1. Walk the rights of way, mapping features that will need special accommodations, such as waterways, forests, native species and wildlife habitats. 2. Consult stakeholders and learn their concerns and needs for vegetation management in the area. 3. Determine which plant and brush species should be controlled and which you want to foster. 4. Consider aesthetics, knowing where and when parts of the right of way will be most visible, then time your control measures appropriately. For example, don’t apply a broad-spectrum herbicide along an interstate highway two weeks before a major traveling holiday.5. Use a multistep control program in areas where achieving ultimate control may be too severe a change if done all at once. 6. Set realistic thresholds, based on the specific area. Stating that no plant will be allowed to grow taller than 6 feet, for instance, might be too restrictive and impractical.