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Annual Meeting of the Advisory Council

Hartford, CT   October 7 & 8, 2003

A. Meeting participants

Advisory Council members

John Ayers, Phil Benedict, William Coli, James Dill, Michael Fitzne,r Lloyd Garcia, David Handley, Zane Helsel, Lebelle Hicks, Mike Hoffmann, Carol Holko, Rob Koethe, Abbott Lee, Tracy Leskey, Rosemary Loria, Edith Lurvey, Mary Kay Malinoski, Dyremple Marsh, Luke McConnell, Audrey Moore, Glenn Morin, Therese Murtagh, Iliana Rivas, Robert Seem, Marc Teffeau, James VanKirk, Joellen Zeh

Guests and staff: Andrea Sylvain of EPA Region 1, Patricia.M.Douglass of USDA - APHIS, Elizabeth Thomas, Northeastern IPM Center, Elizabeth Myers, Northeastern IPM Center

See also: Advisory Council Roster

B. Review of Progress

Website: Use is not overwhelming, but is satisfactory. Webtrends report distributed as part of the workbook not available here.

Publications

    • Printed examples included in the workbook
    • Newsletter articles about related organization: Discussion regarding issue of consultants or other private sector members of the NEIPMC  promoting themselves through NEIPMC. We need to be sure any Center publicity about these people is clearly linked to Center goals.to clearly link articles like this clea, consider including a disclaimer in the newsletter to cover this.
    • Press releases –  It would be helpful to send press releases to the AC members with “open hooks” for members to insert personalized info about their own organizations (adding names of individuals in the states). This could get the release published in more local venues. Liz M would call these out in the release with “[suggested local hook… – insert here]”. see recent press release

State Network Projects  -

Project leaders

Progress reports

Crop profiles and Pest Management Strategic Plans

Recent and pending progress

IPM Working Groups

Rosters

Progress reports

IWG priorities for research and extension

IWG leader priorities: Suggestions made by the IWG leaders as a group for the Center to better facilitate the mission of IWGs (MS Word download).

Discussion:Initially asked to identify IPM priorities for the region. Lack of funding to pay leaders or follow through on ideas partially limited their success in the first grant. In the next round of funding these groups will have base funding and access to a greater amount of competitive funding. Group accountability needs to be written into new rfa. This was not the case in the past. Other regional centers are emulating these groups.

AC Recommendations

At the previous meeting, February 2003, the Advisory Council made a number of recommendations. A workbook page indicates what has been done in the interim to address these recommendations.

C. Mission Statement

Background: Center staff created the first draft and sent to SC members for feedback. The attributes of a mission statement are that it stand alone, tell who we are, contain our organizational values, and  be understood by the public. It does not necessarily need to be in one sentence.

The AC had a full and frank discussion of the mission statement, including appointment of an evening work group to integrate changes in the proposed language (Marc Teffeau, Bill Coli, Joellen Zeh, Liz Myers and Jim VanKirk).

The discussion was carried into the Steering Committee meeting the following week, and the Mission Statement was ratified there. It is:

The Northeastern Integrated Pest Management Center fosters the development and adoption of IPM, a science-based approach to managing pests in ways that generate economic, environmental, and human health benefits to all citizens. We work in partnership with stakeholders from agricultural, urban, and rural settings to identify and address regional priorities for research, education and outreach.

D. NEREAP and NEIPMC

Background:In the mid 1970’s each state appointed an IPM coordinator and in the Northeast by the late ‘70’s they began meeting annually as a group to compare programs, funding, and strategies.  About 8 years ago, the directors of extension and research stations decided to broaden the representation of each state by adding more researchers and key agencies. Flat funding over the years created problems. Additional funds came in through the Pesticide Impact Assessment Program (PIAP) which had money for pesticide surveys and crop profiles, both documents needed by EPA. The PIAP program was dissolved 4 years ago and 3 years ago the Pest Management Centers were formed with part of their function to provide surveys/CPs/PMSPs along with other items on their agenda. Now the name has again changed slightly to the Integrated Pest Management Centers. At the last meeting of NEREAP, the question emerged as to how NEREAP and NEIPMC will fit together and what is the role of the IPM coordinator now that the NEIPMC exists.

Discussion: Over the course of discussion, very clear consensus of the group emerged, without dissent, that the Northeastern IPM Center and NEREAP-IPM each retain important functions and roles and should work together. Carol Holko drafted and the AC accepted a statement of support by the Center for NEREAP-IPM; the AC recommended that this statement be distributed to all appropriate groups and individuals. Later, the Steering Committee approved the following statement, essentially unchanged from the AC draft, and directed that it be distributed to Northeast research and extension directors, to the national IPM Program Leader, and to NEREAP-IPM:

The Northeastern IPM Center depends on NEREAP-IPM for crucial research and outreach support of IPM programs that benefit all stakeholders in the region. Individually, the IPM coordinators offer state-level focus and accountability for programmatic initiatives. As a group, NEREAP acts as a conduit for specialized expertise, technical capability, and historical perspectives that are unique to land grant universities and essential to the success of the Center.

