THE SENATE |
S.C.R. NO. |
14 |
TWENTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2006 |
S.D. 1 |
|
STATE OF HAWAII |
||
REQUESTING HAWAII'S CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION TO SEEK FEDERAL FUNDING TO BE USED FOR PROGRAMS AND MEASURES INTENDED TO PREVENT AND FIGHT AGAINST INVASIVE SPECIES IN HAWAII.
WHEREAS, preserving and protecting our natural environment and resources are critical to ensure a promising future for our residents, especially our children; and
WHEREAS, invasive alien species, such as coqui frogs, brown tree snakes, and other invasive species, represent dangerous threats to Hawaii's fragile and complex ecosystem; and
WHEREAS, for example, coqui frogs, which have reproduced at a frightening rate with distinct populations numbering over 270 on the island of Hawaii alone, are not only a nuisance but, if left unchecked, may also affect the tourism industry and disrupt native bird populations that compete with the frogs for insect prey; and
WHEREAS, in the past, Hawaii's Congressional delegation has worked to secure federal funds for the control and eradication of the brown tree snake, which has been directly responsible for the extinction or local extirpation of 12 of 25 native forest bird and lizard species in Guam; and
WHEREAS, federal moneys received were used for various control measures, research, prevention, and eradication of the brown tree snake, which has significantly reduced the threat that the brown tree snake posed to Hawaii's natural ecosystem and economy; and
WHEREAS, Act 85, Session Laws of Hawaii 2003, established the Hawaii Invasive Species Council (Council), a body that provides leadership, direction, and coordination for invasive species prevention and eradication programs statewide; and
WHEREAS, prior to the Council, the Coordinating Group on Alien Pest Species, primarily comprised of management-level participants from every major federal, state, county and private agency and organizations, conducted various initiatives to combat invasive species, including media campaigns, research, improving coordination and collaboration among agencies, and facilitating the formation of invasive species committees on all major islands; and
WHEREAS, funding for the activities and programs of the Council, the Coordinating Group on Alien Pest Species and the invasive species committees come from a combination of federal, state, and private sources; and
WHEREAS, however, their efforts have been weakened by recent actions of the federal government that have drastically reduced the resources necessary to effectively combat invasive species and may jeopardize existing programs like the eradication efforts under way and planned for controlling coqui frog populations on the island of Hawaii; and
WHEREAS, actions like these deprive Hawaii of the funding desperately needed to protect the native environment and preserve the native ecosystem; now, therefore,
BE IT RESOLVED by the Senate of the Twenty-third Legislature of the State of Hawaii, Regular Session of 2006, the House of Representatives concurring, that members of Hawaii's Congressional delegation are requested to renew their efforts in obtaining federal funding for the prevention and eradication of invasive species in Hawaii; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that members of Hawaii's Congressional delegation are urged to use the same vigor and commitment that they have used in obtaining funding for the brown tree snake; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that certified copies of this Concurrent Resolution be transmitted to the members of Hawaii's Congressional delegation.
Report Title:
Federal Funding for Invasive Species; Prevention and Eradication