The
Tallgrass Legacy Alliance began in 1999 when Kansas Partners
for Fish and Wildlife biologists began to "think big,
think ecosystems." This came at a time when
the Kansas Partners Program was just finishing a needs
assessment of the state's various habitats, done primarily
through The Nature Conservancy and Kansas Biological Survey.
The
assessment showed clearly that all of the resource issues
and environmental needs facing Kansas, one stood bodly
forward--the TALLGRASS PRAIRIE. Only
4% of North America's presettlement tallgrass prairie survives
to this day, and 80% is located in Kansas.
Many
issues threaten the tallgrass prairie landscape, and it
was clear to those involved that something needed to be
done. This something turned out to be the Tallgrass
Legacy Alliance (TLA). The TLA was initiated as a
partnership effort among local ranchers, agricultural and
conservation organizations, and representatives from state
and federal agencies including key initial support by the
Kansas Partners for Fish and Wildlife Program. Yet
credit for the success of the initiative needs to be given
to the ranching families that have so willingly allowed
the Partners Program into their homes and their lives. A
level of trust that could surely be called "friendship" is
what drives the TLA.
The
TLA is proving to be a vehicle with which ideas and funding
sources can get directly on the ground, taking concepts
and dreams and turning them into habitat improvements. TLA's
philosophy is, "If we are to save the Kansas tallgrass
prairie, the first step will be to keep the ranchers on
the landscape: everything else becomes secondary."
Agencies,
individuals and organizations such as the Kansas Livestock
Association, Kansas Farm Bureau, The Nature Conservancy,
Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks, Wildlife Management
Institute, and numerous others have all agreed that when
they walk in the door to a TLA meeting, hats, egos and
titles are hung at the door. All opinions are treated
equally. The group agreed to discard those issues
that appear to be unsolvable and work positively on those
that appear solvable.
Goals
are beginning to blend into reality. Collectively,
our goal is to do whatever possible to fiscally, socially
and environmentally to preserve the ranching communities
of Kansas. |