E. Advisory Council Guidelines

AC accepted the draft guidelines shown below. A suggestion was made to include media representative on the AC, but consensus on this was not reached by the group.

Proposed AC membership guidelines:

  • AC membership size will remain between 30 and 32 members to keep cost down and to allow for meeting efficiency.
  • Stagger membership turnover using 3-year renewable terms. Change of 8 members each year would keep some institutional memory and keep the majority of the members familiar with NEIPMC past progress.
  • Replace inactive members automatically after the 3 years with someone from their representative group.
  • Formally include Working Group representation of 2 leaders per AC meeting rotating on a 2-year renewable rotation.
  • Provide AC members with a description of their responsibilities. (available online)
  • All AC members will be compensated for all appropriate expenses incurred during travel for AC business.

F. Plant Diagnostic Centers

Rose Loria, Cornell and Director of the Northeastern Plant Diagnostic Network, made a presentation and led a discussion on NE PDN. The plant diagnostic network (PDN) was developed by CSREES in response to biosecurity threats. They have a national database and communications network linking the diagnostic centers in the region and across the nation. There are 5 regions paralleling the IPM Center regions with the North Central region split into 2 areas in the PDN. More info on the NEPDN web site.

G. CABI (Commonwealth Agricultural Bureau International)

Background: Among other accomplishments, this organization has created a comprehensive database of information regarding pests and their control for crops throughout the world. Until now, there has been a charge for this service, but recently CSREES bought 2000 access licenses that will be available to faculty and staff at any land grant university. APHIS also has site licenses. With 2000 visitors allowed at any one time, the site should be easily accessible. Look for developments on accessability during early 2004.

H.Evaluation

In the first proposal (NEPMC, fy2000), there is a statement that the AC will do an evaluation of the Center’s progress, but little else specific. Early on in the life of the Center, there was little to evaluate, but now may be the appropriate timing to set this up. The evaluation could be based on the original milestones from the proposal, but some of these have changed or are not relevant for an evaluation. If evaluating on grant objectives the categories would be too broad. We need to decide on criteria for evaluation.

Discussion included the idea of hiring someone unconnected to the Center to undertake an evaluation;Marc Teffeau might be able to make a recommendation for evaluator; focus on deliverables and Center goals in the evaluation;

I. Northeastern IPM Center Proposal Review

John Ayers reviewed the highlights of the proposal that led to Center funding. Brief discussion followed. An abbreviated version of the proposal is available here as a downloadable MS Word file.

J. Request for Applications (RFA)

John Ayers reviewed the draft RFA included in the work book (rather than link to the draft, which is no longer pertinent, the final RFA can be accessed online.) Discussion by the AC followed. Ideas that finally emerged as generally having consensus of the AC include:

State Network Projects should be required to interact with 1890's institutions (in states that have them)

Project types should be associated with ranges of $ available

Be very clear in stating that the panel has discretion about which projects to fund and can carry over money not spent

Cut the Special Projects project type and use the funds for it to distribute among other funds and improve flexibility

K. IPM Working Groups

Issues about working groups: We had a slow start in recruiting, mission was not clear and parts of the mission ("agroecological boundaries") were since rendered moot. Original budget included only annual meeting, but we manufactured a small rolling grants pool out of savings elsewhere. Other IPM Centers are following our lead, with adjustments. They are not necessarily setting WGs along commodity lines - perhaps we should fund needs instead of commodities. (e.g., how to rescue a park). At the national meeting there was some good discussion about groups being more effective when they are task oriented with clearly defined mission.

L. Critical Issues

Inconclusive and brief discussion about how critical are or should be defined.

M. Biannual Regional Conference

We have budgeted $50,000 for each of 2 regional conferences, in 2005 and 2007. How to proceed from there is open for discussion.

Some ideas that came out of the AC discussion:

  • Partner as much as possible when bringing this together. Possibly target toward government officials, local and state.
  • We need NEREAP to buy in, as well as extension directors, ESA, etc.
  • Privatization/commercialization of IPM could be a topic.
  • Visioning process could happen at the conference. Not just land grants would be involved.
  • Bring public officials together – politicians and elected officials.
  • Previous conference in Simmsbury, CT, on whole-farm systems showed IPM in practice. That was really good. It served as a reality check for people in the field.
  • NRAES is a possibility.
  • Volunteers for conference subcommittee: Dave Handley, Mike Hoffmann, Rob Koethe, Audrey Moore, Dyremple Marsh, Jim VanKirk

N. Acronyms Commonly Used in Context of Northeastern IPM Center

see the file developed by Liz Thomas (MS Word download)

 

 


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