Thanks for the superb letter.

Ann Mitchell

Sent from my iPhone

> On Jun 27, 2021, at 3:34 PM, Rebecca Hansen <rpxena...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> 
>  Wonderful.  Thanks so much.
> 
> Sent from my iPad
> 
>>> On Jun 27, 2021, at 1:42 PM, Jody Enck <jodye...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> 
>> 
>> Hello birders,
>> 
>> After receiving lots of input, ideas, and resources from many of you, I put
>> together the letter below and sent it to the President and one of the Vice
>> Presidents at Cornell (as noted in the letter).  Thanks to all who have
>> expressed their concern and who provided important input to this very first
>> step in developing a solution.  Special shout out of thanks to Nancy
>> Cusumano for her initial contact with the President, and to Suan Yong, Josh
>> Snodgrass, and Ken Rosenberg for comments on an earlier draft of the
>> letter.
>> 
>> Martha E. Pollack
>> 
>> President, Cornell University
>>                                                                              
>>                                            26 June 2021
>>  
>> Dear President Pollack,
>>  
>>             I am writing as Chair of the Conservation Action Committee of 
>> the Cayuga Bird Club to communicate and amplify public dismay about recent, 
>> poorly-timed mowing for forage hay crops on Cornell lands during the peak 
>> nesting period for grassland bird species listed as being of special 
>> conservation concern by the New York State Department of Environmental 
>> Conservation and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.  I have been contacted 
>> by many local birders, including farmers and members of the Cornell 
>> University community who are saddened and angry about the situation.  Recent 
>> research lead by Cornell scientists and published in the journal Science 
>> (see Rosenberg, K. V., et al. 2019. Decline of the North American avifauna. 
>> Science 365(6461)) found that nearly 3 billion birds have been lost from the 
>> U.S. and Canada just since 1970.  Populations of grassland bird species like 
>> Bobolink, Eastern Meadowlark, Grasshopper Sparrow, Savannah Sparrow, and 
>> others have declined the most, down 53% in aggregate, accounting for more 
>> than 720 million grassland birds.  Poorly timed mowing of hay crops, 
>> especially throughout the Northeast, is a major contributing factor in the 
>> decline in grassland bird populations. 
>>  
>>             Rather than contributing to the problem, Cornell can help remedy 
>> population declines of grassland bird species by developing a plan for 
>> sustainable management of the substantial acreage of hayfields and other 
>> non-woody habitats under the University’s control.  The Cayuga Bird Club 
>> stands ready to collaborate with Cornell in developing a plan.  We already 
>> have accumulated relevant documents about research and practices aimed at 
>> timing of mowing and other management actions that would be of great use in 
>> developing a Cornell sustainable grassland management plan.  For example, 
>> mowing earlier in the season before establishment of nests and when growing 
>> hay is of high forage quality can have nearly as much conservation benefit 
>> as delaying mowing to a time when quality of the hay forage is lower.  We 
>> also have established contacts with federal and state natural resource 
>> agencies who are knowledgeable of possible financial reimbursement 
>> opportunities for which the University may qualify. 
>>  
>>             Cornell University has an opportunity to be a leader among all 
>> Land Grant Universities by developing a model grassland management plan that 
>> could be adopted by other institutions throughout the Northeast and beyond.  
>> Such a management plan also could be consistent with Cornell’s 
>> sustainability initiatives.  While the current initiatives are laudable, the 
>> focus on renewable energy, transportation and built environments, and even 
>> economic sustainability miss an important need.  All of these actions are 
>> means to achieving the fundamental end of a full and functioning ecosystem 
>> of which we humans are a part and are on which we are dependent for our 
>> survival.   
>>  
>>             The modern concept of “sustainability” emerged fairly recently 
>> in the famous 1987 Brundtland report, “Our Common Future”, prepared for the 
>> U.N.  In that report, sustainability was described in terms of conserving 
>> the ecosystems and natural capital which are necessary for the basic needs 
>> and well-being of humans.  The fundamental end of sustaining ecosystems and 
>> natural capital is noticeably missing from the Sustainable Cornell website.  
>> Indeed, it was unclear what individual from Sustainable Cornell would be the 
>> most important recipient of this letter.  I am copying Vice President, Rick 
>> Burgess, on this letter because he responded to Nancy Cusumano when she 
>> expressed her concern about mowing.  Also, I think it is somewhat ironic 
>> that one of four Cornell Chronicle articles headlined on the website of the 
>> Office of the President at Cornell, under the heading “Academic 
>> Distinction”, is this headline about the Science article I referenced 
>> earlier: “Nearly 30% of birds in the U.S. and Canada have vanished since 
>> 1970.”   Knowledge about the plight of birds exists at Cornell, but does the 
>> administration have the willingness and commitment to actively address that 
>> plight?
>>  
>>             Finally, it is worth noting that the Cayuga Bird Club has a long 
>> history of collaborating and engaging with other institutions and groups, 
>> most recently including the Cornell Botanic Gardens.  We are actively 
>> working with the Botanic Gardens, the City of Ithaca, and several other 
>> partners to restore native plants to the regionally-rare, seasonally flooded 
>> forests at the south end of Cayuga Lake. This work demonstrates how much we 
>> value engagement and collaboration, just as Cornell University does.  We 
>> would like to help Cornell become a regional or national leader in 
>> sustainable management of grassland habitats on university properties.  
>> Members of the Cayuga Bird Club look forward to meeting with the most 
>> appropriate group of administrators to discuss this pressing need.
>>  
>>                                                        Sincerely,
>>  
>>                                                        Jody Enck
>>                                                        Chair, Conservation 
>> Action Committee
>>                                                        Cayuga Bird Club
>> 
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