2008 Update from the New York State Assembly Rural Resources Commission | |||
|
|||
268 Fairport Village Landing, Fairport, NY 14450 • 585.223.9130 Room 643 LOB, Albany, NY 12248 • 518.455.5784 |
Green Collar Jobs For New York |
||
There were several key points brought out by program participants. Many of the jobs in the green economy will require technical training and trade skills, yet students, parents, and the general workforce population don’t know how well jobs such as electricians, auto mechanics, and plumbers pay:
There is a shortage of skilled green collar employees.
Looking forward, the roundtable participants anticipated the February release of the Governor’s Task Force on Renewable Energy Development and its roadmap for greening New York’s energy supply and our economy and workforce. The Task Force issued seven recommendations, which included the following strategies:
|
Rural Resources Commission Legislation |
||
2007 Legislation Signed into Law
Chapter 297 A.7125/S.3234 (Koon) Cluster Based
Industry Matching Grants. 2008 Legislation Signed into Law
Chapter 87 A.6645/S.3228 (Koon) Election of a Single
Town Justice.
Chapter 165 A.4683/S.3236 (Koon) 2008 Legislation Passed Senate and Assembly
A.10201-B/S.7124-B (Lifton/Koon) New York State Center for Rural
Schools. 2008 Legislation Passed by the Assembly
A.10169-A (Koon) Agriculture District Notification.
A.10465-A (Lifton/Koon) Long Term Care Worker Training Program. |
Preventing Timber Theft In New York |
||
New York’s timber resources provide employment for over 50,000 people statewide and the value of harvested wood is over $300 million annually. As the price of wood products increase the temptation to illegally steal timber from isolated woodlots also rises. In 2007, sixteen organizations, including the New York Society of American Foresters, New York Forest Owners Association, NYS Department of Environmental Conservation, Audubon New York, New York Timber Producers, and the Empire State Forest Producers Association issued a report which documented that timber theft continues to be a significant problem. The report explored the cost to timber landowners and offered suggestions to curb timber theft, with a focus on shared responsibility between the landowners, the wood products industry and law enforcement. Moreover, several recent high profile news media accounts of timber theft from New York State and all over the country also point to a continued problem. The Rural Resources Commission has sponsored state timber theft laws that have been beneficial and well received by the public, industry and government officials, but the thefts are still occurring. In April, in response to requests from the leaders of several different organizations, the Commission sponsored a forum on fighting timber theft with a focus on potential updates to previous efforts to combat this problem in New York. The forum participants put forth recommendations for further action and responsibilities from the different groups who share responsibility for helping combat timber theft, including landowners, loggers, mill operators, law enforcement and the judiciary. Suggested landowner responsibilities centered on proper boundary identification, use of sound contracts, guidance from professional foresters and knowing what is happening on surrounding lands. Suggested logger responsibilities included knowing the boundaries of the land they are logging, keeping good records of the timber they logged and working to eliminate those in the industry who steal timber. It was also suggested that mills should know the source of any logs purchased while refusing to deal with known thieves, and that law enforcement and judicial personnel need a far better understanding of the wood products industry and must make enforcement of existing timber theft laws a much higher priority. The Commission plans to continue this dialogue with the timber industry and law enforcement to identify specific proposals that the state could take to reduce this problem. We are exploring other states’ initiatives such as licensing loggers, requiring paperwork or affidavits from both sellers and purchasers, and better publicizing both the problem and what can be done when timber is stolen. |
New York State Assembly [ Welcome Page ] [ Committee Updates ] |