Project Summary/Abstract The overall goal of this WRUC administrative supplement is to increase the knowledge and skills of tribal emergency responders, day laborers, and migrant workers engaged in response and recovery efforts related to recent major environmental disasters in the Western Region. Our approach leverages existing relationships and infrastructure under our HDPT grant to quickly roll out training resources, both in response to recent severe storms and floods and in preparation for future disaster events. Under this initiative, WRUC will partner with the Northwest Tribal Emergency Management Council (NWTEMC), the National Day Laborer Organizing Network (NDLON), and several California-based organizations to extend needed training resources to these impacted communities and worker populations. Proposed activities include a) training for tribal emergency responders provided as part of NWTEMC’s annual conference and in support of a planned 2024 multistate tribal-led NWTEMC simulation exercise; b) Training-of-Trainers for staff and worker-leaders from NDLON and other trusted worker and community organizations with access to day laborers and migrant disaster workers in Washington State and California; and c) a regional partner workshop on Disaster Resilience for Climate-Vulnerable Populations to share lessons learned and to identify future climate disaster response and resiliency needs. These activities expand on the core objective of our parent grant to expand disaster preparedness and emergency response capacity in our region. Total projected training over the two-year funding period: 71 courses, 1,283 trainees, 4,810 contact hours