Beautification task force talks TOKA app success, cleanups, stray animals Jackson Stephens The TOKA app, which serves as a link between the public and local conservation officers, received six verifiable reports that led to one arrest since June 1, officials announced at an Islandwide Beautification Task Force meeting Tuesday. Reports were made concerning suspicious activity in marine preserves, along with notifications that trash needed to be picked up from receptacles in Tumon, said Chelsa Muna-Brecht, director of the Guam Department of Agriculture. “The app serves the purpose of providing a direct digital connection to our conservation officers and it allows the user to also provide photographs so they can take a picture of whatever they are seeing they find questionable,” Muna-Brecht said.