The 2011 IPM Innovators Awards

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The 2011 Awardees are:


City of Palo Alto

DPR initially honored Palo Alto with an Innovator Award in 2003 for its citywide adoption of IPM policies and progressive practices. Palo Alto is being recognized with a second award for greatly expanding its reduced-risk pest management practices to protect water quality, minimize pesticide use and apply least-toxic products when pesticides are truly needed.

The many accomplishments of the city's parks, golf, public works and open space staff include reducing pesticide use by 45 percent from 2005; designating 12 parks and facilities as pesticide free; switching to trapping instead of poison baits for gopher and other rodent control; power-washing trees to remove tussock moth egg sacks; and extensive efforts to protect bee hives by relocating them when necessary and feasible instead of destroying them.

The city uses no spray insecticides on any property - these insecticides are the primary contributor to urban creek toxicity throughout the state. Palo Alto also was the first agency to require EcoWise certification for its structural pest control contractors - a requirement that sets rigorous standards to reduce environmental and human health toxicity.

More information, including annual IPM reports, is available on the city's website, or by contacting Julie Weiss, environmental specialist, by email or 650/329-2117.


Gallo's Sonoma Vineyards

Gallo has a long history of IPM practices in the California winegrape industry, and Gallo's seven vineyards in Sonoma County exemplify this leadership. Gallo strives to stay on the cutting edge of environmental sustainability practices by minimizing pesticide use and exceeding application requirements to protect worker safety.

Gallo is continuously reassessing its pest management practices to reduce pesticide use, runoff and environmental effects. For example, Gallo has converted to double-row spray rigs to reduce to a single pass of herbicide in the vineyard. The company provides funding and support for pocket gopher studies on its Laguna Ranch.

Other examples include using falcons for starling prevention, and integrated Pierce's disease management and removal plans. Prevention practices include installation of owl boxes and raptor perches for rodent control, and the release of predacious mites.

More information is available at www.gallo.com or by contacting Susan Hensley by email or 209/341-5281.


Marin County Integrated Pest Management Program

Marin County adopted an IPM policy in 1983, followed in 1998 with an IPM ordinance establishing an IPM Commission and IPM coordinator and a requirement that all county departments comply with IPM standards. This strong commitment has helped reduce pesticide use on Marin County owned, managed or leased property by 90 percent in the last 10 years.

The IPM program uses a wide range of practices to reduce pesticide use, including: beneficial insects; owl boxes and traps for rodent control; honey to attract skunks to dig up yellow jacket nests; coyote replicas to scare off geese; volunteers to hand weed and mulch for weed control; and replacement of landscape plants that attract pests with drought tolerant, native plants. The program also conducts flame trials for weed management and applies mint oil, clove oil and other least-toxic products when pesticides are needed.

The program maintains a comprehensive website with detailed records of all IPM activities, including both chemical and non-chemical management, and a list of allowed pesticides.

More information is available at www.marinparks.org/Depts/PK.aspx or by contacting Ed Hulme, superintendent of the program's parks and landscape, by email or 415/499-6531.


Sunwest Fruit Company

Sunwest Fruit Company, a privately owned grower/packer/shipper of stone fruit and citrus based in Parlier, uses a variety of innovative IPM practices. The company grew the first citrus and stone fruit certified by Protected Harvest, a nonprofit organization that promotes sustainable agricultural practices, and sold under Zeal, an eco-label targeting socially and environmentally conscious consumers.

Sunwest has eliminated the use of simazine, diuron and other herbicides known to contaminate ground and surface water. It allows native vegetation to grow between trees, which reduces erosion and soil compaction and increases organic matter in the soil. Other practices include modifying tractors and adding enclosed cabs with carbon air filters to reduce applicator exposure and provide a safer, more comfortable work environment.

The company traps red scale insects, tracks their populations with global positioning system mapping and partnered with Agrian, a Fresno-based software firm, to develop an iPad application to capture the data. It uses pheromone disruption for pests in stone fruit using dispensers known as puffers and installed bio-filters in the Tivy Creek watershed to filter runoff and prevent pesticides and other pollutants from entering the creek.

Sunwest and its partner, Fresh Sense, received an Innovator Award in 2008 for building the market for sustainably produced fruit and motivating growers to adopt more environmentally friendly pest management practices. Sunwest is being recognized this time for its individual contributions to reduce pesticide use. More information is available at www.sunwestfruit.com or by contacting Greg Thonesen, ranch manager, by email or 559/318-0280.


If you would like to find out more about IPM, our IPM Innovators, or the IPM Innovators Program, you can contact:

For content questions, contact:
Michelle Andreetta
1001 I Street, P.O. Box 4015
Sacramento, CA 95812-4015
Phone: (916) 324-4245
E-mail: school-ipm@cdpr.ca.gov