Category Archives: Policy Reform

Organizations working to affect energy, emissions, and natural resource policy. This might include incentive (tax credit) and disincentive (tax) programs, efficiency standards and goals, protections, and regulations.

Washington Natural Resources Conservation Service

Description:

With the mission of “Helping People Help the Land,” the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) provides products and services that enable people to be good stewards of the Nation’s soil, water, and related natural resources on non-Federal lands.  With our help, people are better able to conserve, maintain, or improve their natural resources.  As a result of our technical and financial assistance, land managers and communities take a comprehensive approach to the use and protection of natural resources in rural, suburban, urban, and developing areas.

Since the 1930’s, NRCS has worked with conservation districts and others throughout the U.S. to help landowners, as well as Federal, State, Tribal, and local governments and community groups. NRCS has six mission goals: high quality, productive soils; clean and abundant water; healthy plant and animal communities; clean air; an adequate energy supply; and working farms and ranch lands. To achieve these goals, the Agency implements these strategies:

• Cooperative conservation: seeking and promoting cooperative efforts to achieve conservation goals.
• Watershed approach: providing information and assistance to encourage and enable locally-led, watershed-scale conservation.
• Market-based approach: facilitating the growth of market-based opportunities that encourage the private sector to invest in conservation on private lands.

In Washington:

Spokane, WA. (Feb. 14, 2013) — Private landowners and tribes working to increase crop residues, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and improve soil health on their farm, may apply for conservation financial and technical assistance, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) announced today.

SPOKANE, Wash. (Feb. 6, 2013) – Today, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) announced they are seeking project proposals for the Pacific Salmon Habitat Improvement Partnership (PSHIP) to assist with restoration of habitat and improve water quality for salmon in the Puget Sound. NRCS will work with federal, state, and local governments, tribes, and non-governmental organizations to identify willing landowners on working lands.

SPOKANE, Wash. (Feb. 6, 2013) – March 15 is the second application cut-off date for the Farm and Ranchland Protection Program (FRPP), USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) announced today. Since 1996, FRPP in Washington State has provided over $15 million in Federal funds combined with roughly $18 million from private and public sources for a total of $33 million to preserve over 9800 acres of rich farmland on 96 parcels  
For more information on these projects, click on the links.

 Washington NRCS, Olympia Chapter

 

Organization Type: Government Agency

Website

Telephone

(360) 704-7740

Address

1835 BLACK LAKE BLVD SW STE B OLYMPIA, WA 98512-5715

Landscape Conservation Incentives

Description:

This is a list of Landscape Conservation Initiatives that the USDA has implemented since 2009. These initiatives enable NRCS to more effectively address priority natural resource concerns by delivering systems of practices, primarily to the most vulnerable lands within geographic focus areas.

Through these initiatives, NRCS seeks to accomplish:

  • Conservation beyond boundaries—Landscape-scale natural resource concerns, such as species conservation and water quality, cannot be treated effectively based on geo-political boundaries.  NRCS recognizes that natural resource concerns transcend farm, county, and state boundaries.
  • A science-based approach—Findings from the multi-agency Conservation Effects Assessment Project (CEAP) indicate the most effective way to increase protection of natural resources is to target conservation to the most vulnerable or valuable areas and to apply a systems rather than a practice-by-practice approach.  Within individual initiatives, the best available university and government science resources are used to define initiative targeting approaches.
  • Build on existing locally-led efforts and partnerships—NRCS seeks to maximize the success of initiatives by leveraging partner interest and resources through programmatic and other tools.
  • Regulatory certainty for agricultural producers—Where applicable, NRCS is working with regulators so agricultural producers can have certainty that the voluntary conservation systems they implement are consistent with current and potential regulation, as well as sustained agricultural production.

