Title: Development of Best Practices in Integrated Pest Management
1Development of Best Practices in Integrated Pest
Management
- Christopher A. Norris
- Lisa Kronthal Elkin
2Why Best Practices For IPM?
- IPM was identified as a need by around 75 of
respondents to Heritage Health Index survey, 2005
Heritage Preservation IMLS, 2005
3The IPM Working Group
- An ad hoc group of museum professionals
dedicated to the development of pest management
resources for the general museum community
4Then (2000)
5Now (2008)..
6Resources
- MuseumPests.net
- PestList
- Wiki site
- Annual Meeting
7Five Thematic Areas
- Data Collection
- Identification Aids
- Treatments
- Web Resources
- Standards Best Practices
8Standards Best Practices Subgroup
- Three main areas
- Policies
- Procedures
- Tools
- Activities
- Gather available resources from community
- Vet resources and make available via web
- Develop template documents for policies and
procedures
9What do we mean by Standards Best Practices?
- Standard A generally accepted level of
attainment for use as a basis of comparison in
measuring or judging performance1 a
codification of technology or procedure
developed, tested, peer-reviewed, and published
by a professional society or governmental agency
to be adhered to by members and subscribers
generally must be followed closely in attention
to its prescribed detail2 - 1 Merritt, E. 2005. Standards of Stewardship
presentation at the annual meeting of The
Association of College and University Museums and
Galleries, Bloomington, Indiana, April 30, 2005. - 2 Hathaway, A.W., 1992. Standards, guidelines,
and protocols Keeping our house in order. AEG
News, 35(1) 26-28. Cited in Cato et al. (2003),
MuseumWise Workplace Words Defined. - Best Practices a technique or methodology that,
through experience and research, has proven to
reliably lead to a desired result1 generally
agreed upon but not legislated2. Commendable
actions and philosophies that successfully solve
problems, can be replicated, and demonstrate an
awareness of standards3. - 1 SearchSoftwareQuality.com/definitions
- 2 Cato et al. (2003), MuseumWise Workplace
Words Defined. - 3 Merritt, E. 2005. Standards of Stewardship
presentation at the annual meeting of The
Association of College and University Museums and
Galleries, Bloomington, Indiana, April 30, 2005.
10Defining the Audience
- Who are the major players in setting procedures
and policy within institutions? - Administration
- Building Management
- Security Safety
- Vendors (including food services, events, etc.)
- Research/Collections
- Exhibition Education
- Human Resources
11How do we influence these institutional
supergroups to deliver effective IPM?
- Define the role of each group in IPM
- Find an incentive, or incentives
- Speak to their needs
- Develop a tool to address this process
- ? The Grid
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13The Grid is not a best practices document
- But it does lay out the framework of
consultation that is necessary to implement an
IPM strategy - And it provided the groundwork for the
Subgroups development of best practices documents
14To download the Grid.
- http//www.museumpests.net/tools/FINAL-SBPgrid.pd
f
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16Review
- Pulled together a set of 46 institutional IPM
documents - 28 policy documents
- Also training resources, procedures, etc.
- Reviewed by Subgroup for
- Content
- General applicability
- 10 policy documents passed by the group
- Sought institutional permission
- Posted on website
17To download sample policies
- http//www.museumpests.net/resources/sampledocs.ht
ml
18Minimum Requirements for an IPM Policy
- Introduction
- Objective/Scope
- Justification
- Applicability
- Overall responsibility
- Other roles and responsibilities
- Training
- Support/Budget
- Best Practices
- Monitoring
- Remedial Action
- Documentation
- Review/Revision
19Policy Template
- Uses the minimum requirements
- Provides guidance notes under each heading
- Notes were based on Grids recommendations for
framing and targeting content
20Minimum Requirements for IPM Procedures
- Introduction
- Applicability
- Roles and responsibilities
- Procedure-Specific Information
- Monitoring
- Documentation
- Review/Revision
21Seven Procedure Templates
- Who is the IPM plan directed at?
- Control of Access
- Control of Environment
- Housekeeping/Removal of Shelter
- Control of Food/Live Plants/Catering
- Monitoring/Data Analysis
- Treatment
22To Download Templates
- http//www.museumpests.net/tools/templates.htm
23The membership of IPM-WG is broad
- IPM-WG draws from the experiences and expertise
of a wide range of individuals and institutions. - This breadth of input is vital when determining
best practices - In the longer term, its also essential for the
development of effective standards
24This has been a community-led and supported,
grass roots process
- IPM-WG is not affiliated with any particular
institution or society - Although AMNH has hosted all the meetings to
date, individuals and their institutions meet the
costs of attending - We receive a small amount of sponsorship and our
website is hosted by one of the participants, Zak
Software
25IPM-WG is an open group..
- A general invitation to the meeting is sent out
via listservers anyone from the community who
wants to attend can do so - The work processes are transparent all
documents are posted for comment and review on
the Wiki site.
26Our goals are practical
- Throughout the process, our goals have been
practical to develop tools and resources that
can be downloaded and used by any institution
27IPM-WG may act as a model
- IPM-WG provides an example of how standards and
best practices can be framed in a community-led
process that goes across traditional
institutional and disciplinary boundaries - The development of The Grid as a first stage
enabled us to frame documents that would speak
directly to the major institutional players in
any IPM plan. We think this approach is widely
applicable to standards and other policy
development
28Standards or Best Practices?
Standard A generally accepted level of
attainment for use as a basis of comparison in
measuring or judging performance a codification
of technology or procedure developed, tested,
peer-reviewed, and published by a professional
society or governmental agency to be adhered to
by members and subscribers generally must be
followed closely in attention to its prescribed
detail Best Practices a technique or
methodology that, through experience and
research, has proven to reliably lead to a
desired result1 generally agreed upon but not
legislated. Commendable actions and philosophies
that successfully solve problems, can be
replicated, and demonstrate an awareness of
standards.
29Want to know more?
- To join IPM-WG
- Rachael Arenstein rachaelarenstein_at_hotmail.com
- To learn more about the SBP subgroup
- Derya Golpinar dgolpinar_at_tenement.org
- To join the Pest list
- http//www.museumpests.net/listsignup.asp
- To download this presentation and all other
documents mentioned - http//www.museumpests.net/
30Acknowledgements
- Rachael Arenstein, Neil Duncan, Richard Monk
- All members of IPM-WG and especially SBP
Subgroup Members Barbara Brown, Derya Golpinar,
T. Rose Holdcraft, Emily Kaplan, Jeremy Jacobs,
Gail Joice, Linda Klise, Judith Levinson, Suzanne
Ryder, Mike Schwetz, Laura Smyk, Gwen Spicer, Tom
Strang, Amber Tarnowski, Paul Wilkinson - Insects Limited, Steritech, and Zak Software for
support of the group and the annual meetings - AMNH Division of Vertebrate Zoology for hosting
the meetings - Alex Wild, University of Arizona, for permission
to use insect images (myrmecos.net)
31The End