Wisconsin's Assessment of Needs (AON)

The Wisconsin AON is the primary program implementation document for the State, as required by the USFS.  The intent of the AON is to provide background information in the form of a natural resource primer that supports, reveals, or highlights forested areas in the state that could or should be protected.  This document also provides justification for focusing protection efforts on those areas identified as environmentally importation, threatened by conversion and having the most long-term benefits from being protected.  The ultimate goal of the document is to delineate Forest Legacy Areas (link to FLA main page) for approval by the Secretary of Agriculture.

The USFS requires that state to conduct an AON, in cooperation with the SFSCC (link), to document the state’s inclusion in the Forest Legacy Program.  The AON contains an evaluation of current forests, forest uses, and the trends and forces causing conversion to nonforest uses.  Within this document, the state is able to define eligibility criteria (link?) to be used in the identification of the important forest areas to be proposed as a Forest Legacy Areal determine through analysis what defines “threatened” and “environmentally important forest”; and outline the state’s project evaluation and prioritization procedures.  The AON must be developed in consultation with SFSCC and approved by the Wisconsin DNR, the state lead agency.

Public Involvement
The USFS requires States joining the Forest Legacy Program to gather public input on the program.  The public input process is an opportunity to identify potential project partners, to define Forest Legacy Areas (FLAs), and to obtain public support for land conservation and Forest Legacy Program (FLP).  The information gathered in the public involvement process was used to develop the Wisconsin Assessment of Needs (Link) which guides the State’s Forest Legacy Program. 

 


Last Revised: Friday April 24 2009