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Program Assessment
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Program
View Assessment Details
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Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program
The purpose of Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program (WHIP) is to create and improve wildlife habitat. WHIP activities include developing upland wildlife habitat; restoring wetland wildlife habitat; and enhancing habitat for priority, declining, or threatened and endangered species.
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Rating
What This Rating Means |
PERFORMING Adequate
This rating describes a program that needs to set more ambitious goals, achieve better results, improve accountability or strengthen its management practices.
- The Natural Resources Conservation Service has improved its management of WHIP. Since WHIP was first assessed in 2002, it has: (1) adopted recommendations issued by internal and external oversight teams; (2) created new allocation and performance incentive formulas; and (3) instituted new software to track program activities and evaluate and rank applications.
- The program has developed long-term and annual outcome-oriented performance measures for the program. WHIP has made progress in meeting its annual targets and its long-term performance goal of improving habitat for prioritized species.
- WHIP overlaps with other Federal, state, and private wildlife habitat restoration and creation programs. WHIP's efforts to target Federal trust species is a duplication of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's programs.
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Improvement Plan
About Improvement Plans |
We are taking the following actions to improve the performance of the program:
- Developing a National WHIP Plan to identify key priority species and habitats.
- Improving WHIP management by identifying national program priorities, standardizing the application selection and ranking process, and conducting an independent review of the allocation formula.
- Emphasizing performance in WHIP national guidance and allocation process to ensure conservation practices are installed as planned on a timely basis and priority species and habitats are targeted.
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