From:
Animal Defenders of Westchester (ADOW)
May 10, 2024
Article in support below: Wildlife Crossings have saved animals all over the U.S.
Pleasse contact NYS Assembly members and ask them to pass this important bill! (S.4198A/A.4243A)Find your Assembly members here:
https://nyassembly.gov/mem/search/
EExcellent article in support below:
https://www.adirondackalmanack.com/2024/05/pass-the-new-york-wildlife-crossings-bill.html
Pass The New York Wildlife Crossings Bill
By Peter Bauer
The New York State Senate just passed the New York Wildlife Crossings Act
(S.4198A/A.4243A) by a landslide margin of 55 yeas to 4 nays. This bill
enjoyed widespread and bipartisan support from all corners of New York
State. Senator Dan Stec, Republican from Queensbury, who represents much of
the Adirondack Park, was one of just four members who voted no. Senator Stec
was also the lone “no” vote in the Senate Environmental Conservation
Committee that had earlier voted 9-1 to approve this bill.
This legislation is sponsored by Senator Leroy Comrie and Assembly Member
Robert Carroll, and directs the Department of Transportation (DOT) to
identify sites along highways, thruways and parkways in the state where
wildlife crossings are most needed to increase public safety and improve
habitat connectivity. This legislation enjoys broad, popular support across
the environmental community. It’s now time for the State Assembly to follow
suit and pass this bill. Two key North Country Assemblymembers, Billy Jones,
Democrat from Franklin County, and Matt Simpson, Republican from Warren
County, support this bill.
The bill requires DOT to assess roadways “in the state for potential
wildlife crossings to improve wildlife habitat connectivity, reduce wildlife
vehicle collisions, and increase public safety for New York motorists.” DOT
will use its assessment of roadways to create a list of the top ten priority
wildlife crossings sites in the state according to an established set of
criteria. Additionally, for the top five project sites, DOT will also
identify federal grant funds that are available for those projects.
The Biden Administration has made $350 million dollars available for
wildlife crossings as part of the bipartisan Infrastructure Law enacted in
2021. In December 2023, the federal government announced that it had awarded
$110 million dollars of federal funds for wildlife crossings. New York can
better position itself to take advantage of these available federal funds by
passing the Wildlife Crossings bill.
Wildlife crossings are structures, such as overpass bridges, underpass
tunnels, culverts and directional fencing, that enable wildlife to safely
cross roads and other barriers. Not only will wildlife crossings help to
improve public safety by reducing vehicle collisions with wildlife, they
will also improve the survival rate of wildlife moving throughout, and
across the boundaries of, the Adirondack Park and surrounding areas. Having
safe opportunities for road crossings are critical for many species of
wildlife in and around the Adirondack Park that have large territorial
ranges, such as moose, deer, bear, wolves, and bobcats. In addition, foxes,
fishers, martens, and other smaller species of wildlife, plus reptiles and
amphibians, need safe means of passage across large roads that impact their
habitat and their ability to search for food and breeding grounds.
One of the most successful wildlife overpass projects is in Banff National
Park, Alberta, Canada, on the Trans-Canada Highway (shown above). This
overpass is one of dozens of overpasses and underpasses on the highway. A
2014 study found that this project was helpful to maintaining the health of
wildlife populations by not artificially separating wildlife populations.
The Banff wildlife bridge has been in operation for more than 20 years.
Another highly successful example of use of a variety of wildlife
underpasses and overpasses is on US Route 93 in Montana.
Along this highway there are 122 wildlife travel accommodations, including
fencing that channels wildlife travel patterns to overpasses and
underpasses. More than half of the wildlife facilities are on the section of
US Highway 93 that passes through the Confederated Salish and Kootenai
Tribal lands. The tribes insisted on these facilities, which after they were
developed, and were proved successful, were used in other areas of the
highway outside the reservations. One study that looked at 15 underpasses on
Highway 93 found two dozen animal species used them. Automobile-wildlife
collisions have also dropped dramatically on this section of highway.
Safe crossings that allow wildlife to travel from one location to another is
even more important as climate change continues to impact natural habitats
and drives wildlife migration, mostly in a north-south direction. One key
roadway that needs to be prioritized for wildlife crossings, even though it
prevents wildlife travel in an east-west direction, is the Adirondack
Northway (I-87) because of its high rate of travel, and its dissection of
the Adirondack Park from critical habitat in the northeast. There are a
couple of existing crossings under the Northway, such as in the area north
of Schroon Lake, but these were installed decades ago and are undersized and
under-utilized. New, properly designed crossings over and under the Northway
are needed to allow for adequate wildlife movement.
A statewide plan for wildlife crossings is a modest step, but an important
one that will boost wildways and the movement to preserve and connect
biologically important areas in the Adirondack Park and beyond. Isolated
habitats need to be connected to preserve habitats for sensitive and
wide-ranging animals like bears, otters, wolves, big cats, raptors,
songbirds, and butterflies. Large interconnected wild areas will provide
wildlife with the basics for sustenance – food, mates for reproduction and
genetic viability, cover, and new habitats.
It’s time for the State Assembly to pass this legislation.
Life is as dear to a mute creature as it is to man. Just as one wants
happiness and fears pain, just as one wants to live and not die, so do other
creatures.
~ The Dalai Lama
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