Showing posts with label bamboo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bamboo. Show all posts

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Bamboo Wars - An Act Regulating the Planting and Sale of Running Bamboo


AN ACT REGULATING THE PLANTING AND SALE OF RUNNING BAMBOO.


               The Bamboo Wars continued today in Connecticut, a state that has been trying to mitigate the damage of certain plants since at least 1726 (Connecticut keeps trying to ban plants Invasive Notes (2010))  Today the Connecticut House of Representatives voted (130 yea; 3 nay; 17 absent according to a source involved in the creation and support of the legislation) to concur with a Senate bill that makes it possible for a landowner faced with unwanted incursions of a neighboring planting of certain bamboo species liable for the cost of making the aggrieved property owner whole. A property owner subjected to uncontrolled growth of running bamboo from a neighboring property will have means to recover costs incurred by the removal and mitigation of the plant. The point of the bill is to place the burden of the cost of damages to an uninfested property onto the shoulders and pocketbook of the person who chose to plant running bamboo and let it run unfettered.

               The mission of the landowners who are faced with the rampant spread of running bamboo is to place the cost of control back onto the original planter rather than the receiver. Traditionally unsuspecting neighbors were condemned to pay for the control of a plant they never asked for and most certainly never planted. Historically people turned to plant bans which while perhaps reducing future establishment through intentional introductions, did little to relieve the costs for those stuck with the externalization of the cost of management by those who found reason to plant running bamboo in the first place. The result in a few cases has led to a form of terrorism by bamboo, and expensive control costs in most cases.

               The specific species behind the Bamboo Wars in Connecticut is Phyllostachys aureosulcata McClure (1945) affecting primarily cities, suburbs, home gardens and their surrounding areas,The species can damage sidewalks and driveways, destroy swimming pools, invades septic systems, establish in turf and lawns, and shade out other vegetation (Rickel, 2012). Multiple townships have established ordinances restricting the planting and growth of running bamboos, and many of those specifically target Phyllostachys spp. (e.g.,Brookhaven NY, 2012; West Bradford PA, 2011). The species forms monocultures (Ward, 2011) which changes community structure in natural areas.(USDA APHIS 2012).








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Sunday, December 23, 2012

Some bamboos run into legal barriers - legislative updates - a wicked inconvenience


                                         
The noxious, invasive in some places invasive bamboo wars continue to grow and spread. In some sense they are 'popping up' as fast as the plant they have identified as their number one here and now enemy of the personal good.

The local weed warriors are challenged because their needs are not obvious to the disinterested rest of us, and because recent history has made an artificial division between agriculture's noxious weeds and ecology's invasive species. To the beleaguered property owner it is all the same destructive incursion and infestations that deny them the use of their property.  

Local and state government are slow to act because they count voted and so far the documented infestations of problematic bamboo are dwarfed by species such as mile-a-minutebuffelgrass, tamarisk and kudzu, and because the invaded properties do not yet equal a constituency that can sway elections - mostly because it is fragmented and divided as to particular species of concern or method of control. 

Who should pay to clean up the mess is the large elephant in our national political discussion from guns to energy, bamboo to atmospheric gas ratios, we have met the enemy and it is us. We do not want to pay for what we throw over our garden fences whether at the scale of an individual, a corporation or a nation-state.

We face a wicked inconvenience - plants that seem to misbehave are symptoms of our own unwillingness to take responsibility for our own actions. 
        


UPDATED 12-16- 2012                                                                                  INSTITUTE OF INVASIVE  BAMBOO  RESEARCH
Delaware:
1. Dover, DE                                                                                             Bamboo Ban http://bugwood.blogspot.com/2012/07/invasive-bamboo-outlawed-in-dover.html
2.Smyrna, DE                                                                                          10 foot set back http://search.municode.com/html/12853/level3/PTIITOCO_CH74VE_ARTIVBA.html
3.Lewis Park   Newark, DE                                                                    Bamboo Ban – destroying tennis court  http://www.cityofnewarkde.us/archives/61/Bamboo%20Removal_with%20photos.pdf

