Partnering for pesticide reduction

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Partnering for pesticide reduction Growing with Master Gardeners™ Carl Grimm Senior Solid Waste Planner METRO Resource Conservation and Recycling

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Partnering for pesticide reduction. Growing with Master Gardeners ™. Carl Grimm Senior Solid Waste Planner METRO Resource Conservation and Recycling. Presentation plan. Behavior change vs. upstream change? Growing a partnership A few tools of change Our training for change - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Partnering for pesticide reduction

Page 1: Partnering for pesticide reduction

Partnering for pesticide reductionGrowing with Master Gardeners™

Carl GrimmSenior Solid Waste PlannerMETRO Resource Conservation and Recycling

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Presentation plan

1. Behavior change vs. upstream change?

2. Growing a partnership

3. A few tools of change

4. Our training for change

5. What are we learning?

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1. BEHAVIOR CHANGE VS. UPSTREAM CHANGE?We know we can’t shop our way out of the pesticide problem

…and that upstream work is essential.

We also believe “behavior change” work can help…

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Behavior change grows communities of careCommunity support is needed for future policy success

…and for cultivating community norms

Helping individuals reduce their exposure to toxics

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Metro, meet OSUOSU, meet Metro

Regional government

Urban planning origins

Hazardous waste reduction goal

Land-grant university

Agricultural origins

Education goal

Growing a partnership for pesticide reduction

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Dancing the advocacy-education fence line How we’ve moved forward, in and out of the comfort zone•Establish our common ground

•Develop common work collaboratively

•Metro largely provides resources

•OSU largely provides services

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Our common ground

Protect human and environmental health

Make Integrated Pest Management (IPM) information easily accessible

Ensure that information shared is based on scientific research

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2. A FEW TOOLS OF CHANGEOutreach kit

Pesticide-free pledge

Free coupons

Grow Smart Grow Safe and the pesticide hazards “cheat sheet”

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Table banner

How-to booklets and rack

Organic lettuce seeds

E-newsletter signup

Tabletop signs

Outreach kit

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Pesticide-free pledge and promptFacilitating commitmentsGenerating social normsMeasuring impact (as best we can)

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Free coupons and seedsGenerating reciprocityRemoving barriers

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Grow Smart, Grow Safe

King County, Thurston County, Washington, and Metro partnership

Resident-friendly interface for hazard rankings and alternatives

Free iPhone app now available, plus www.growsmartgrowsafe.org

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Pesticide hazards “cheat sheet”Combines Thurston County hazard ratings with some Grow Smart, Grow Safe tool elements with use information for Master Gardeners

Piloted last year, revision in works

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Thurston County IPM chemical reviews Science-based reviews combine hazard and risk ratings. Powers “cheat sheet” and Grow Smart, Grow Safe.

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E-newsletter

Helping participants move up the ladder of commitment with monthly tips and commitment opportunities

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Western Oregon IPM Resources CollaborativeExploring development of region-specific urban IPM web resource for Master Gardeners, governments and pest management professionals

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3. OUR TRAINING FOR CHANGEThe softest side, and essential

In Master Gardener trainings

Setting clear expectations

Role playing

Be ready!

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Field support for Master GardenersPopping in on volunteers at workCoaching and mentoringBringing resourcesCollecting pledges and emailsTaking picturesExpressing appreciation!

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4. WHAT ARE WE LEARNING?

As usual…

Counting beans: EASY

Measuring behavior change: HARD

Measuring waste diversion: HARDEST

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Bean counting

*Metro contacts are for fiscal year; Master Gardener contacts are for previous calendar year.

FY07-08

FY08-09

FY09-10

FY10-11

FY11-12

FY12-13

0

10,000

20,000

30,000

40,000

50,000

60,000

70,000

Metro and OSU contacts, 2008-2013*

"Metro" contactsMaster Gardener contactsPledges

Cont

acts

/ple

dges

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Audience researchRegion-wide surveysParticipant surveysVolunteer focus groups and surveys

Learned: Suburban pet owners and parents are key audiences

Almost every household uses pesticides

About 40% use green alternatives (organic or other)

Health, water, and children are key motivators for change

Master Gardeners value the cobranded materials, especially the hazards “cheat sheet”

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Pesticide HHW diversion cost guestimate*

Diversion cost estimated as annual program cost ÷ cumulative diversionDisposal cost assumes 5% annual increase Diversion estimate assumes• Pledgers would have used

HHW disposal for pesticides and will not after pledging and disposing one load

• Frequency and quantity of disposal would have been average

• 5% recidivism rate *Based on best estimates as of September 20, 2013. Results may change as the analysis progresses.

year 1

year 2

year 3

year 4

year 5

year 6

year 7

year 8

year 9

year 10

$0

$10

$20

$30

$40

$50

$60

$70

$80

$90

$100

-

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

5,000

6,000

7,000

8,000

9,000

10,000 90.7727506104477

24.4678730713158

$2 $3

8,583 lbs

Cost per pound diverted (est.)Cost per pound disposed (est.)Cumulative diversion in pounds from FY12-13 pledgers (est.)

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Estimated value of reduced pesticide impacts?

Human healthWater qualityWildlife

= PRICELESS?

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Recommendations

Connect with your Extension ServiceStart simpleBuild on common groundGive time for working out detailsInvolve key players early and oftenProvide adequate fundingBuild on existing resources

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More information

Carl [email protected]/garden

Weston Miller503-706-9193weston.miller@oregonstate.eduwww.metromastergardeners.org