NE PMC Insider

Internal newsletter of the Northeastern Pest Management Center.

Issue 1, July 2001


(June and July are the same issue under 2 different names)

 

In this Issue:
Welcome
Advisory Council First Meeting
Cranberry PMSP
Information Network Projects
IPM Commodity Working Groups
National
        Western Region PMC Schedules Workshop
        Web Pages
Contact us
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Welcome:
This is the first issue of the NE PMC Insider, our  "in-house" newsletter. We will use this to provide updates to all who are part of NE PMC's formal structure:

* Information Network project leaders and cooperators
* members of the Steering Committee
* members of the Advisory Council
* members of IPM Commodity Working Groups.

We will try to keep it relatively short, and we will shoot for a new issue each month. Distribution will be primarily via the internet. If you prefer a printed or faxed copy, please contact Jim VanKirk or Liz Thomas (contact information below).


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Advisory Council meeting:

The first meeting of the Advisory Council was held May 30 in Albany, NY. Attendance was very good, with 22 AC members and 8 IPM Commodity Working Group representatives in addition to Center staff. This level of participation seems especially good considering the poor timing.

The morning session dealt primarily with review of the development of pest management centers in general and NE PMC in particular. Therese Murtagh (USDA/OPMP) and Mike Fitzner (USDA/CSREES) reviewed background, history and political context of pest management centers. Jim VanKirk and John Ayers described the structure of NE PMC and its core objectives. An informal and wide-ranging discussion of issues involving the Center ensued in the afternoon. Topics included:

* "IPM" and "pest management", is there a threat to formula funds?
*  role and organization of IPM Commodity Working Groups
*  uses of crop profiles
*  how much Center emphasis should be on pesticide issues?
*  size and diversity of the Advisory Council
*  challenges for NE PMC.
The next meeting will be in the Baltimore area during January, 2002.
AC members who came to the meetings received resource notebooks. Those of you who were unable to attend should receive notebooks in the mail any day now.
You can access a report on the meeting with supporting documents (including the AC roster) online at http://neipmc.org/ac/May01/report.html . Contact Liz Thomas or Jim if you need a printed copy.

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Cranberry PMSP:

NE PMC will be undertaking it's first Pest Management Strategic Plan August 16 and 17 in Providence, RI. The PMSP we develop will have a national scope, so growers, researchers and others from Massachusetts, New Jersey, Michigan and the Pacific Northwest will participate. The Western and North Central Centers are supporting this project by picking up travel costs for participants from their regions.

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Information Network Projects:

Seven information network projects were funded by NE PMC. Over the course of the next three years, all will develop communications networks and undertake some combination of pest management tactic surveys, crop profiles and pest management strategic plans. Project leaders are:
*  Delaware: Susan Whitney, U. Del.
*  Maryland: Amy Brown, U. Maryland
*  New England (CT, MA, ME, NH, RI, VT): Jim Dill, University of Maine, Orono
*  New Jersey: George Hamilton, Rutgers
*  New York: George Good, Cornell
*  Pennsylvania: Robert Weaver, Penn St.

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IPM Commodity Working Groups:
We have recruited leaders for 6 CWGs, and they in turn will work with NE PMC staff to recruit membership. Two budgetary adjustments are favorable for the CWGs: each will now be able to hold an annual meeting, and we have developed a very small pool of funds that CWGs can access to address critical priorities. Each CWG will have about 12 members; if you know of someone who should be on a particular CWG, please contact the CWG leader. Leaders are:

*  Community: Reg Coler, U. Massachusetts & Mary Kay Malinoski, U. Maryland
*  Field crops, forage and livestock: Dennis Calvin, Penn St. and Keith Waldron, Cornell
*  Fruit: Dave Handley, U. Maine & Peter Shearer, Rutgers
*  Ornamentals Production: Paula Shrewsbury, U. Maryland and Margaret Skinner, U. Vermont
*  Public health IPM: Jody Gangloff-Kaufmann, Cornell
*  Vegetables: Ruth Hazzard, U. Massachusetts & Curt Petzoldt, Cornell

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National:
The Western Region PMC has scheduled a workshop to provide an opportunity for agricultural stakeholders to communicate various pest management tactics, issues and concerns within the western United States. This meeting is targeted toward growers, commodity groups, university/college researchers and extension personnel, USDA funded programs (IPM, Sustainable Agriculture and others). For more on the workshop scheduled in Reno Aug. 28 and 29, check the WRPMC website http://www.wrpmc.ucdavis.edu


The national Pest Management Center website provides a great deal of information on many aspects of pest management. Access it at www.ipmcenters.org . You can get to any regional Center site from there, or go directly to the Northeastern PMC site at http://nepmc.org/


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Contact Us:
Coordinator             Jim VanKirk:    jrv1@cornell.edu
(that's the digit 1 after the v, not the letter L!).

Information Specialist Liz Thomas:      egt3@cornell.edu

Director                          John Ayers:   jea@psu.edu

 

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. We work in partnership with stakeholders from agricultural, urban, and rural settings to identify and address regional priorities for research, education, and outreach.