Title: SCOE, White, Defenders of Wildlife, Transp and Wildlife'ppt
1Transportation and Wildlife Policy and Practice
People, Economics and Forest Carnivore
Management Trisha White, Defenders of Wildlife
2is dedicated to the protection of all native
wild animals and plants in their natural
communities. New approaches that keep species
from becoming endangered Protect entire
ecosystems and interconnected habitats
3 1. Proactive 2. State-based 3. Incentive-driven
4 WHY TRANSPORTATION?
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101. Reduce the impact of roads and highways on
wildlife and habitat.
112. Incorporate wildlife conservation into
transportation planning.
12www.defenders.org/habitat/highways
13- Integrated Planning
- Conservation Banking
- Interagency Coordination
- Wildlife Crossings
- Public Lands
- Native Vegetation
14- Transportation and metropolitan planners should
utilize existing landscape-level conservation
plans in their own planning efforts. - Training
- Monitoring
- Outreach
Integrated Planning
15State Wildlife Grants Program
- Comprehensive Wildlife Conservation Strategies by
Oct. 1, 2005 - State Fish Wildlife Agencies
- Block grant with non federal match requirements
- Fluctuating funding 65 - 85 million per year
16State Wildlife Grants Program
- Wildlife Status
- Habitat Status
- Threats Analysis Research
- Prioritized Actions
- Monitoring Status and Actions
- Plan Review Update
- Coordination with Agencies
- Public Participation
17Oregon Conservation Opportunity Areas
Source Oregons Living Landscape, Defenders of
Wildlife, 1998
18Oregons Conservation Opportunity Areas
19Oregons Roads and Cities
20Conservation Opportunity Areas with roads and
cities
21Oregons State Transportation Improvement Plan
22STIP Project 03551
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24- Use conservation banking to mitigate those
impacts that cannot be avoided, and when
consolidating mitigation is ecologically
preferable to onsite mitigation. - Revolving fund
- Use existing plans
- Strategic sites
Conservation Banking
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26Interagency Coordination
- Coordinate with resource agencies early,
substantively and continuously throughout
transportation planning and project development. - Consult
- Trust
- Support
27TRANSPORTATION SPENDING
2877
FWS transportation-related workload increase
between 1998 and 2000
291
FWS budget increase
30- Build wildlife crossings where necessary to
repair ecological damage and restore habitat
connectivity. - Research
- Retrofit
- Monitoring
Wildlife Crossings
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34- Maintain roads on public lands in a manner
consistent with the management of surrounding
natural resources, including wildlife, both
terrestrial and aquatic. - No new roads
- Alternatives
- Signage/speed limits
- Keep scenic roads scenic
Public Lands
35Native VEGETATION
- Use only native species in roadside vegetation
management. - Inventories
- Training
- Rewards
36Native Vegetation
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38History of Transportation Policy in the U.S.
39By the Numbers
- INTERSTATE
- 1957-1969
- 12 years
- 25 billion
- ISTEA
- 1991 - 1998
- 7 years
- 150 billion
- TEA-21
- 1998-2003
- 6 years
- 218 billion
TEA3 247 375 billion
40What?
- Six year authorization
- Finance
- Safety
- Environment
- Planning
- Research
- Highway Programs
- Public Transportation
41- Calls for consultation with resource agencies
and coordination with land use and conservation
plans - Encourages conservation banking
- Makes wildlife crossings eligible for safety
funding - Funds alternative transportation on public
lands. - Provides for removal of invasives and
restoration of native vegetation on roadsides.
What about Wildlife?
42What now?
- TEA-21 expired September 30, 2003.
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- Extensions
- Funding level
- Elections
43 Questions?
Trisha White Habitat Highways
Campaign 202.772.0236 twhite_at_defenders.org