New York:
4.Hempstead, NY                                                                                   Bamboo Ban                                                                             http://elmontcivic.com/index.php/town-news/351-hempstead-town-adopts-legislation-to-ban-invasive-bamboo-on-local-properties
5.Brookhaven, NY                                                                                  Bamboo Ban                                                                     http://www.newsday.com/long-island/nassau/bamboo-ban-plans-reach-long-beach-brookhaven-1.3846701
6. Smithtown, NY                                                                                   10 foot set back                                                              http://ecode360.com/15100285?highlight=bamboo#15100285
7. Village of Branch, NY                                                                        10 foot set back                                                              http://villageofthebranch.homestead.com/bamboo.html
8. Saltaire, NY                                                                                         Bamboo Ban                                                                 http://www.saltaire.org/bamboo.pdf
9. Greenport Village, NY                                                                       Bamboo Ban                                                            http://suffolktimes.timesreview.com/2012/06/32943/greenport-village-considers-a-bamboo-ban/
10.Oyster Bay, NY                                                                                                                                                                 http://oysterbay.going.com/articles/tell-us-bamboo-epidemic-in-tobay-7b2ccb97
11.Long Beach, NY                                                                                                                                                                      http://longbeach.patch.com/groups/editors-picks/p/city-council-votes-to-restrict-bamboo-plantings

12. Woodsburgh, NY                                                                            Bamboo Ban                                             http://www.newsday.com/long-island/nassau/woodsburgh-restricts-bamboo-cats-dogs-1.2819294
13.Babylon Village, NY                                                                         Bamboo Ban         http://www.lilanduseandzoning.com/2012/09/11/several-long-island-municipalities-adopt-bamboo-restrictions/
14.New York *called upon to add to states invasive list               unanimous vote                     http://www.northshoreoflongisland.com/Articles-Opinion-i-2012-09-27-93819.112114-sub-Editorial-Council-should-be-the-panda.html
15. Islip, NY                                                                                            proposed                                                                                  http://sachem.patch.com/articles/islip-notebook-town-looks-to-limit-bamboo-growth
16.Lake Grove, NY                                                                                                                            http://www.northshoreoflongisland.com/Articles-News-i-2012-09-27-93884.112114-sub-Huntington-Town-seeks-state-aid-with-pesky-bamboo-plant.html
17.Huntington, NY                                                                               proposed Dec 18 2012 resolution hearing                                                                                                                         http://www.northshoreoflongisland.com/Articles-News-i-2012-09-27-93884.112114
18. Ocean Beach, Fire Island, NY                                                      Bamboo Ban                                                           http://www.ecode360.com/7717482

New Jersey:
19.Wall, NJ                                                                                                                    http://www.wallnj.com/legal/2012/2012-21.pdf
20. Raritan, NJ                                                                                      proposed                                                                                   http://www.nj.com/hunterdon-county-democrat/index.ssf/2012/10/public_works_superintendent_ba.html
21.Toms River, NJ                                                                                                                               http://tomsriver.patch.com/articles/toms-river-to-crack-down-on-invasive-plants
22.Brick, NJ                                                                                                                                                                               http://brick.patch.com/articles/brick-officials-work-to-curb-invasive-plants                                                                                                                                                       
23.Lacey, NJ                                                                                                                                                             http://lacey.going.com/articles/committee-to-vote-on-wild-plant-ordinance-at-meeting-thursday
24.Lake Como, NJ                                                                                 proposed                                                                   http://haleybehre.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/9-27-bamboo.pdf   
25.Manchester, NJ                                                                                                                                                            http://manchester-nj.patch.com/articles/environmental-commission-considers-invasive-plants-ordinance
26.Long Branch, NJ                                                                                                                 http://www.app.com/videonetwork759857/1823122521001/Homeowner-speaks-about-invasive-bamboo
Pennsylvania:
27. Concord, PA                                                                                       10 foot set back http://delconewsnetwork.com/articles/2012/10/09/garnet_valley_press/news/doc50743effc1905506029621.txt
28.West Bradford, PA                                                                             40 foot set back    http://www.westbradford.org/downloads/2011Ordinances/11-01Bamboo.pdf
29.Rutledge, PA                                                                                       10 foot set back                                      http://www.rutledgepa.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/bamboo-ord-461-dec-2011.pdf
30.Haverford, PA                                                                                                                       http://www.haverfordtownship.com/egov/docs/1317927418_850616.pdf
31.Middletown, PA                                                                         http://www.delcotimes.com/articles/2012/07/26/news/doc5010b9753a0e1332618081.txt
32.Rose Valley, PA                                                                                   proposed                                                                      http://www.rosevalleyborough.org/storage/minutes/rvbmins101012.pdf
33.Montgomery Township, PA                                                             proposed                                                     http://www.thereporteronline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=%2F20121128%2FNEWS01%2F121129591&template=printart
34. Doylestown, PA                                                                                 Bamboo classified Noxious - height 8 inches                                  http://www.doylestownpa.org/Download/Ordinances/No%20%20353.pdf_brush_grass_weeds.pdf

