| Senator
Andrew Roraback (R-30) today secured Senate passage of a bill
he first proposed three years ago to ban the purchase and
sale of harmful invasive aquatic plants and to create an Invasive
Plants Council to educate state residents about the problems
associated with invasive aquatic and land-based plants.
“I
have to thank Tom McGowan of the Lake Waramaug Task Force
for bringing this idea to me three years ago. Invasive plants
are choking our lakes and ponds, and this bill will go a
long way toward avoiding future degradation,” said
Senator Roraback.
“Establishing
this council of experts is the first step toward protecting
the state’s environment from plants that may appear
harmless and even attractive, but when left unchecked can
cause a great deal of harm by overrunning native and beneficial
plant species,” he added.
The legislation
is now awaiting further action by the House of Representatives,
Specifically,
the bill calls for appointing several plant experts to the
Invasive Plants Council that, in addition to educating the
general public, merchants and consumers about the problems
associated with invasive plants, would recommend ways to
control and abate the spread of these plants, as well as
work with state agencies researching invasive plants and
developing new, beneficial, varieties of plants. Furthermore,
the council may recommend that the legislature act to ban
the purchase and sale of specific invasive plants in the
state. And, the bill lists several aquatic invasive plants
that can no longer be sold, purchased, distributed, cultivated
or possessed in Connecticut. It also prohibits the state
from using invasive plants for its own landscaping needs.
“We are
a state of gardeners, and the experts appointed to the Invasive
Plants Council will be very careful about designating plants
as invasive. That is why educating the public about the
dangers of these harmful plants is so important. Under this
legislation, plants designated as invasive must meet very
specific criteria, such as not being indigenous to the state,
having the biological potential for widespread dispersion,
and is able to out-compete other species in the natural
plant community. Before adding a plant to the invasive plants
list, the council may hold a public hearing. When a plant
is designated as invasive, the council may recommend ways
to discourage their sale and suggest alternative plants
that state residents could grow instead,” said Senator
Roraback. |