Thursday, October 9, 2014

Fwd: Federal Agencies Urged to Follow Refuges and Ban Dangerous Pesticides





-----Original Message-----
From: sholmer@abcbirds.org
To: abcorgs
Sent: Thu, Oct 9, 2014 11:53 am
Subject: Federal Agencies Urged to Follow Refuges and Ban Dangerous Pesticides

 

 

Federal Agencies Urged to Follow Refuges and Ban Dangerous Pesticides

A coalition of wildlife conservation and food safety organizations are calling federal land managers to halt the use of dangerous neonicotinoid pesticides due to harm to pollinators.  Letters were sent to the Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, and Forest Service. The National Refuge System managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has already taken this important step for public safety and wildlife conservation.

On June 20, 2014, President Obama issued a Memorandum, “Creating a Federal Strategy to Promote the Health of Honey Bees and Other Pollinators” that acknowledges the urgency of taking action on pollinator declines and recognizes that pollinator protection is critical for domesticated honey bees but also, more broadly, for all native pollinators including hummingbirds and perching birds.  Ultimately, measures to protect pollinators will affect the very sustainability of the ecosystems on which all species rely.

“As stewards of public lands in the United States, the Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service and Forest Service have a critical role to play in the President’s initiative, both in ensuring the viability of pollinator habitat and in protecting wildlife from toxic, persistent and systemic pesticides,” said Cynthia Palmer, Birds and Pesticides program director for American Bird Conservancy.  “Federal agencies are well-positioned to promulgate an agency-wide suspension on the use of neonicotinoids.”

 

Hundreds of recent studies detail the worrisome effects of neonicotinoids on bees, birds, and other wildlife.  Europe has enacted a two-year moratorium on uses of neonicotinoids, and many U.S. companies as well as state and local legislatures are reining in their use.  First introduced in the U.S. in 1994, the neonicotinoids are highly toxic to a broad range of invertebrates and to birds and other wildlife. They persist in the soils--from months to years–and are prone to run-off and groundwater infiltration.

 

Barely a month after the President issued the Memorandum, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) announced a formal decision phasing out, by 2016, all neonicotinoid use in agriculture on thousands of acres of National Wildlife Refuge lands.  USFWS Chief Jim Kurth stated “We have determined that prophylactic use, such as seed treatment, of the neonicotinoid pesticides that can distribute systematically in a plant and potentially affect a broad spectrum of non-target species is not consistent with Service policy.”

 

“It’s time for the United States government to take a step back, suspend neonicotinoid use, and assess what impacts these chemicals are having on wildlife -- and on human health as well,” said Palmer.      

Conservation Groups, Scientists Call for Stronger Critical Habitat Protections for Endangered Species

The Center for Biological Diversity submitted a letter to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service signed by 207 conservation groups, criticizing a proposal that weakens habitat protections for endangered species. Under the Endangered Species Act, federal agencies are prohibited from “adversely modifying” — that is, hurting — critical habitat for endangered species in actions they fund, permit or carry out. The proposal will enable more habitat destruction by redefining adverse modification as only those actions considered to potentially harm the entirety of a species’ designated critical habitat, a change that will give a green light to federal actions that harm small portions of critical habitat without assurance that the cumulative effects will be taken into account.

Also 50 scientists sent a separate
letter to the agencies echoing conservationists’ concerns, faulting the proposal’s lack of scientific foundation and highlighting the urgent need for the administration to develop the capacity to track cumulative impacts to endangered species habitats.

“Critical habitats are just that — the special places that allow species to survive. We must not let them erode and watch species die slowly,” said Dr. Stuart Pimm, Doris Duke professor of conservation ecology at Duke University and one of the signers of the scientists’ letter.

The scientists’ letter highlights the critical habitat of Northern Spotted Owls as an example of how the current proposal undermines recovery prospects for species. In 2012 the USFWS designated approximately 9.5 million acres of critical habitat for the owls, but stated that “the determination of whether an action is likely to destroy or adversely modify critical habitat is made at the scale of the entire critical habitat network.” Because of the size of the total critical habitat designation, even if a federal agency proposed eliminating 10,000 acres of habitat, it would not likely diminish the conservation value of the entire critical habitat network.