Maryland:
35.Mount Rainier, MD                                                                            Bamboo Ban proposed            
36.Cambridge, MD                                                                                    proposed              http://www.choosecambridge.com/index.php/news/667/208/City-Council-Minutes/
37.College Park, MD                                                                                                         http://www.collegeparkmd.gov/temp/Temp%20Docs/11-O-04.Chapter125.BAMBOO.pdf

Massachusetts:
38.Cambridge, MA                                                                                    proposing possible ban          http://www.wickedlocal.com/cambridge/news/x555035388/Cambridge-City-Council-in-60-seconds#axzz2FP8kh9lR



North Carolina:
39.Carolina Beach, NC                                                                                  proposed                          http://islandgazette.net/news-server5/index.php/news/local-and-state-news/local/16908-carolina-beach-considers-prohibiting-uncontrolled-bamboo-growth

Rhode Island:
40.Nether Providence, RI                                                                             10 foot set  back                   http://www.trulia.com/blog/stephen_sisman/2012/06/a_29

California:
41. Loma Linda, Ca                                                                                        Nuisance abatement                                                                                                                                http://www.lomalinda-ca.gov/asp/admin/CityCouncilDoc/getCDoc.asp?ID=293


               


Sunday, December 09, 2012

Mt Rainier, Maryland, Faces Wickedly Inconvenient Invasive Bamboo Problem

Yellow groove bamboo, Phyllostachys aureosulcata invading a natural area
image by Caryn Rickel, Institute of Invasive Bamboo Research, Bugwood.org


               For each community there comes a time when the invasive impact of a charismatic mega species finally causes an epiphany and an interest in one century of concern takes hold. Most of us are comfortably landscape illiterate and cannot be bothered with an invasive species especially if it is a plant, because most of us identify a plant as a tree or shrub, flower or grass and, then, quickly move on to our morning coffee.  We no longer know the common names, and sure enough cannot deal with the impossible to pronounce alien-exotic sounding names such as Phyllostachysaureoculcata McClure (1945) at any time of the day.

               Mount Rainier, a small town in Prince George's County, Maryland, my county, has found itself under attack from past landscape practices of its own doing, and now wants action and proposes a ban on all invasive plants. The immediacy of the idea obscures the question as to what exactly is an invasive plants, but oppressed homeowners and beleaguered politicians seldom let actual context interfere with well-meaning intentions. The press, of course, does not have the time or resources to actually talk to people who know a little or much about invasive species, but rather focus on factoids that sell news by fanning the flames of simplistic thinking.

               Invasive species issues are seldom, if ever, linear. They are not solved by direct line thinking. Simple solutions like a city ban will not solve the existing problem. This is the wicked inconvenience of invasives. Simple solution will inevitably cause unintended consequences and more problems. Invasive species impacts are wicked problems because they involve many vested interests, ill-defined definitions, limited resources  and short, near term frame of mind goals (interest is lost easily). For example, a land manager invests the money and time to remove a weed from a play ground but does not have a long term plan for what comes next, resulting in a new species quietly establishing because there was no EDRR plan put in place as part of the original plant removal. 

