Quail Forever Members to Meet Conservation Policy Makers in Washington

   05.15.12

Quail Forever Members to Meet Conservation Policy Makers in Washington

Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever leadership and members will be in Washington, D.C., this week to meet with legislators in support of conservation practices and wildlife habitat. Howard Vincent, Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever National President and CEO; Dave Nomsen, Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever Vice President of Government Affairs, and a contingent of the conservation organization’s staff and membership will meet with U.S. Senate and House Agriculture Committee members and U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack.

The meetings are designed to inform policy makers in preparation of the serious negotiations for the 2012 federal Farm Bill that begin later this month. “It is important the voice of landowners and conservationists carries to our nation’s capital to showcase the positive results programs like the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) have on the landscape,” notes Nomsen, “Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever members are well equipped to carry this message. This week also showcases the credibility Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever has gained in 30 years of conservation advocacy. The ability for our members to sit face-to-face with the likes of Senator Debbie Stabenow, Chairwoman of Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry; and Senator Pat Roberts, the Committee’s Ranking Member, is invaluable.”

Representing Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever in Washington, D.C., will be:

  • Moe Linden from Dighton, Kans., a member of the Stubble Ducks Pheasants Forever chapter
  • William Zehnder from Vassar, Mich., a Pheasants Forever/Quail Forever National Board member
  • James Dietsch and Laura Miller-McIver from Oklahoma City, Okla., both members of the Central Oklahoma 89ers Quail Forever chapter

In addition to meetings with the leadership offices of the House and Senate Agriculture Committees, Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever will meet with Agricultural Secretary Tom Vilsack to discuss the recent CRP General Sign-up 43 and the recent reallocation of 1 million CRP acres to the most popular continuous practices within the program.

Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever’s Top Five 2012 Farm Bill endorsements include:

1. Reauthorize CRP. With approximately 6 million acres set to expire in 2012 and an additional 3 million acres in 2013, the Conservation Reserve Program is expiring acres at an alarming rate. Congress has to act to pass a 2012 Farm Bill and reauthorize CRP so the program can rebuild going forward.

2. A Competitive Conservation Reserve Program – Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever understand and support the need for an economically competitive and targeted Conservation Reserve Program and the reauthorization USDA’s most successful conservation programs in order to ensure the future of CRP and improve the program’s overall value. Conservation programs such as CP33 Buffer Acres, CP37 Duck Nesting Acres, and CP38 SAFE Acres offer the ability to turn every CRP acre into a specifically targeted approach to wildlife conservation and environmental sensitivity, while typically offering producers more competitive rental rates than general CRP contracts.

3. Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP) Acres Baseline and Permanent Funding – WRP acts as American’s number one wetlands restoration program, improving wetland conservation, mitigating wetlands loss, providing migratory bird and fisheries habitat and improving water quality. “Wetlands are some of the most valuable pieces of land for wildlife and environmental quality,” says Nomsen, “In addition to permanently funded wetlands protections, an acres baseline for this program needs to be established, thereby ensuring a constant minimum of what we can improve upon.”

4. Continuation of Open Fields Hunting Access Programs. The Voluntary Public Access and Habitat Incentive Program is an innovative program used to help fund dwindling public access to private lands, which constitutes the greatest threat to hunting in the United States today. Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever support the permanent authorization and funding for this program, which benefits both wildlife habitat and hunting access. “It is crucial to give sportspeople a place to experience the outdoors, and this voluntary program creates a win-win relationship for the landowner and the outdoorsman,” says Nomsen.

5. Strengthened “Sodsaver” or Non-cropland Conversion Provisions – Sodsaver provisions would help conserve one of America’s most iconic and threatened ecosystems: our native grasslands. Grasslands provide essential habitat and breeding grounds for countless species of North American ducks and other recreationally important species like pheasants, quail and deer. These provisions would save taxpayer dollars and conserve critical habitat while maintaining farmers’ abilities to manage their lands as they see fit.

For more information please, contact Dave Nomsen at (320) 491-9163 / Email Dave. For all other inquiries, please contact Rehan Nana, Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever Public Relations Specialist, at (651) 209-4973 / Email Rehan.

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Pheasants Forever launched Quail Forever in August of 2005 to address the continuing loss of habitat suitable for quail and the subsequent quail population decline. Bobwhite population losses over the last 25 years range from 60 to 90 percent across the country. The reason for the quail population plunge is simple - massive losses of habitat suitable for quail. There are five major factors leading to the losses of quail habitat; intensified farming and forestry practices, succession of grassland ecosystems to forests, overwhelming presence of exotic grasses like fescue that choke out wildlife, and urban sprawl.

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