Birders Use Data to Try and Prevent Window Collisions as Birds Fly South

From Innovationtrail.org - As birds return south for the winter, they can face some deadly obstacles, like windowsOne report estimates up to a billion birds a year may die from collisions with glass windows in the U.S., and that could be up to 10 percent of the population in the country.  BirdSafe Pittsburgh is a new initiative that enlists bird-lovers to help collect data that could help keep birds more safe. It's a pilot program which kicked off in the spring with the National Aviary, conservancies, and other groups and it’s similar to monitoring efforts in other urban areas like New York and Chicago. At 6:30 in the morning on a recent Sunday, a dozen or so people gather by a fountain in the courtyard of PPG Place—tall glass buildings in Downtown Pittsburgh for training on collecting dead or injured birds for BirdSafe's monitoring program. 

Matt Webb is the organizer of this morning's training. He works for the American Bird Conservancy at Powdermill Nature Reserve, doing research on bird collisions with windows, trying to develop bird-friendly glass.  Webb’s one of the few people in the country doing this kind of work. But Webb’s hoping to track birds in a methodical way, getting data that scientists can use. The information collected could help test popular theories about bird collisions--like whether turning out the lights in skyscrapers at night is really effective for protecting birds.  For the full story see http://innovationtrail.org/post/birders-use-data-try-and-prevent-window-collisions-birds-fly-south.

 

4 Reasons Why it's a Bad Argument to Say Cats Kill More Birds Than Wind Turbines

 

By Chris Clarke in REWIRE - A recent Nature article offered up some shocking statistics about the number of wild animals likely killed by outdoor domestic cats each year, and it's gotten a lot of buzz. According to the research, outdoor cats -- most of them ferals -- kill as many as 20 billion wild animals in the U.S. each year, including at least 1.4 billion birds. Some people, prominent environmentalists among them, are citing these truly shocking numbers to argue that the threat wind turbines pose to birds and bats is numerically far smaller, and thus not a big deal.

 

But that's a really bad argument, fatally flawed both logically and ecologically. Here are four reasons why:  http://www.kcet.org/news/rewire/wildlife/4-reasons-cats-bird-kills-dont-excuse-wind-turbine-bird-kills.html

Hunters Urged to Stock up on Non-Lead Bullets/Shot

ABC is urging hunters to protect the environment and non-target wildlife by voluntarily switching to non-lead ammunition. Millions of birds are poisoned every year following ingestion of either shotgun pellets mistaken for grit or seeds, or lead particles left in gut piles following hunts. Among the birds most impacted are Bald Eagles, hawks, vultures, California Condors, and Mourning Doves.

“Hunters have historically strong outdoor ethics, and as more and more of them are learning how lead bullet fragments left in gut piles or lead shot scattered on the ground can poison and kill scores of animals—including Bald Eagles, California Condors, hawks, ravens, and doves--they are voluntarily switching in ever-greater numbers to readily available, lead-free alternatives,” said George Fenwick, President of American Bird Conservancy.

Non-lead ammunition can be more expensive, but claims by some that this is prohibitive for hunters have been shown to be vastly overstated. For example, the cost of most premium lead and non-lead ammunition is now about the same according to Cabelas, one of America's leading outdoor outfitters. According to user reviews on the company’s website, many hunters are so satisfied with the performance of the non-lead ammunition that they say they will never go back to the old lead versions. See http://www.abcbirds.org/newsandreports/releases/140911.html for more.

Botulism Kills Thousands of Ducks at Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge

 

Oregon Wild is concerned about the botulism outbreak whose root cause is the diversion of water for agriculture on National Wildlife Refuge lands being leased by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.  For details about the latest outbreak that has killed thousands of ducks see the following AP story at http://www.oregonlive.com/environment/index.ssf/2014/08/botulism_kills_thousands_of_du.html. Oregon residents are being encouraged to contact their Senators in support of providing more water for wildlife at http://org.salsalabs.com/o/1780/p/dia/action3/common/public/?action_KEY=16507.

 

Feral Cats Pose a Serious Health Threat to Humans

An ABC letter published by The Baltimore Sun: In late August, Richard Henry Lee Elementary School in Glen Burnie had to close its doors because a feral cat had found its way into the building. In closing the school, officials demonstrated prudent concern for the health and well-being of students.  Read more at: 

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/readersrespond/bs-ed-feral-cats-20140925,0,3458580.story#ixzz3FaWdlvvR

 

Wind Project in Missouri to Relocate Due to Migratory Bird Concerns

 

A proposal to construct a large wind power plant near Squaw Creek National Wildlife Refuge, a globally Important Bird Area in northwest Missouri has been withdrawn. Warnings that the energy facility would kill unacceptable numbers of birds helped convince the project’s backers to relocate the proposed facility.

 

“In this case the developers and owners listened to our concerns and reacted in an admirable way,” said Hutchins. “The example they have set deserves to be applauded.”