               Mount Rainier has a bamboo problem. Which bamboo exactly is causing the problem? This is a trick question because almost assuredly they have no idea that there are 26 species in the genus. Most likely, they are dealing with one of two possibilities, but what reference are they using to establish that identification. More worrisome is the idea that a ban will solve the problem. A ban will solve tomorrow's neighbors' incursion but today's property owners will still be left with the financial burden of mitigating the damage to get back full use of their land. The real issue is how to make existing property owners whole. Who is responsible for the loss of the use of my land when a neighbor's invasive species jumps the fence?

               There is little doubt that some species of invasives especially certain bamboos can rip part patios, chew through foundations, uproot asphalt, grow through concrete, and otherwise make practicable use of a property impossible for any reason. And these few specific bamboos are not alone in the invasive category  - just ask the Confederacy about kudzu, fire ants and pythons to name a few. It is good to remember that in spite of these facts, bamboo, as of now, mostly impacts managed gardens, properties, and landscapes. Because the term of art invasive species comes out of ecological and natural land management investigations, the labeling of bamboo as 'invasive' causes definitional problems.[1] It would be better, perhaps,  if historically we had not separated the idea of weeds and invasive plants, but we have. The so-called 'running' bamboos are destructive, aggressively harmful,'noxious' landscape weeds that do not fit well into classic invasive species categories especially those that require harm to natural areas and that require seeding pressure (something these bamboos do not do - yet). 

               For over thirty years a generation of dedicated volunteers and professionals has been trying to get the rest of us to notice that we have a problem, but until the problem costs us personally, we do nothing preferring to be ecological ostriches.

               Mount Rainier needs a plan before a law. It needs to put a cutting edge comprehensive program together that involves sustainable landscaping practices (SITES). The town needs an outreach program to its citizens on what the problem is and what they can do about it personally.  The town needs to support through information web sites best management practices for new installation and old landscape maintenance strategies (integrated pest management practices: IPM). The town should be putting together an early detection and rapid response (EDRR) program do ensure they never have this kind of problem again. And finally, Mount Rainier should be advocating for a county-wide policy, for every community is part of an ecosystem, and invasive species issues must be managed holistically at the ecosystem level.



[1] As per Executive Order 13112 an "invasive species" is defined as a species that is:

1) non-native (or alien) to the ecosystem under consideration and

2) whose introduction causes or is likely to cause economic or environmental harm or harm to human health.

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Wicked Inconvenience: Invasive offences or Bamboo Fences

I just finished cherries and do not have the time today for an expose on bamboo. However, this little gem which I picked up from a Mid Atlantic Exotic Pest Plant Council thread quite nicely highlights the wicked problem nature of invasive species, plus the law of unintended consequences. A few months ago, I wrote about Miscanthus; there were a flurry of articles about the use of this species to generate bio-fuels. I seem to recall that one writer noted that we could generate half the state of Illinois’ electric power need if we planted ten percent of the states land acreage in Miscanthus. The story in April 9th Time Magazine is of the same ilk.

Somewhere buried in today's bamboo story, as a solution for your carbon habits, is some science, but as with all wicked problems, what we have here, are co-equal and co-evolving, wicked problems, unitary solutions for which will, have unexpected, unplanned, and unintended causal complications. I wish I had the time to to a cursory bamboo review; perhaps next time, until then, the story, and your thoughts?

26. Plant a bamboo fence
By Maryanne Murray Buechner
Article ToolsPrintEmail Bamboo makes a beautiful fence, and because it grows so quickly (as much as 1 ft. a day or more, depending on the species), it absorbs more CO2 than, say, a rosebush. Most homeowners have to restrict its growth, lest it get out of control. Do this, however, and you reduce bamboo's capacity as a carbon sink. Only large-scale plantings, which absorb CO2 faster than they release it, can favorably tip the scales. How big is your yard?