APPENDIX F

SUMMARY OF THE HUMAN DIMENSIONS BREAKOUT SESSION

Jody Enck and Tommy Brown, Cornell University, Co-Chairs

The 12 participants in the Human Dimensions (HD) breakout session identified initially 25 HD issues pertaining to cormorant management in the Northeast. We consolidated these 25 issues into 12 distinct categories, which are listed below in priority order. One of these, lack of a coordinated and effective communications plan about cormorants, was identified overwhelmingly as the most important human dimensions issue by participants. Three other issues were identified as being of second priority; the remainder were low priority issues.

ISSUES:

ISSUE: AGENCIES IN THE NORTHEAST NEED TO HAVE EFFECTIVE AND COOPERATIVE COMMUNICATION STRATEGIES REGARDING CORMORANTS.

ELEMENTS OF DISCUSSION:

 

SCOPE

TIME FRAME

WHY IS IT IMPORTANT?

BARRIERS

OPPORTUNITIES

COMMUNICATION AND EDUCATION NEEDS

RESEARCH AND INFORMATION NEEDS

RECOMMENDED STRATEGIES:

1. Northeast Administrators should appoint a team to develop a communication plan.

2. A strong communication element should be included in any regional cormorant management plan that is developed.

3. Communication messages should be developed by an interagency team, including support from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Sea Grant.

4. Incorporate important research results into the communication plan.

5. Incorporate what we've learned (positive and negative) from previous outreach efforts into communication plan.

6. Identify and describe policies and functions of various agencies regarding cormorants.

7. An interagency team should develop, with various public stakeholder groups, a set of protocols and information needs before any management actions are taken.

8. Obtain information about important tradeoffs stakeholder groups are willing to support or are unwilling to accept.

OTHER ISSUES TO CONSIDER

GENERAL IMPRESSIONS

Misunderstandings, perceived lack of communication, and uncertainty about how best to communicate what messages and with whom all lead to frustration by both federal and state/provincial staff involved with cormorant management. Communication efforts within and among agencies are needed as much as communication efforts between agencies and various stakeholder groups. Further, enhanced intra and interagency communication requires a clear articulation and understanding of terms (e.g., human dimensions, stakeholder, issue, management). Within the breakout group, various definitions of these terms were being applied without discussion of what they really meant. It became obvious that shared understandings did not exist as the discussion proceeded.

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