 

“This is a great victory for birds,” said Anita Randolph of Audubon Missouri, who helped lead the fight to stop the original facility. Other leading critics of the now-abandoned project include Greater Ozarks Audubon Society and Burroughs Audubon Society of Greater Kansas City.

Profiles of Ten Endangered American Species - Monarch Butterflies Have Declined by More Than 90 Percent

Our children are less likely to see monarch butterflies, a bumblebee, and a host of other once-common wildlife species due to farm pesticides, declining ocean health, climate change and dirty energy production, according to a new report by the Endangered Species Coalition. The report, Vanishing: Ten American Species Our Children May Never See, highlights ten disappearing species and the causes of their dramatic population declines. The report can be viewed and downloaded from the website: vanishingwildlife.org

“As the situation for many species grows ever more dire, our direct actions are able to rescue some of them from extinction,” said Dr. Peter Raven, President Emeritus, Missouri Botanical Garden. “This list should inspire hope and at the same time lead us to devote full attention to the species most in need.”

The ten species in the report are the mountain yellow-legged frog, monarch butterfly, North Pacific right whale, great white shark, little brown bat, whitebark pine, rusty patched bumblebee, greater sage-grouse, polar bear, and the Snake River sockeye salmon.  The greater sage-grouse’s habitat once encompassed nearly 300 million acres, but their range has declined dramatically as humans have moved in to graze livestock and drill for oil and gas, without regard for sage-grouse habitat needs. Hundreds of miles of roads have fragmented sage-grouse populations, which are in peril due to aggressive degradation of their habitat.

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Steve Holmer

Senior Policy Advisor

American Bird Conservancy &

Director, Bird Conservation Alliance

202-888-7490

sholmer@abcbirds.org

 

www.abcbirds.org, www.birdconservationalliance.org, ABC on Facebook, ABC Videos

 

 

 

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Monday, September 29, 2014

à pandora's box for Gateway's Sandy Hhook unit?

Sandy Hook National Seashore has an issue. Gateway National Park Service has OK a facility that will destroy habitat when there is developed areas already available.. Why ?

Read on and comment if you can

http://patch.com/new-jersey/middletown-nj/please-oppose-national-park-services-plan-build-new-maintenance-building#.VCoOs_7D_bW

Monday, September 22, 2014

Fwd: No casinos in our parks! Tell the NYS Gaming Commission you're against casinos in Sterling Forest & Woodbury





-----Original Message-----
From: communications@nynjtc.org
To: prosbird
Sent: Mon, Sep 22, 2014 12:34 pm
Subject: No casinos in our parks! Tell the NYS Gaming Commission you're against casinos in Sterling Forest & Woodbury

No Casinos in Our Parks!
Roulette Wheel
Tell the Gaming Commission not to gamble away our natural resources. (Photo credit: Ralf Roletschek/Fahrradtechnik und Fotografie)

Let the New York State Gaming Commission Know You're Against the Proposed Casinos in Sterling Forest and Woodbury (Harriman State Park) During the Public Comment Day TOMORROW, Sept. 23. The hearing takes place in Poughkeepsie at the Grandview (176 Rinaldi Blvd.) from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Wear yellow to show your opposition and sign up to speak before the Commission. Find full details here.

 

Can't Attend? The NYS Gaming Commission is Accepting Written Comments Through Sept. 30. For talking points and contacts for your letter in opposition to Sterling Forest Resort, click here. For talking points and contacts regarding Caesars New York in Woodbury, adjacent to Harriman State Park, click here. You can find a sample letter to Caesars here.

 

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Friday, September 19, 2014

Fwd: Please Sign Our Petition To Protect Monarch Butterflies





-----Original Message-----
From: updates@enature.com
To: Peter
Sent: Fri, Sep 19, 2014 10:56 am
Subject: Please Sign Our Petition To Protect Monarch Butterflies

Take Action Today

Save Monarch Butterflies Sign Our Petition To Help Protect This Iconic Species! Take action today!

Monarch

Their fluttering migration covers wide swaths of North America. But now their populations are crashing.

Please sign our petition encouraging measures to protect our remaining Monarchs!

Dear Friend,

Monarch butterflies urgently need your help. This iconic, orange-and-black beauty was once common in backyards across the country... but its population has plummeted by 90 percent from the 20-year average.

You can help protect our Monarch butterflies by signing this petition!

These delicate creatures weigh less than a gram, but every year they travel thousands of miles -- from Canada down to Mexico -- in an incredible, multigenerational migration. Generations of schoolchildren have learned about metamorphosis by watching monarch caterpillars transform into butterflies.

