Collaborative Groups
- | South Lassen Watersheds Group |
- | Lake Almanor Watershed Group |
- | Burney-Hat Creek Community Forest and Watershed Group |
- | Sierra to California All-Lands Enhancement |

South Lassen Watersheds Group (SLWG)
The South Lassen Watersheds Group (SLWG) began meeting in 2017 and includes a powerfully diverse mix of local partners interested pursuing high priority, large-scale, multi-jurisdictional projects to improve forest and watershed health, reduce wildfire risk, protect critical habitat, and support local contractors and industry. Born from Lake Almanor Watershed Group strategic planning meetings, the group also adopted a number of guiding principles from the Upper Feather River Integrated Regional Watershed Management (IRWM) Plan, a cohesive strategy for planning and implementing water management programs throughout the Upper Feather River Watershed. SLWG participants include IRWM planners as well as representatives from local, state, and federal agencies; nonprofits; and community groups.

Lake Almanor Watershed Group (LAWG)
The Lake Almanor Watershed Group (LAWG), formerly known as the Almanor Basin Watershed Group (ABWAC), was created in 2005 by the Plumas County Board of Supervisors to address water quality, land use, and critical habitat issues in the Lake Almanor Basin and make policy recommendations to the Board of Supervisors. From 2005 to 2013, LAWG served as an official advisory body to the Plumas County Board of Supervisors, providing recommendations to the county on a range of topics from overnight boat use on Lake Almanor to cloud-seeding. LAWG created a Watershed Management Plan that was approved by the Plumas County Board of Supervisors in 2009 and is intended to guide all efforts by LAWG to protect water quality, critical habitat, and quality of life in the Lake Almanor Basin. Since 2009, LAWG raises money each year to hire an independent contractor to sample the lake. Sierra Institute has been a part of LAWG since its origins in the early 2000s and provides watershed coordination for the group.

Burney-Hat Creek Community Forest and Watershed Group (BHCCFWG)
Founded in 2009, the Burney Hat Creek Community Forest and Watershed Group (BHCCFWG) is a collaborative forestry effort dedicated to improving social, environmental, and economic conditions in the Burney Creek and Hat Creek watersheds. The collaborative footprint encompasses 364,250 acres of public, private, and Tribal lands, and the communities of Burney, Johnson Park, Hat Creek, Cassel, and Old Station. In recent decades, local communities have experienced high rates of unemployment and increased risks of high-severity wildfires, issues the collaborative actively works to mitigate. The group's vision is to create a fire-resilient forest ecosystem with sustainable populations of wildlife, fisheries and habitat, functioning and restored watersheds and water quality, protected cultural resources and appropriate recreational opportunities while also helping to support quality of life, jobs for diverse community members, and economic benefits in local communities. BHCCFWG receives federal support through the U.S. Forest Service’s Collaborative Forestry Landscape Restoration (CFLR) program, augmenting available local resources to advance landscape-scale fuels reduction and forest health projects through coordinated public-private efforts.

SCALE
The Sierra Institute’s Sierra to California All-Lands Enhancement (SCALE) project is a mechanism for collaboration between collaborative groups working on landscape-scale forest restoration and community improvement across California. This project developed out of Sierra Institute’s broader work at the intersection of forest management and rural community well-being. By promoting successful collaboration at the community-level, the SCALE project promotes work on the ground that restores forest resilience, supports local economies, and builds strong communities.