The partners of the Lower Hudson Partnership for Regional Invasive Species Management (PRISM) are groups, organizations, institutions, agencies, or individuals involved with invasive species in the Lower Hudson region. Partners may be involved in education or outreach about invasive species, management of invasive species, surveying and mapping of invasive species, or researching invasive species.
LH PRISM Partnership Structure and Function
The LH PRISM is supported by three full-time staff: a Terrestrial Invasive Species Coordinator, an Education and Outreach Coordinator, and a Lead Coordinator who are housed within the Trail Conference. The LH PRISM staff seek to engage the Lower Hudson PRISM network in a democratic, collaborative process to develop region-wide priorities for invasive species and to find efficient ways to implement those priorities on-the-ground. Over the past ten years, the LH PRISM partnership has expanded to include 59 individuals and organizations. LH PRISM partners include nonprofits, educational institutions, private businesses, government organizations and state agencies, land trusts and dedicated community members. We have focused on engaging partners with diverse experiences, backgrounds and viewpoints and have strategically recruited partners to ensure geographic representation within the Lower Hudson PRISM region. Having such a wide range in partners allows us to consider more perspectives and develop more robust management guidance.
The Steering Committee is a governing body for the LH PRISM elected by all current partners. Six elected members serve on the LH PRISM Steering Committee for 3-year terms; the LH PRISM Lead Coordinator is also an ex-officio member of the committee. The Steering Committee meets several times a year and supports the LH PRISM staff and partners with strategic advice on conservation-based practices, development of annual work plans, and partner outreach and coordination. They also assist in coordinating other major joint initiatives across the partnership as needed. In addition, the Steering Committee reviews and ranks proposals submitted by partners and engaged stakeholders in the region to conduct invasive species projects that implement LH PRISM’s Strategic Plan. The most highly ranked projects are then forwarded to the NYSDEC for final approval.
Sharing information about best management practices, challenges, and successes among partners, state agencies, and other stakeholders is critical to collective progress in invasive species work. Outside of regular partner and Steering Committee meetings, ad hoc working groups perform a significant portion of the PRISM’s strategy and planning work. These working groups include partners and non-partner participants who express interest in working on a specific topic, guided by the PRISM Coordinator. Recent working groups include Education and Outreach, Species Categorization/Tier System, Aquatic Invasive Species, and Forest Pest and Pathogens. The working groups increase the capacity of the PRISM staff and have served as important collaborative tools that scale up to statewide/cross-PRISM working groups such as those for Education and Outreach, Terrestrial Coordination, and Aquatics Coordination.
Lower Hudson PRISM Partners as of April 1, 2024
• Bedford Audubon Society
• Black Rock Forest Consortium
• Botanical Solutions
• Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies
• Clarkson University / Beacon Institute for Rivers & Estuaries
• Constitution Marsh Audubon Center & Sanctuary
• Cornell Cooperative Extension – Dutchess County
• Cornell Cooperative Extension – Putnam County
• Cornell Cooperative Extension – Rockland County
• Cornell Cooperative Extension – Westchester County
• Walt Daniels
• Dutchess County Parks
• Dutchess Land Conservancy
• Ecological Research Institute
• Fat & Sassy Goats, LLC
• Friends of Rye Nature Center
• Friends of the Great Swamp
• Don Gabel
• Gunks Climbers Coalition
• Greenburgh Nature Center
• Simon Gruber
• Hammond Museum & Japanese Stroll Garden
• Hudson Highlands Land Trust
• Hudsonia
• Jay Heritage Center
• Little Bear Environmental Consulting
• Louis Calder Center – Fordham University
• Manitoga
• Mianus River Gorge, Inc.
• Mohonk Preserve
• New York City Department of Environmental Protection
• New York City Department of Parks & Recreation
• New York-New Jersey Trail Conference
• North Salem Open Land Foundation
• NYS Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation – NYC Region
• Pace University
• Scenic Hudson, Inc.
• SOLitude Lake Management
• Glenn Sungela
• Teatown Lake Reservation
• Terrapin Tree Care
• The Bronx River Parkway Reservation Conservancy
• The Fresh Air Fund / Sharpe Reservation
• The Friends of the Old Croton Aqueduct
• The Invasives Project – Pound Ridge
• The Native Plant Center
• The New York Botanical Garden
• The New York Restoration Project
• The Pound Ridge Land Conservancy Inc.
• Three Arrows Cooperative
• Trillium Invasive Species Management, Inc.
• Van Cortlandt Park Alliance
• Vassar College
• Village of Tuxedo Park
• Wallkill Valley Land Trust
• Westchester County Parks, Recreation, Conservation
• Westchester Land Trust
• Westchester Parks Foundation
• Winnakee Land Trust