Specifications include, but are not limited to: Wildland Urban Interface ProgramThe Wildland Urban Interface (WUI) program is funded by the USDA Forest Service to mitigate risk from wildland fire within the Wildland Urban Interface (the zone of transition between wildland/unoccupied and developed land). Funds are made available and awarded annually through a competitive process requiring a 50/50 match with emphasis on hazardous fuel reduction in the WUI, information and education, assessment and planning, and monitoring through community and landowner action. DOFAW is looking for other non-federal landowners, agencies and organizations interested in collaborating on joint projects across land ownership and management boundaries. Communities that have developed a Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP) can apply for funds through the WUI grant program to implement educational or fuels reduction projects. Currently, there are 13 community wildfire protection plans statewide (https://dlnr.hawaii.gov/forestry/fire/community-risk-reduction/community-wildfire-protection-plans/). Alternatively, communities can apply for funds to develop a new CWPP if one does not already exist. Landscape Scale Restoration ProgramThe Landscape Scale Restoration Program is a USDA Forest Service State and Private Forestry (S&PF) competitive annual grant program that funds projects focused on priority landscapes and/or issues identified in State Forest Action Plans and that address national priorities (specifically the program purpose and criteria in sections (a) and (e) from the 2018 Farm Bill). LSR projects are to focus on rural forest land which is also considered nonindustrial private forest land or State forest land. Projects are encouraged to be cross-boundary, include a ny combination of ownerships, and appropriate in scale to address the restoration objectives (e.g. water quality and watershed health improvement, wildfire risk reduction, and fish and wildlife habitat improvement) identified in the project. Coordination with and proximity to other landscape-scale projects on federal or state lands is encouraged but not required. DOFAW is looking for other non-federal landowners, agencies and organizations interested in participating in the program. DOFAW will submit projects that address the top priorities identified in the Hawaii Forest Action Plan (https://dlnr.hawaii.gov/forestry/info/fap/).