But the milkweed that monarchs depend on for survival is now being wiped out by genetically engineered, herbicide-resistant crops, as well as pesticides, human development and climate change

Please sign our petition asking the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to protect monarch butterflies under the Endangered Species Act before it's too late. A "threatened" listing (not as dire a listing as "endangered") will allow important research and educational activities to continue while protecting this iconic pollinator for future generations.

Will you sign our petition urging action to protect our remaining Monarchs from the threats that may bring their extiction?

Adding your voice to the effort to protect Monarchs will make a difference. Don't let our Monarch butterflies become only a memory in regions where they were once ubiquitous.

Sign this petition if you agree that our world would be a poorer place without Monarch butterflies.

Thank you for your help-- it really can help make a difference!

Sincerely,

Robin McVey

Robin McVey
Public Editor, eNature.com

Take action today!

P.S. eNature and Care2.com have teamed up to send periodic updates providing folks ways to help protect America's wildlife. Please get involved by signing our petition today!







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Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Fwd: [Ridgewood Reservoir 851] 2014 NYS Open Space Conservation Plan




-----Original Message-----
From: Christina Wilkinson 
To: ridgewoodreservoir <ridgewoodreservoir@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Wed, Sep 17, 2014 3:32 pm
Subject: [Ridgewood Reservoir 851] 2014 NYS Open Space Conservation Plan

From: Panzone, Thomas V (DEC) [mailto:thomas.panzone@dec.ny.gov] 
Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2014 2:20 PM
Subject: 2014 NYS Open Space Conservation Plan
 
Dear Colleagues:
 
For Release:  IMMEDIATE                                                                                                                                            Contact:  Jomo Miller
Wednesday, September 17, 2014                                                                                                                                               (518) 402-8000
 
DEC AND STATE PARKS RELEASE STATE OPEN SPACE CONSERVATION PLAN FOR PUBLIC COMMENT
Public Comments Accepted Through December 17; Public Hearings to be Held Statewide
 
                Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Commissioner Joe Martens and Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation (State Parks) Commissioner Rose Harvey today released the 2014 State Open Space Conservation Plan for public comment.  The plan guides State Environmental Protection Fund investments in open space protection.  Public comments on the draft plan will be accepted from September 17 until December 17 and a series of public hearings will be held across the state from October 21 to October 23.
 
                The Draft Plan makes recommendations on how open space conservation will help accomplish Governor Cuomo's goals, which include: ensuring clean water, air and land for a healthy public and vibrant economy; greening New York's economy; protecting natural resources and promoting outdoor recreation; increasing and improving the visitor experience; creating a 21st century parks system that is aesthetically compelling, energy and operationally efficient, and built to last; and working to address climate change.
 
                Building upon the recommendations of Regional Advisory Committees, the Commissioners now ask the public to make recommendations on how open space conservation programs can make the state better prepared and more resilient in preparation of future storms and climate change.  Governor Cuomo created the NYS 2100 commission in response to Superstorm Sandy to generate recommendations to improve resilience and strengthen the state's infrastructure in the face of natural disasters and other emergencies. Many of the open space recommendations included in the 2100 Commission report are integrated into the draft plan.
 
                "By increasing funding for the Environmental Protection Fund and incorporating resiliency principles in Sandy recovery and NYWorks, Governor Cuomo has demonstrated his commitment to protecting New York's open spaces," DEC Commissioner Martens said.  "New Yorkers and visitors to the state love open spaces and the plan will ensure New York's natural resources are protected and preserved for future generations. Specifically, the draft plan makes a series of common sense policy recommendations that will protect wildlife habitat, protect water quality, provide opportunities for public recreation, protect working farms and forests, and build resiliency and protect property from the effects of storm surges and flooding.  The 137 priority projects identified by Regional Advisory Committees will extend New York's proud tradition of open space protection."
 
                State Parks Commissioner Harvey said, "New York State parks and public lands remain essential pieces in the building of communities.  These lands offer visitors peaceful or fun-filled getaways, promote healthier lifestyles and serve as important economic drivers for the State and local communities.  New York's abundance of parks and open spaces are reason enough alone for families and business to relocate to New York. We look forward to hearing from the public on the draft plan."
 
                The draft plan was created through the work of nine Regional Advisory Committees composed of representatives of county governments and people knowledgeable in open space conservation selected by DEC and State Parks.  The nine committees correspond to DEC's nine administrative regions.  Each committee was asked by the Commissioners to review the existing 2009 plan, including the list of priority open space conservation projects, as well as policy recommendations, to make New York's comprehensive open space conservation program stronger in the future.
 
