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Shared Ground

Shared Ground

著者: Sean Knierim & Allan Marks
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Shared Ground is a podcast that explores resilience & grit, generosity & kindness. We start with true stories of kindness and support during and after the 2025 LA wildfires.

© 2025 Shared Ground
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  • Episode 20: Rebuilding Using an Open Hand with Tyler Pew
    2025/08/13

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    🔥 From Wildfire to Renewal: Greenville’s Reimagined Future

    In 2021, the Dixie Fire wiped out Greenville, CA in under an hour, destroying nearly a million acres. Among those left standing in the ashes was Tyler Pew, a fourth-generation local and design-build contractor. Faced with total loss, he moved back home from San Francisco and asked: What if recovery is not about rebuilding the past, but creating something better?

    Tyler shares the hard truth about disaster recovery, why the toughest years often come 5 to 7 years later, and the difference between a “closed fist” and an “open hand” when rebuilding a community. He draws on lessons from other disaster-hit towns, integrates indigenous Mountain Maidu land wisdom, and helps launch innovative housing initiatives like Welcome Home Greenville.

    📑 Check out the incredible body of work that Tyler and the LMNOP Team have led with a group of partners HERE — a 3-year index of projects completed in the general time sequence of the work.

    This is a story of resilience, regeneration, and finding hope in the next generation.

    🎧 Listen now to learn how tragedy can become transformation, and how open-handed leadership can shape a stronger future.

    👉 If you have faced setbacks or care about community resilience, share this episode with someone who needs to hear it.

    Shared Ground is produced by Sean Knierim and Allan Marks. Thanks to Cory Grabow, Kara Poltor, Corey Walles (from The Recording Studio) for your support in launching this effort.

    For more stories of resilience & rebuilding, kindness & generosity: visit shared-ground.com and subscribe to Sean's substack. We invite you to share your own stories of resilience at the Shared Ground website - whether in response to the January fires in LA or other situations.

    Follow us at seanknierim.substack.com, Instagram, or wherever you listen to podcasts (Apple Podcasts, Spotify, etc).

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    42 分
  • Episode 19: Quick Hits - Grace, Grief, and Megafires with Jennifer Grey Thompson
    2025/08/06

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    How do communities recover after disaster? And what happens when leaders try to move forward quickly, speeding past a process that would honor what has been lost?

    In this episode, Sean sits down with Jennifer Gray Thompson, founder of After the Fire USA. Jennifer has walked into some of the hardest-hit communities across the country, helping people navigate recovery after megafires.

    They talk about what defines a megafire, why grief cannot be skipped, and how communities find strength not in strategy documents, but in each other.

    Jennifer offers sharp insight into what makes Los Angeles both powerful and vulnerable. She also shares what gives her hope after years of doing this work. And how she cares for herself while caring for others.

    If you care about climate, loss, leadership, or recovery, this conversation will stay with you.

    Listen to hear:

    • Why resilience requires opening ourselves to accept grace
    • What makes megafires different from other disasters
    • How communities like yours can show up for one another

    Shared Ground is produced by Sean Knierim and Allan Marks. Thanks to Cory Grabow, Kara Poltor, Corey Walles (from The Recording Studio) for your support in launching this effort.

    For more stories of resilience & rebuilding, kindness & generosity: visit shared-ground.com and subscribe to Sean's substack. We invite you to share your own stories of resilience at the Shared Ground website - whether in response to the January fires in LA or other situations.

    Follow us at seanknierim.substack.com, Instagram, or wherever you listen to podcasts (Apple Podcasts, Spotify, etc).

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    8 分
  • Episode 18: Navigating the Aftermath with Gavin Blair
    2025/07/30

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    What happens when the systems meant to protect us fall short? How might we rebuild them with compassion, insight, and integrity?

    In this episode of Shared Ground, we talk with Gavin Blair of Bright Harbor about the complex realities of disaster response and long-term recovery. Gavin has spent years working at the intersection of risk, community service, and systemic resilience, supporting survivors, navigating the insurance and FEMA landscape, and pushing for solutions that focus on those affected by challenging situations.

    We cover:

    • How systems need to innovate in response to the increasing severity and frequency of disasters, and what effective support really looks like
    • What FEMA gets right, where it breaks down, and how to work within its limits
    • Why insurance systems often fail survivors, and what needs to change
    • How to advocate for communities without adding to what they’re experiencing
    • And why kindness isn’t just moral, it’s structural

    This episode blends the intimate with the systemic, pairing lived experience with lessons for anyone working in emergency response, policy, or community infrastructure. It’s about what resilience really looks like—and how it begins long after the flames are out.

    Shared Ground is produced by Sean Knierim and Allan Marks. Thanks to Cory Grabow, Kara Poltor, Corey Walles (from The Recording Studio) for your support in launching this effort.

    For more stories of resilience & rebuilding, kindness & generosity: visit shared-ground.com and subscribe to Sean's substack. We invite you to share your own stories of resilience at the Shared Ground website - whether in response to the January fires in LA or other situations.

    Follow us at seanknierim.substack.com, Instagram, or wherever you listen to podcasts (Apple Podcasts, Spotify, etc).

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    40 分
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