> We're so happy to meet you! This page is to welcome newcomers. For people first encountering Public Lab, there are a lot of unknowns about how our community is organized, how we collaborate, our culture, and the personal relationships that fuel our work. Our community aspires to be a respectful place. Please read and abide by our Code of Conduct. ### Who is Public Lab? We're an open community and network that anyone can join, including you! We especially welcome people concerned with local environmental problems, but we need all kinds of people. This is a collaborative research effort including activists, makers, scientists, technologists, curious people and assorted hybrids of all of the above. We are hosted by [a non-profit](/about) with a paid [staff](/plots-staff), but our community work wouldn't be possible without [our network of organizers](/organizers). Together, we try to understand and address environmental problems that affect people, with inexpensive and accessible "Do-It-Yourself" techniques. > But it only works if we all share our ideas and innovations! Sign up now **** ###Getting Started: There are a number of ways to get started on Public Lab. We host an [Open Call](https://publiclab.org/open-call) every Tuesday to welcome newcomers, and connect people to resources and ideas available on Public Lab. If you're ready to get going now, check out a few things below that you can do to get started: **Have an environmental concern or question you'd like support on?** Here are some things you can do on Public Lab: - Post a question using the [Question/Answer](www.publiclab.org/questions) forum. - Post an [Issue Brief](www.publiclab.org/issue-brief) to share about an environmental concern and reach out to others for ideas. - Search [methods](www.publiclab.org/methods) for environmental monitoring ideas. **Looking to contribute ideas, or to support other people's environmental exploration?** - You can [Follow tags](https://publiclab.org/tags) on topics that interest you, and get alerts when people post questions related to that topic. - Check out the [requests](https://publiclab.org/wiki/requests) people have shared. - Help build Public Lab's open source code base. Visit our [github](https://github.com/publiclab). - [Donate](www.publiclab.org/donate) to Public Lab and help to grow the community and resources available here. **Looking to learn more about what people are sharing?** Here are some good ways to check out what people are up to: - The [dashboard](https://publiclab.org/dashboard) shows a feed of all the recent activity on Public Lab - Check out new posts and stories on the [blog](www.publiclab.org/blog) - Follow Public Lab on [social media](https://www.facebook.com/PublicLab/) - Check out things going on near you on the [maps page](www.publiclab.org/maps). ## Benefits * a community of diverse and helpful fellow researchers to ask for support and advice -- by signing up on the website you may join several relevant mailing lists * a growing body of open source research and resources to leverage in your work * you may use, reuse, adapt, improve, and distribute any Public Lab research without even asking permission! (Find out how at http://publiclab.org/licenses) * a place to publish your own work and to build a body of research online ## Responsibilities * to share what you do with the rest of the research community (through our mailing list and website: http://publiclab.org) * to help others leverage your and Public Lab's research and resources * to cite our community (which you're now part of) when presenting or publishing your work, if you based it on or drew ideas from the Public Lab research community. **** ### Welcome Committee The Welcome committee was created to do just that -- welcome people first encountering Public Lab, and provide a personal connection for explaining our culture, ethics, digital infrastructure, and organizational structure. [people:welcome] **** ## How to use this website ... [Read more here](/website-basics) about how to use the website.