Pheasants Forever Forms New
Quail Habitat Organization
Quail Forever to apply proven model to the quail range for
benefit of habitat and hunters
St. Paul, Minn. – August 10,
2005 –
Pheasants Forever (PF) announced today that it intends to
extend its successful organizational model for habitat
development by forming a new organization, Quail Forever,
dedicated to quail conservation and education. Quail
Forever will build on PF’s track record of successful local
chapter development, localized habitat initiatives, and
national public policy leadership and advocacy. Plans for
the new organization include recruitment of additional
wildlife biologists and a phased chapter development plan.
PF was
founded in St. Paul, Minnesota in 1982 and has grown to more
than 110,000 members and 600 chapters nationwide. PF is
unique among conservation organizations in that its local
chapters maintain control of 100% of locally raised funds,
and make all decisions on how to spend those conservation
and education dollars. The organization has a steady track
record of success, including the completion of more than
300,000 habitat projects benefiting 3.4 million acres for
wildlife since inception. PF has also participated in over
800 land acquisitions totaling more than 100,000 acres now
open to public hunting. All told, PF has spent more than
$170 million nationwide on wildlife habitat projects and
conservation education during its 23-year history.
Leveraging a Successful
Model
In
forming Quail Forever, PF plans to deploy the same
organizational model – localized decision-making with lean,
low-overhead central administration. Pheasants Forever
already has a strong presence in states where quail and
pheasants share habitat – Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Indiana,
Maryland, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Ohio, Oregon, and
Pennsylvania. In fact, Pheasants Forever members have been
responsible for delivering more than 2 million acres of
wildlife habitat in those shared habitat ranges. Those same
states have also been some of the country’s most successful
at enrolling acres in the bobwhite buffers (CP-33) component
of the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP).
“Quail –
like pheasants – don’t migrate, so we believe locally raised
funds shouldn’t migrate either,” said Howard Vincent, PF
president and CEO. “Without a doubt, there is still plenty
of pheasant habitat work to do. At the same time, we have
an opportunity to share the successful Pheasants Forever
model with quail and quail hunters.”
Public Policy Leadership
PF is a
respected voice in state and national government, helping
promote the 39.2 million-acre CRP program, the 2.2
million-acre Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP), and a variety
of state-specific wildlife conservation initiatives. PF was
also involved with the creation of the CRP practice (CP-33)
– known as the bobwhite buffers initiative – which has led
to 250,000 acres targeted at quail conservation.
The
Southeast Quail Study Group (SEQSG), a technical arm of the
Southeastern Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies, is a
working group composed of many of the country’s foremost
bobwhite quail biologists. The SEQSG developed the Northern
Bobwhite Conservation Initiative (NBCI), the first-ever
national quail recovery plan. The NBCI provides a
landscape-scale road map to restore quail populations to
their 1980 levels through habitat conservation.
“With our
experience in enrolling bobwhite buffer acres and the recent
completion of the Northern Bobwhite Conservation Initiative
plan, the time was right for us to lend our habitat
conservation expertise to help implement the NBCI,” Vincent
said. “We want to do what we can to make a difference for
quail and quail hunters before it becomes too late.”
Phased, Member-Centric
Approach
PF
outlined a phased approach to establishing the Quail Forever
organization. Initial focus will be on states with both
pheasant and quail hunters and habitat. Quail Forever’s
expansion south and west will be based on chapter interest
and available resources. In the organization’s first year,
Quail Forever has set a goal of forming 50 chapters and
recruiting 12,000 members to work on quail habitat projects.
PF
currently employs 22 wildlife biologists covering 28 states
and Canada. There are plans to add quail specialists in
states where chapter need and state agency grants allow.
The organization has promoted Jim Wooley of Iowa, PF’s
senior wildlife biologist, to oversee all Quail Forever
biologists. Wooley has been with the organization for 20
years and was PF’s first biologist. Current PF biologists
along the shared pheasant and quail range will work with
both PF and Quail Forever chapters in the interim as well.
Established Professional
Management Structure
Quail
Forever will be managed by the existing PF national staff,
with oversight by the PF Board of Directors. The PF
national office currently receives a nominal $30 membership
fee from each member to cover administration, magazine
publication, and chapter services costs, and raises
additional funds through corporate sponsorships and
merchandise sales. All locally raised event funds remain
local for use by chapters in habitat development projects.
“We have an opportunity to service two organizations while
keeping administrative overhead low and leaving more dollars
available for habitat projects to benefit quail and
pheasants,” added Vincent.
“The
Northern Bobwhite Conservation Initiative points the way to
restoring huntable quail populations across their range,”
said Don McKenzie, coordinator of the NBCI. “Now we need
strong arms and legs to deliver that plan down to the
grassroots level across two dozen states. Pheasants Forever
has proven successful at delivering effective conservation
programs to the ground across the pheasant range. If they
can catalyze a similar movement of quail enthusiasts to
implement the NBCI, they will help make a real difference to
brighten the future of the South’s game bird king.”
To learn
more about starting a Quail Forever chapter in your area,
please contact the Quail Forever national office toll free
at (866)45-QUAIL or contact Jim Wooley at (641)774-2238 or
via email at
jwooley@lisco.com.