Across the country, airports are facing challenges forced upon them by wildlife such as deer and eagles. Last January the issue was thrust into the national spotlight when a plane landed in the Hudson River and airport managers are finding an increasingly large number of animals crossing onto their airport runways.
Throughout the year, L.R. Kimball will be sharing our expertise in wildlife management with webinars and whitepapers. This week, we will be kicking off this series with a webinar about wildlife hazard issues. We will address how wildlife strikes affect airports, what you can do if you have a strike, and the components of assessments and management plans.
Visit our website to learn more about L.R. Kimball’s wildlife hazard assessment services.
In this week's session, participants will learn about:
- Regulations surrounding wildlife strikes and trigger events
- Why Wildlife Hazard Assessments (WHA) are important
- Overview of the WHA process and final reports
- Components of a Wildlife Hazard Management Plan (WHMP)
Tune in for 30 - 45 minutes of information that you can use in your organization. Best of it, it's free and all you need is a computer to attend!
When: Wednesday, February 17 at 11:00 AM EST
Where: From the comfort of your own office

Hi Folks,
We are in the process of getting our past webinars recorded and archived on our website. Please check back- we hope to have this done soon. Thank you for your interest and let us know if we can help you in any other way!
Posted by: L.R. Kimball | March 31, 2010 at 02:45 PM
i am a nigerian working as hazard control officer in one of nigeria airports,haven been trained both local and abroad i still wish to be posted with latest method of wildlife hazard assesssment all ends.i will appreciate if could send me any latest reseach on this program.you guys are doing wonderfully well please keep me posted becouse i want to be part of progress.
Posted by: aiyeola adekunle bashiru | March 30, 2010 at 02:38 AM
Hi
I missed you webinar. Any chance that you will be posting it on your website for those of use who did not know about it on time?
Posted by: G. Searing | March 28, 2010 at 12:26 PM