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After a successful steering group meeting in July, we have set up expert advisory groups focused on the following areas:
Our expert advisory groups will use their skills, experience and knowledge to identify the best ways to reach and gather contributions from a much wider range of people.
We will be asking them to explore technical questions like:
Their answers will help us find the best methods and times to ask local people and organisations to propose priorities for nature’s recovery, and locations where action could be taken to achieve those priorities.
If you are not on one of these groups, we still want to hear from you. The expert groups will not be deciding strategy content in isolation.
We will be sharing more ways to get involved soon, but in the meantime please contact us if you’d like to tell us about a specific area of interest, skills or experience you’d like to contribute to the local nature recovery strategy.
Our next priority is to create a communications and engagement plan, ensuring we are clear on:
In the meantime, we’re enjoying connecting with local people and groups interested in working together to recover nature in Dorset. We’re keeping a list of local projects and initiatives, ready to consider how these might feed into the strategy.
We look forward to seeing some of you at:
We’ve also got some meetings with other authorities working on local nature recovery strategies to consider questions like:
Please tell your contacts, colleagues, and networks about the Dorset local nature recovery strategy by sharing this update. The more people involved, the greater the success for people and nature.
Contact us if you have:
You can sign up to our ‘Dorset Council News’ e-newsletter to keep up to date with the progress we’re making to make nature bigger, better and more joined up in Dorset.
Photo credit Susan Buckland ‘Black-tailed Godwitt at Lodmoor’