                The Commissioners invite the public to comment in writing and at the public hearings. Specifically, comments could offer suggestions on:
 
·         how the state and its partners can promote and enhance existing and new state lands as tourism destinations as part of a comprehensive open space conservation program;
·         how the state can make public lands attractive to a diversity of New Yorkers; 
·         how DEC and State Parks can offer better access for sportsmen and women;
·         how DEC and State Parks can work to provide outdoor recreation opportunities for New Yorkers and visitors of all abilities through Universal Access; 
·         where DEC and State Parks can further develop Universal Access;  and
·         what the state can do to acquire and make more accessible lands near and in urban centers.
                "The draft plan covers a lot of ground," Commissioner Martens added.  "We urge the public to review the draft plan and give us comments that can strengthen the State's Open Space Conservation program in the future."
 
State Agriculture Commissioner Richard A. Ball said, "Open space and agriculture are inherently connected.  Farms not only provide an opportunity to grow local products, but a habitat for wildlife and scenic vistas that are a draw for tourists across the state.  Many of the goals of the open space plan such as maintaining critical natural resources and enhancing scenic, cultural and historic resources are made possible in large part due to the existence of working farms and woodlands.  Updating the state's Open Space Plan every three years is a good way to ensure that our existing open space resources are inventoried and enables the state to better plan for future open space protection efforts."
 
           Public comments can be submitted by email to LF.OpenSpacePlan@dec.ny.gov or mailed to DEC by December 17 to:
                Open Space Conservation Plan
                625 Broadway
                Albany, NY 12233
               
An electronic version of the draft plan is available at http://www.dec.ny.gov/lands/317.html
 
A SERIES OF PUBLIC HEARINGS WILL BE HELD from October 21 to October 23 throughout the state.   There will be a workshop before each hearing and the public will have an opportunity to attend either an afternoon or evening session.  Please note that hearing times are different for Region 9.
 
Workshop: 1:00 - 2:30 p.m.
Afternoon Hearing: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m.
Evening Hearing: 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
 
Region 1
October 22, 2014
NYS DEC Region 1 Headquarters
SUNY at Stony Brook
Room B-02
50 Circle Road
Stony Brook, NY 11790
 
Region 2
October 22, 2014
NYS DEC Region 2 Office - Long Island City
47-40 21st Street
Long Island City, NY 11101
 
Region 3
October 21, 2014
Bear Mountain State Park
Bear Mountain Inn
Bear Mountain, NY
 
Region 4
October 21, 2014
New York State DEC Region 4 Office
1130 North Westcott Road
Schenectady, NY 12306
 
Region 5
October 23, 2014
NYS Region 5 Headquarters
Main Conference Room
Route 86
Ray Brook, NY 12977
 
OR
 
October 21, 2014
OPRHP Saratoga Regional Office
Gideon Putnam Room
19 Roosevelt Drive
Saratoga Springs, NY 12866
 
Region 6
October 21, 2014
Utica State Office Building
Conference Room A
207 Genesee Street
Utica, NY
Use front door and sign in at the guard desk.
 
OR                                                                                         
 
October 22, 2014
NYS Region 6 Headquarters
Dulles State Office Building
First Floor Conference Room
317 Washington Street
Watertown, NY
 
Region 7
October 23, 2014
State Fair Grounds
The Martha Eddy Room
581 State Fair Boulevard
Syracuse, NY
 
Region 8
October 22, 2014
NYS DEC Region 8 Headquarters
6274 East Avon-Lima Road
Avon, NY 14414
 
Region 9
Hearings 4 p.m. – 6 p.m.; and 7 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.
October 22, 2014
Concord Town Hall
86 Franklin Street
Springville, NY
 
               
                Since 1992, the Open Space Conservation Plan has served as the blueprint for the State's Open Space Program, guiding the investment of land protection funds from the Environmental Protection Fund.  As required by law, the Plan is updated periodically, relying heavily on the work of the nine Regional Advisory Committees, which have worked with staff from both agencies and the public to produce a draft for public hearings and comments in 2014.  Following the public comment period the Plan will be finalized and submitted to Governor Cuomo for approval in 2015.
 
###
 
 
 
Sincerely,

Thomas V. Panzone, MPA
Regional Citizen Participation Specialist
Office of Communications Services
NYSDEC - Region 2 Office
Hunters Point Plaza
47-40 21st Street
Long Island City, NY 11101
Tel: (718) 482-4953
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