These incentives are :

  • Bay Delta Initiative (BDI)                                                                                                     Improving water quantity and quality in the Bay Delta area of California for over 23 million people and irrigation water to four million acres of farmland.
  • Chesapeake Bay Watershed Initiative (CBWI)                                                                      Supporting rural economies, protecting wildlife habitat and improving water quality in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed.
  • Everglades Initiative (EI)                                                                                                       Improving water quality, controlling invasive plant species, improving wildlife and fish habitat and supporting rural economies in the Florida Everglades region.
  • Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI)                                                                            Restoring and protecting watersheds in eight states surrounding the Great Lakes that provide drinking water for over 40 million Americans and drive a $62 billion annual economy of fishing, boating and recreational activities.
  • Gulf of Mexico Initiative (GoMI)                                                                                         Improving water quality, increasing water conservation and enhancing wildlife habitat within watersheds draining into the Gulf of Mexico in the states of Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas.
  • Illinois River and Eucha-Spavinaw Lake Initiative (IRWI)                                                   Reducing nutrients, bacteria and sediment and enhancing the economic viability of agricultural operations within the Illinois River Sub-Basin and Eucha-Spavinaw Lake Watershed of Arkansas and Oklahoma.
  • Lesser Prairie Chicken Initiative (LPCI)                                                                              Expanding Lesser prairie-chicken habitat and benefiting the long-term sustainability of producers’ agricultural operations in high priority habitat areas in the current range in the states of Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas.
  • Longleaf Pine Initiative (LLPI)                                                                                              Enhancing critical wildlife habitat and improving the health, sustainability and profitability of privately owned Longleaf pine forests in the southeastern United States.
  • Migratory Bird Habitat Initiative (MBHI)                                                                                Providing food, water and critical habitat for bird populations, supporting local economies by attracting hunters and bird watchers, and expanding opportunities for improved wildlife management.
  • Mississippi River Basin Healthy Watershed Initiative (MRBI)                                               Improving water quality, restoring wetlands, and enhancing wildlife habitat and agricultural profitability in priority small watersheds of the Mississippi River in the states of Arkansas, Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, Tennessee, South Dakota, and Wisconsin.
  • New England / New York Forestry Initiative (NENYI)                                                               Helping keep forests as forests in the New England region that provide clean drinking water, support rural economies and protect wildlife habitat.
  • North Central Wetlands Conservation Initiative (NCWCI)                                              Protecting wetlands and improving water quality, flood water retention and fish and wildlife habitat in the Prairie Pothole Region of Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota.
  • Ogallala Aquifer Initiative (OAI)                                                                                         Reducing aquifer water use, improving water quality and enhancing the economic viability of croplands and rangelands in Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, New Mexico, Texas, South Dakota and Wyoming
  • Red River Initiative (RRI)                                                                                                Decreasing water quantity flowing into the Red River and its tributaries to reduce flooding potential, increasing water quality, and restoring wildlife habitat for migratory species.
  • Sage Grouse Initiative (SGI)                                                                                               Conserving Greater sage-grouse population by restoring its habitat and improving the productivity of ranching operations in 11 western states.
  • West Maui Coral Reef Initiative (WMCRI)                                                                        Reducing pollution to improve coastal water quality and coral reef ecosystem health in the Ka’anapali-Kahekili watershed of Hawaii.
     Temporary Places

Organization Type:

Sierra Club – Cascade Chapter

The Sierra Club’s tagline is  “Enjoy, explore, and protect the planet.”

As stated on the website:

The priorities of the Washington State Chapter also encompass the crucial third part of the Sierra Club mission: Protect the planet that we love to explore and enjoy. Our volunteers work hard to achieve a broad range of well-defined conservation goals, in ways ranging from hands-on habitat restoration to active lobbying for better legislation.

Organization Type:

Website

Contact e-mail

Telephone

(206) 378-0114

Address

180 Nickerson Street, Suite 202, Seattle, WA 98109

WashPIRG Foundation

WashPIRG is an advocacy group bringing issues to life that normally are overlooked by the legislative process like education, environmental stewardship, tax havens, student debt, and public transportation.

Organization Type:

Website

Contact e-mail

Telephone

(206) 568-2856

Address

1402 Third Ave Ste 715 Seattle, WA 98101

Idaho Foundation for Parks and Lands

Mission statement: The Idaho Foundation for Parks & Lands is a statewide public benefit privately funded organization whose mission is to preserve and protect open space lands and unique natural, scenic settings for public benefit through various flexible conservation methods.

