Appleton, A. F.2016-04-192016-04-192002Presented at the WWF Workshop: The Prospects of PES in Europe, Sofia, Bulgaria, 19-20 October 20052413_pes_in_newyork.pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10919/66907This presentation by Al Appleton, former New York City Commissioner of Water and Environment, discusses his experience setting up payment schemes for farmers in the Catskill Mountains that have not only safeguarded New York City's water supply (saving an estimated 5 billion USD investment in a water treatment facility), but also helped preserve rural farming communities. He describes in detail the challenges faced in the process and the innovations they developed to overcome them. The conclusion provides lessons learned from the experience and key criteria for developing ecosystem service strategies in other locales.application/pdfen-USIn CopyrightRural developmentStakeholdersWater purificationCommunity institutionsWater managementConflict resolutionUrban planningResource lawPayments for environmental servicesGovernment policySurface waterEnvironmental servicesPollution controlWater qualityWatershed managementRural planningNew york cityEcosystem servicesDrinking waterWatershed protectionFiltrationThe catskillsRural landscapesUrban rural partnershipWhole farm planningGovernance WatershedHow New York City used an ecosystem services strategy carried out through an urban-rural partnership to preserve the pristine quality of its drinking water and save billions of dollars and What lessons it teaches about using ecosystem servicesPresentation