Transcript Document

Making Plans Relevant and Used
by Agencies and Partners
Discussion Leaders: Karen Terwilliger, Anna Smith
How and when do state Wildlife Action Plans
have “traction” within the host fish and wildlife
agency and their partners?
How can states help each other raise the profile
of action plans?
What is the role for AFWA in raising the profile
of action plans?
Perspective: Action Plan Relevance to
our Agency and Key Partners
 State Wildlife Action Plan KEEPS our AGENCY relevant
 to the core and scope of its authority/mission
 to its full responsibility to the resource- all wildlife
 to its broader constituency- the public
=The opportunity to be the relevant state agency in
wildlife conservation
Relevance of Plan for Agency and Partners
The Plan can be:
 The united blueprint for a full service State Fish and
Wildlife Agency
 Vehicle to deliver holistic wildlife conservation –
overabundant to rare- and show all the connections
and interrelationships
 The bridge, the glue between consumptive and non
consumptive management and constituency
 The Plan makes the agency relevant- documents its
commitment to its responsibility, authority and
constituency
 The transformation to a broader constituency and
holistic conservation/landscape science
History and Context of Wildlife Conservation
Era of Abundance - 1500 to 1849
Era of Over-exploitation - 1850 to 1899
Era of Protection - 1900 to 1929
Era of Game Management - 1930 to 1965
Era of Environmental Management - 1966 to 1979
 Era of Conservation Biology - 1980 to present
Have our State Agencies adapted and evolved to meet
the need and authority for Wildlife Conservation?
Gaps were filled by other
programs/agencies, NGOS,
partners- e.g. NHPNatureServe,
environmental review, etc.
A Conservation Institution for the 21st Century:
Implications for State Wildlife Agencies-JWM- Jacobson et al.
“The wildlife conservation institution needs to reform
to maintain legitimacy and relevancy in the 21st
century”
Principles for a State Agency Institution (N AM Model):
 Public Trust Doctrine-all species and publicly owned
 Broad Based funding
 Trustee based governance- politics, accountability
 Multidisciplinary Science as basis
 Diverse stakeholder involvement
Is the State Wildlife Action Plan this Opportunity?
Agency Investment in Wildlife Diversity
and the Wildlife Action Plan
Agency Resources
Resource authority
Resource
responsibility
Broad constituency
Public and partner
support
Objective: Plan Used by Agency and Partners
Use is correlated with:
1- Need or demand- ($, incentive)-fills a need
Provides data, criteria, support
2- Investment- participation/engagement
Confirms need to involve agency & partner programs
 The more it supplies a demand, fills a need, supports a program,
the more relevant and used it will be
 The more the agency has invested in it the more it will be used
 What do they give to or get from it? Our message should target this
 What do our agencies have to loose- vs gain by not being inclusive
and involving them- constituency and authority?
State Wildlife Action Plan Relevance:
Elements 1-5 offer sound Conservation Planning
Approach (6-8 interwoven into process)
Simple Format for Plan- Element= Chapter
•
ID conservation targets that can represent ALL
species (harvested to endangered)
•
Package inclusively into key habitats for all species
not just SGCN (group by habitat or functional units)
•
ID Threats and Actions that affect all species not
just SGCN and highlight inclusive priorities
Keep it simple, user friendly and in their
language
How it can be Used and Relevant to
State Agency
Traction for Inreach
 Habitat- data can be used by all agency programs
 NE geospatial condition analysis,
 Conservation assessment- regional habitat data
 CC resiliency, connectivity, etc.
 Information on habitat, condition and trends, etc.
 All programs can use for proposals, competitive
advantage- use support of habitat and broader suite of
species with more information and support from broader
constituency
 NE- Regional Best Practices- lexicon Elements 1-8
www.rcngrants.org synthesis of 50 RCN projects
How it can be used by Partners
Recognize: Too much for Agency to do alone!
Partners have already been filling the gaps/roles that the
agency couldn’t provide. Strengthen those partnerships!
 Include them and their common programs- development
and implementation- gives them credibility and visibility. RI
Liaison to towns partnership.
 They offer their valuable strengths- they can do/lobby more
and enhance outreach to their broader constituency- give
them info they need for mutual benefit- win-win!
 They have to write plans too: e.g. AL TNC and other state
agencies want to develop joint plan- use SWAP for theirs.
Incorporate each others’ plans for mutual support and
visibility.
More Traction Together
 States help states- coordination - e.g. Northeast e.g.Monthly calls, newsletter and website, synthesis, lexiconconsistency and regional context 50 RCNs
 Federal agency support incorporating them into their
plans/programs
 NRCS ranking criteria, NWRs CCPs, USFS Plans, State
Forest Plans- incorporate the Plan Actions
 AFWA guidance, coordination- more?
 All PLANS add the action about State Wildlife
Conservation Agency transformation for increased
capacity and resources?