About the Western Integrated Pest Management Center
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Contents:
Purpose
Funding
Organization
Advisory Committee
Steering Committee
The WIPMC's most basic function is to develop and maintain a pest management information network in the Western Region that will increase the economic benefits of adopting IPM practices and reduce the environmental and human health risks associated with managing pests. These goals were established by USDA's National Roadmap for Integrated Pest Management, which addresses pest management needs for production agriculture, natural resources and recreational environments, and residential and public areas.
The Western Region's information network of IPM coordinators and others serves two major purposes: to facilitate communication among pest management stakeholders, and to provide these stakeholders with broad access to pest management information. The WIPMC works to connect a diverse array of stakeholders (i.e., people who have an interest in pest management policy and implementation) throughout the region. These stakeholders include pest management users (farmers, nurserymen, park and turf managers, pest control operators, and others), consumer and environmental groups, governmental regulatory agencies, researchers, and educators.
Communication channels are effective only if all parties can consistently access the same reliable information. Research-based information is essential to the ability to make sound pest management decisions in any context, from a backyard garden to national regulatory offices. The WIPMC, working with the three other regional Integrated Pest Management Centers and with the support of USDA, is building a comprehensive database that eventually will hold scientifically tested pest management information. This database is available for use by everyone at http://projects.ipm.gov.
Section 406 of the Agricultural Research, Extension, and Education Reform Act of 1998 authorized funding for the national Integrated Pest Management Centers. As the result of a competitive process, the four regional Integrated Pest Management Centers were first funded in FY 2000. Management of the WIPMC is through the University of California, Davis. The organizational structure of the Western Integrated Pest Management Center is designed to maximize collaboration among individuals and groups with diverse perspectives across the West. Broad-based regional participatory leadership assures stakeholder needs are met. Advisory and Steering Committees guide and direct Center staff (the Director, Associate Director, and Writer) in managing information flow. Regional affiliates located in several states respond to information requests for all of the western region that arise from USDA and USEPA.The Advisory Committee provides vision and guidance. Members represent a wide range of stakeholders linking the Western IPM Center to stakeholder needs and priorities for pest management programs. These advisors, integral to IPM Center outreach, promote awareness of the Center's resources to their own constituencies and beyond. The Advisory Committee meets once per year.
Steering Committee
The Steering Committee is the Center's policy-setting body. It gathers input from stakeholders (including the Advisory Committee), determines broad policy goals and priorities, and provides direction for timely and effective Center management. The Steering Committee meets once per year and communicates by email and telephone regularly.
(Acknowledgment and thanks go to the NE IPMC for much of the above text.)


