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PRESS RELEASE
May
19, 2006
NEW TASK FORCE IS FORMED TO TACKLE
WHITE-TAIL DEER
A
new task force has been formed to deal with issues caused by the
burgeoning population of white-tail deer in Westchester, County Parks
Commissioner Joseph A. Stout has announced.
The
organization, called the Westchester County Forest Regeneration Citizens’
Task Force will be headed by Greenburgh resident William S. Greenawalt.
The group will study current research on deer population, including deer
counts and other data, to develop a strategy that county parks staff,
municipal officials and private property owners can use in the
management of deer-related problems. While hunting has always been
prohibited in county parks, carefully regulated and monitored deer
culling will be discussed as a possible means of reducing the number and
size of deer herds.
The
task force comprises representatives from a wide range of organizations
including The Nature Conservancy, the Humane Society, Audubon New York,
Teatown Lake Reservation, the New York State Department of Environmental
Conservation, Mianus River Gorge, Pace University Environmental Center
and Federated Conservationists of Westchester County.
“If
you live in Westchester chances are you’ve been affected by white-tail
deer in some way, whether they’ve chewed on your shrubs, or darted out
in front of your car at night, or even if you’ve just enjoyed watching
them grazing at the edge of a forest,” Stout said. “They’re
beautiful to look at but conservation advocates have strongly advised us
that deer over-population has a significant negative impact on the
health of our forests.”
Stout
said that the idea to form a task force on the white-tailed deer was
conceived during the Park’s Department’s annual “Conversations on
Conservation” conference, a program that brings together public and
private conservation advocates and experts, municipal planners and
private citizens to discuss and develop solutions to challenging
environmental issues. He said the conference made it clear that the
white-tail deer today is fairly universally considered nuisance wildlife
and that a regional strategy was needed. The conference organizers
approached County Executive Andy Spano who endorsed the formation of the
task force but at the same time charged the county’s Parks and
Planning departments to develop a deer-management program and plan of
action to be used in the county parks, to be completed within half a
year.
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