RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Attitudes toward and adoption of roadside revegetation using native plants by departments of transportation in New England states JF Native Plants Journal JO NATIVE PLANTS JOURNAL FD University of Wisconsin Press SP 31 OP 46 DO 10.3368/npj.20.1.31 VO 20 IS 1 A1 John Campanelli A1 Yulia A Kuzovkina A1 Robert M Ricard A1 Cristian P Schulthess YR 2019 UL http://npj.uwpress.org/content/20/1/31.abstract AB Recent federal policy changes mandate the establishment of native plant communities along roadsides and the utilization of roadsides and other federal lands to benefit pollinator health. State departments of transportation (DOTs) have faced significant barriers, however, when attempting to transition from the traditional protocol of using introduced cool-season turf grass to revegetate roadsides to implementing new, more complicated management practices required to establish native plant communities. This study used focus groups to help our research team anticipate the challenges New England state DOT managers would confront before our team authored a manual that would guide efforts to transform roadside revegetation practices. Two-and-a-half years following publication of the manual, we used online and written surveys of these DOT managers to determine the progress they made in implementing new protocols and the hurdles they encountered. We projected that the challenges would fall into 3 overarching areas: a) concerns about existing private subcontracting systems used for post-construction roadside revegetation; b) the need to educate employees on the benefits of transitioning to revegetation using native plants; and c) lack of funding for exploring and developing new methods and practices. Ultimately, our follow-up surveys clearly reveal that the greatest obstacle to transitioning to the use of native plants for roadside revegetation involves funding, which remains insuļ¬ƒcient in an era of chronically stressed government budgets.