Nickel and diming isn't good enough
By
Colleen Cronin / ecoRI News staff
Turtles at Trustom Pond. Photo by Will Collette |
On
the forms for last
year’s filing, a torch symbol marks where filers can make a contribution to the
Olympics, a heart signals the place for a donation to the state organ
transplant fund, and a paint brush sits next to the boxes for a gift to the
Rhode Island State Council on the Arts.
The
third category from the bottom shows a little black and white fish, streams of
waves coming from its tail, and contributions ticked off there are for the
“Nongame Wildlife Fund.”
Created
by a 1986 law, the
voluntary program funds “non-game wildlife” research and management, to
supplement other funding the state uses for those species, which includes
invertebrates, insects, and other creatures not already supported by the large
federal programs that help conserve mammals, birds, and finned fish.
The
voluntary fund doesn’t draw in much money. For fiscal 2024, contributions
totaled $15,095 from 1,840 taxpayers, according to the Rhode Island Department
of Revenue.
It’s
gone toward researching and monitoring amphibians, reptiles, and pollinators,
among other things.
“This is a very small amount” compared to the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management’s total budget of $143.7 million in fiscal 2025, DEM spokesperson Evan LaCross told ecoRI News via email.
Zooming
in on the funding earmarked for wildlife, it still isn’t much. Overall, funding
for non-game wildlife in Rhode Island is dwarfed by game wildlife funding.
Between
federal and state funding, DEM’s budget includes less than a million dollars
total for non-game species, compared to nearly $13 million from federal
wildlife and sports fishing restoration programs and state matches that
supports game species, according to budget information provided by LaCross.
The
bulk of the funding for non-game species in Rhode Island comes from the
federal State Wildlife Grant,
which totaled $590,205 last year and required a 35% match from the state.
Amanda
Freitas, DEM’s Rhode Island Wildlife Action
Plan community liaison, whose work is a collaborative project
between the department and the Rhode Island Natural History Survey (RINHS),
said she really only uses the “game” and “non-game” terminology when referring
to funding.
It’s
easier to describe the federal funding from the State Wildlife Grant, which
supports much of her work, as some of the least restrictive of the federal
funding for wildlife Rhode Island receives.
In
her work, she is focused on the species of greatest concern that could benefit
from conservation, which are listed in the state’s Wildlife Action Plan and
include some “game” species, too.
Historically,
wildlife conservation in the United States focused on species that people
hunted and fished. Fees on licenses and taxes on gear for these activities
contributed to funding for that type of wildlife.
In
2005, the State Wildlife Grant program began distributing money to Rhode
Island.
“That
was the first time that reptiles, amphibians, invertebrates, in particular,
could receive conservation dollars before they were in that metaphorical
emergency room,” Freitas said.
Before
that, those species only received funding directly if the federal government
placed them on the endangered species list.
State
Wildlife Grant money funds both habitat conservation and research, but it pales
in comparison to the resources out there for game species.
“For
the species that don’t have a hunting season or a fishing season, and a real
impetus in that respect, to get a good handle on their numbers and how they’re
doing … there isn’t a lot of funding necessarily, to go and find that
information,” Freitas said.
For
example, when scientists started to see white-nose syndrome in bats,
the lack of historical data made addressing the problem a challenge.
“When
we started losing bats, we didn’t really know, like, how many we started with,”
she said.
With
more money, and thus more research, there could be better understanding of how
to do conservation work.
There
have been some efforts to tax hiking gear to fund or allocate increased
appropriations on the federal level for those species, but Freitas said those
efforts haven’t been successful.
Although
there is room for change, the current model, with emphasis on hunting and
fishing species, has done a lot of good and will continue to do so, Freitas
said, even positively impacting the species it isn’t directly protecting.
“It’s
not exactly a problem, it’s a puzzle,” David Gregg, RINHS executive director,
said. RINHS took on the state’s rare species program in 2003, cataloging which
wildlife needs conservation help and where.
Gregg
explained that there’s often a struggle to find matching funds or creative ways
to push how much money can go to different programs because of how funding is
structured or restricted.
When
it comes to using game dollars to fund habitat preservation, the non-game
species can often benefit, too.
Still,
the funding, especially coming from the state, remains an issue, he said. “The
story is that there’s not much.”