The official website says:

The Foundation works to protect Idaho for the people. Since its beginning in 1972 the Idaho Foundation for Parks and Lands, a private nonprofit and nongovernmental, has worked to protect outdoor resources. The foundation has handled more than $12,000,000 in assets and our administrative budget has never been more than one percent of our asset base. Our charter maintains flexibility because Idaho is so diverse. The opportunity for land conservation is entirely voluntary and we only go where we are wanted. There is no maternity ward for terra firma. Two of Idaho’s staunchest park supporters, Governor Robert and Lu Smylie helped in the early development of the land trust in Idaho. Both knew the Harriman brothers well, dined with them at the Railroad Ranch in Island Park, on their private railway car and sometimes in New York. Working with E. Roland and Gladys Harriman, who owned 75 percent of the ranch and W. Averell Harriman with his 25 percent, Governor Smylie wrote the agreements that would preserve all 15,000 acres as a gift to the people of Idaho.

Organization Type: Not-For-Profit Corporation

Website

Contact e-mail

Telephone

(208) 344-7141

Address

5657 Warm Springs Avenue Boise, ID 83716

Spokane Riverkeeper

According to their website, “The Spokane Riverkeeper is a non-profit organization dedicated to protecting and restoring the health of the Spokane River Watershed. We accomplish this by collaborating, educating, and, when necessary, litigating to preserve the Spokane River’s health now and in the future.

Spokane Riverkeeper is a vigilant guardian of the Spokane River and its watershed and an effective advocate for the restoration and preservation of the river’s ecological health and aesthetic integrity. As a member of the international Waterkeepers movement, Spokane Riverkeeper’s first priority, day-to-day, is to defend the river against pollution and polluters.

The long-term vision of Spokane Riverkeeper is to restore the river to its natural state, undiminished by human activities that cause pollution or divert water from the river, especially during low seasonal flow periods. Our mission recognizes that protecting the river and securing its future as an ecological and spiritual resource for the region is best secured by working with current allies and enlisting new allies in the causes to which we’re committed.”

Organization Type:

Website

Contact e-mail

Telephone

(509) 835-5211

Address

35 West Main, Suite 300 Spokane, WA 99201 United States

Northwest Environmental Advocates

Mission statement:  To work through advocacy and education to protect and restore water and air quality, wetlands and wildlife habitat.

Northwest Environmental Advocates (NWEA) use strategies such as negotiation, litigation, education, community organizing, and advocacy.  This includes:

  • filing lawsuits to obtain program implementation and remedy egregious threats
  • advocating for funding, enforcement, and environmental results
  • working on advisory committees to build support for implementation
  • education and community organizing to ensure an informed and involved public

Organization Type:

Website

Telephone

(503) 295-0490

Address

P.O. Box 12187 Portland, OR 97212-0187

People For Puget Sound

People For Puget Sound is an organization for the conservation of the greater puget sound area.

Their mission is: “Our vision is a clean and healthy Sound, teeming with fish and wildlife, cared for by people who live here.”

Their work includes:

Advocating for puget sound politically

Educating about conservation

Restoring puget sound to a more natural state

Organization Type: Not for Profit

Website

Contact e-mail

Telephone

(206) 382-7007

Address

911 Western Avenue #580, Seattle, WA 98104, USA

Washington Environmental Council

From their website: Here at Washington Environmental Council we believe that a healthy environment and healthy economy go hand in hand. We believe that we will all live better lives when our air and water are clean. And for 40 years Washington Environmental Council has been speaking up to make sure those values have a voice in the state capitol.

WEC has adopted a five‐year Climate and Clean Energy Agenda, a long‐term commitment to move the dial on state policy to reduce emissions, use energy efficiently, transition to clean energy, and set limits on global warming pollution that drive a clean energy future. WEC is partnering closely with Climate Solutions and Sightline Institute in this work.

Organization Type: Non-Government Organization

Website

Contact e-mail

Telephone

(206) 631-2600

Address

1402 3rd Avenue, Suite 1400, Seattle, WA 98101

BC Sustainable Energy Association

BC Sustainable Energy Association is a nonprofit organization in Victoria, British Columbia that works to provide and advocate environmentally friendly energy practices.  As gathered from their website, “The BC Sustainable Energy Association’s mission is to empower British Columbians to build a clean, renewable energy future.”  BC Sustainable Energy Association helps suggest policies and programs to policymakers use seminars or “webinars” to inform the public about current climate news and organizes sustainable energy tours.  Currently their challenges include putting clean energy into classrooms and workplaces. They rely on donations and charities and are growing, honest organizations.

 

Organization Type:

Website

Contact e-mail

Telephone

(604) 332-0025

Address

PO Box 44104 Gorge Plaza 2947 Tillicum Rd.