Common Evaluation Criteria
Several criteria are common across most or all the 24 project types. The following information provides additional detail on these fields and how they are evaluated.
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For category specific criteria click on the below links.
Habitat Projects Specific Criteria
Species Projects Specific Criteria
Education Projects Specific Criteria
Other Options Projects Specific Criteria
Regulatory Requirements
WHC recognizes voluntary efforts, and all projects must exceed any relevant regulatory requirements. For projects that relate to regulatory requirements (e.g., a mitigation wetland), the applicant must explain how they exceed that requirement. For example, if 5 acres were required for mitigation and 6 acres were created, this would exceed that regulatory requirement for the Wetland project. Many projects will not have any associated regulatory requirements, if this is the case the project meets this criterion because the project is entirely voluntary.
Project Start Day
Projects must have been implemented or “on-the-ground” long enough to have a measurable impact to be qualifying. A project is considered “on-the-ground” when active management/monitoring began.
The project start date is used to evaluate the duration of ongoing projects. New projects are evaluated based on a combination of the listed project start date and other information and documentation provided in the application to ensure the project has been on the ground long enough to qualify.
The requirement for how long a project must be on the ground for a specific project type can be found in the corresponding Scoring Rubric. For planning purposes, applicants are encouraged to consider a full year as a good rule of thumb for the time a project should be on-the-ground to ensure the project will meet this criterion.
Conservation or Conservation Education Objective
A conservation or conservation education objective outlines what the end goal of the project is. Revisiting an established objective over time can help ensure that a project remains on track to accomplish the desired goal.
Employee and Other Participant Involvement
Hours of Involvement
Jane and Jason lead a one-hour training for 10 other staff members about managing for an invasive plant. Jane and Jason would list 2 hours for their training project (1 hour each for leading the training). The employees who received the training would not be included in the hours recorded as they were not planning or implementing the training project, they were recipients of the training. Since the activity was a teaching/learning activity and no actual actions or planning for invasive species management was occurring, Jane and Jason’s two hours would not also be listed under an invasive species project.
Calculating Hour Averages
Depth of Engagement
- Indicators of one-off or irregular involvement include mentions of a specific event or day
- Indicators of regular involvement in implementation include mentions of participation in doing work needed for the project to function such as management, monitoring, teaching, etc.
- Indicators of regular involvement in long term planning include mentions of team meetings to assess the project, annual project planning, etc.
Technical Advice
Corporate Commitment
Projects may be part of of a corporate initiative or commitment to that specific project type. Corporate level commitments that specify a project-level focus are uncommon among applicants. If there is such a commitment (such as a corporate level commitment to grassland habitats) documentation is required to demonstrate the formalized commitment.
Alignment with Large Scale Initiatives
For Habitat Projects: A southeastern grassland conservation initiative
For Species Projects: A shorebird conservation initiative
For Education Projects: Relevance to conservation or education plans
Third Party Certification
In order to earn points for third-party certification it must be:
- Project type specific
A forest project has a general habitat certification. This does NOT meet the requirement.
- Requirements and/or evaluation criteria are publicly available
- Some form of verification (documentation or audit)
- Applicants are not guaranteed to receive certification just for applying (not all applications are successful)
- There is a renewal aspect (certification is not awarded on a permanent basis)
Scoring Invalid Projects
- Greenhouses as habitat projects
- Species structures (nest boxes, platforms, brush piles) as habitat projects
- Stream or trash clean ups as remediation projects
- Education projects with topics/content not relevant to habitat/species conservation (i.e., geology, recycling, etc.)
Project Mapping
- If the project focuses on management/monitoring of vegetation à habitat project
- If the project focuses on management/monitoring of wildlife à species project
- If the project focuses on informing an audience & evaluating the learners or event à education project
Project Overlap
- If the project focuses on management/monitoring of vegetation à habitat project
- If the project focuses on management/monitoring of wildlife à species project
- If the project focuses on informing an audience & evaluating the learners or event à education project