HISTORY
The conception, development, and growth of the Extension Disaster Education Network (EDEN) were a direct result of the lessons learned by the land-grant system responding to the catastrophic Mississippi and Missouri river floods of 1993.
Based on these lessons learned, it was obvious that the Land-Grant system would have an ongoing expectation to be involved locally and nationally in the emergency management arena. EDEN formed as a North Central Region (NCR) “disaster reduction group” committee with a three-year outlook, got its name in 1996, and began the transition to a national network in 1998. The major lessons learned in the 1993 floods were:
A.J. Dye of the USDA Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service(CSREES), now known as USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA), asked Peter Bloome, University of Illinois; Jerry DeWitt, Iowa State University(ISU); and David Baker, University of Missouri, to develop a proposal for the use of remaining special funds to build on the lessons learned and to position the region to more effectively prepare for and respond to future disasters.
The three leaders initially envisioned that one or more centers would be established in the North Central Region where states could pool their technical and educational resources to more effectively respond in times of a disaster. During the 1993 disaster, the states did share some important human resources, but they thought that they could do better.
DeWitt submitted a multi-state proposal for $80,000 to CSREES. Shortly after the grant was funded, DeWitt changed jobs, and it was agreed that Illinois and Missouri would move forward with the proposal. The University of Illinois sub-contracted with ISU, and Peter Bloome agreed to serve as the new Principal Investigator for the grant. The NCR Extension directors were asked to designate one representative per state to serve on a regional committee and to attend a fall 1995 meeting in Kansas City. The main issues that surfaced during that meeting were:
At a second meeting in Kansas City in May 1996, the representatives brought more ideas for collaboration. On the last day, participants agreed the “disaster reduction group” needed a name. The key driving principle was development of a network or collaboration between the 12 NCR states to respond as a system/region to future disasters. Four key words described that vision-“Extension… Disaster … Education…Network,” thus the name and acronym of EDEN were born. EDEN’s growth into a national network can especially be related to three events:
Since 2003, NIFA has provided EDEN with funding to support EDEN coordination and communications, Web development and maintenance, curriculum development, training, and resources development.


