the California State Assembly and Senate propelled Assembly Bill 2196 to the Governor’s desk, … Read more
Hiring: Beaver Coexistence Program Manager
Beaver Coexistence Program Manager 40 hrs per week. Three-year, remote position (must be based in CA) Application Deadline: 5pm PDT, October 13, 2024 (or until position is filled) Start Date: … Read more
Bring Back the Beaver
To improve water supply for humans and the environment and increase resilience to drought and climate change, the WATER Institute is working to integrate beaver management into California policy and regulation.
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WATER Institute Staff
Brock Dolman
OAEC Co-Founder; Program Director
Brock Dolman (he/him) co-directs the WATER Institute, Permaculture Design Program and Wildlands Program. He has taught permaculture and consulted on regenerative project design and implementation internationally in Costa Rica, Ecuador, the US Virgin Islands, Spain, Brazil, China, Canada, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Democratic Republic of Congo, Cuba and widely in the United States.
Kate Lundquist
WATER Institute Co-Director
Kate Lundquist (she/her) co-directs the Occidental Arts & Ecology Center’s WATER Institute and the Bring Back the Beaver Campaign. Collaborating with landowners, communities, tribes, conservation organizations, and resource agencies across California, Kate works to implement beaver and process-based restoration to conserve watersheds, recover listed species, increase water security, and build resilience to climate change.
Johanna Silver
WATER Institute Communications and Project Manager
As the communications and project manager with the WATER Institute, Johanna Sliver (she/her) builds enthusiasm around beaver, process-based restoration, and other WATER Institute programs…
The WATER Institute can help you protect your watershed:
Modeling Watershed Resiliency
“Just as water is the foundation of life, it must also be the foundation of design in the built environment.”
–Betsy Damon (Keeper of the Waters)
Community resilience depends on healthy relationships with our watersheds. Through a practice we call “Conservation Hydrology,” you can create and install water management systems that restore and protect watersheds. Learn about our Conservation Hydrology demonstration site for design inspiration.
Training Changemakers
“If you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the precipitate.”
–Steven Wright
The WATER Institute supports students, landowners, watershed advocates, land managers, land use professionals, agency staff, and policy makers to become water-literate environmental stewards. You too can increase your community’s watershed literacy by drawing from our many resources.
Supporting Communities to Transform Watersheds
“Water links us to our neighbor in a way more profound and complex than any other.”
–John Thorson
Viewing your watershed as a shared “basin of relations” allows you and your neighbors to truly define the boundaries of your community and to organize around meaningful issues of lasting local social security.
Changing the Rules
“Fix it in your constitution that no corporation, no body of men, no capital can get possession and right to your waters. Hold the waters in the hands of the people.”
–John Wesley Powell, 1890 North Dakota Constitutional Convention
We are perched on the tipping point of a “watershed moment.” Considering the importance of water, we all need to be involved in the politics of water resources.
Lasting change ultimately occurs in the arenas of politics and democratic decision-making. Learn how the WATER Institute is changing the rules through our Bring Back the Beaver Campaign and other agricultural water work.
Conservation Hydrology – Concepts Coined
At the WATER Institute we call our philosophical and practical responses to current water challenges and opportunities “Conservation Hydrology.” Conservation Hydrology emphasizes community-based watershed literacy, planning, and action. It challenges the current “dehydration model” of human development and advocates for a “rehydration model.” The old “drain-age” is now being replaced by a new “retain-age”! To achieve this goal, we must retrofit existing development patterns with new ones based on the principles outlined below, coined by WATER Institute Co-Director Brock Dolman.
Slow it. Spread it. Sink it. Store it. Share it.
The Clean Water Act now recognizes the “pave and pipe paradigm” as disastrously flawed and hydro-illiterate. These outmoded engineering practices capture, concentrate, and convey water “away” as quickly as possible, which is especially harmful in drought-prone areas. The WATER Institute advocates a new paradigm to recharge our aquifers with a call to slow it, spread it, sink it. Slow the water down. Spread the water out. Sink the water into the land. Store the water in the aquifer. Share the water with all of life. Brock Dolman’s slow it, spread it, sink it meme has gone viral worldwide!
Basins of Relations
Watersheds are catchment basins of varying sizes that collect surface water and groundwater in a given geographical area. “Basins of Relations” is the notion that our watersheds are complex, living systems full of organisms that rely on us to be aware of how our actions impact the waters we share. All of our organizing strategies at the WATER Institute are based on a “Ridgeline to River to Reef” model that recognizes that actions taken in the uplands have profound consequences downstream.
Illustration by Jim Coleman
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