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The New York State Invasive Species Task Force. Past, Present & Future Steven Jay Sanford Chief, Bureau of Habitat, NYSDEC. What is the ISTF?. Laws of New York, 2003 Chapter 324. Task Force Members. Government agencies Conservation organizations Trade groups Academia.
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TheNew York StateInvasive Species Task Force Past, Present & Future Steven Jay Sanford Chief, Bureau of Habitat, NYSDEC
What is the ISTF? Laws of New York, 2003 Chapter 324
Task Force Members Government agencies Conservation organizations Trade groups Academia
Task Force Members DEC Ag & Markets DOS DOT OPRHP Thruway & Canals APA BRI Sea Grant Cornell Farm Bureau TNC NHP Invasive Plant Council Marine Trades Nursery & Landscape
ISTF Charge Assess impacts, identify existing actions, and report recommendations to Governor and Legislature by 30 November 2005
Invasive species cause problems across many facets of our lives…
Ecosystems Natural Systems
Ecosystems Managed Systems
Food Supply Agriculture
Food Supply Harvested Fish, Shellfish & Wildlife
Built Environs Industry & Transportation
Built Environs Gardens, Landscaping, Pets
Recreation Angling
Recreation Boating
Recreation Parks
New York invasions since ISTF established… European Crane Fly Southern Bacterial Wilt Swede Midge Brown Fir Longhorn Beetle Chronic Wasting Disease European Wood Wasp Northern Snakehead Fish Bloody Red Shrimp
Implementation Recommendations SFY 2006-07 Budget Spending Plan SFY 2007-08 Budget
Strategic Elements Coordination Prevention Education Early detection Rapid response Control or management Research
Overarching Principles Deliver program primarily through partners Allocate EPF resources primarily to partners PRISMs for “on-the-ground” delivery NYSIS Council supported by NYS staff NYSISC and Advisory Committee by E. O.
Regional Partnerships PRISMs – partnerships for regional invasive species management Principal means of delivering IS programs throughout NYS
Core Functions Coordination (among partners) Volunteers (recruit & train) Education (identify & meet needs) Early Detection (monitoring network) Rapid Response Eradication (implement projects) Research (citizen science) Planning (integrate existing plans)
Recommendations # 1 Establish a permanent leadership structure to coordinate IS efforts. Federal model
New Structure Council (10 agency reps) Advisory Committee (~30 groups) Office of Coordination (4-5 agency staff)
Core Functions(NYSISC, NYSISAC, Office of Coordination) Coordinate with all stakeholders Communicate Identify program needs Identify resource needs Develop programs Pursue resources
Recommendations # 2 Prepare and implement a comprehensive IS management plan. Contract
Plan Outline Roles Responsibilities Authorities Resources Integration Gaps Strategies
Recommendations # 3 Allocate appropriate resources to invasive species efforts. $ 3.25 million EPF
Recommendations # 4 Establish a comprehensive education and outreach effort. Cornell Cooperative Extension ?
Outreach & Education Identify needs Catalog what’s available Develop new materials Develop new training Deliver training Coordinate with PRISMs Integrate with research Integrate with Clearinghouse
Recommendations # 5 Integrate databases and information clearinghouses. Natural Heritage Program ? Sea Grant ?
Locational Database The invasive “map” for NYS Available on www GIS for all species Link to others Identify/meet needs Integrate with Clearinghouse
Information Clearinghouse The invasive “library” for NYS Available on www Info about all species Link to others Identify/meet needs Integrate with Database
Recommendations # 6 Convene a regular invasive species conference. Invasive Plant Council February 7 & 8 in Albany American Wildlife Conservation Foundation March 24 in Syracuse
Recommendations # 7 Formalize NYS IS policy and practices. # 9 Coordinate and streamline regulatory processes. DEFERRED
Recommendations # 8 Establish a center for invasive species research. Coordinate, prioritize, fund
Research Coordination Establish IS Research Advisory Board Catalog existing research Identify research needs Prioritize research needs Identify researchers Catalog available funding Recommend research priorities to NYSISC Track progress/report to NYSISC
Applied Research Supplement NYSDOT research funds to complete Phragmites biocontrol Priority based on existing information Future priorities guided by Council and Institute
Recommendations # 10 Encourage non-regulatory approaches to prevention. Clean Stock Pilot
Clean Stock Pilot NYS Ag Experiment Station (Geneva) Virus-free before propagation or distribution Grapes, small fruits (Currants), tree fruits Protocol for voluntary self-certification
Recommendations # 11 Influence Federal actions to support invasive species prevention, eradication and control. DEFER (agencies & organizations)
Recommendations # 12 Recognize and fund demonstration projects. PRISMs Eradication Grants
$ 1 million in FY 05-06 • Eradication only • Aquatic (and wetland) species • $ 1 million • $ 100,000 cap, 1:2 match • Municipalities and not-for-profits • Grants awarded June 2006
$ 1 million in FY 06-07 • Eradication only • Aquatic and Terrestrial species • $ 1 million • $ 100,000 cap, 1:1 match • Municipalities, NFPs, agencies • Applications early 2007