Huffington Post Video on Taylor Shellfish

While we support Taylor shellfish by eating their products, and it is worth reminding folks that they actively support clean water environmental initiatives, this seems to be part of a larger PR campaign to defang the opposition to the expansion of the shellfish industry in the South Sound.

A 4th Generation Oyster Fisherman, and Early Ties to the Oyster Industry (VIDEO) http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rebecca-gerendasy/a-4th-generation-oyster-f_b_1706782.html

Washington Shellfish At Risk–Crosscut

Last Friday, a State panel met to  come up with  a range of recommendations to the Governor about Ocean Acidification. Here’s the report on their meeting, brought to us by Crosscut. They currently need support, so if you like what you read, think of donating something, anything.

John Stang reports.

http://crosscut.com/2012/07/24/puget-sound/109707/ocean-acidification-ruckelshaus-salish-puget-sound/

Shellfest at Hood Canal’s Potlatch State Park–August 4

More about the event at

The Seattle Times – Shellfest Info

Puget Sound Cleanup Agency gets a new director–Seattle Times

A bit more on Anthony Wright,  the new director of the Puget Sound Partnership. Still holding out to see if he is the right man for the job. He apparently will be participating this week and next in some environmental community meetings of organizations that work with the Partnership. More as it unfolds.

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2018737359_pugetsound21m.html

New Director Aims to Shore Up Puget Sound Agency–NWPR

Is this a positive step forward? Someone who actually comes in saying he’s going to make everyone unhappy in his quest to clean up the Sound and Salish Sea. How successful will he be? If he alienates the environmental wing, who actually goes out and does the bulk of the work on the ground and in the streams, and pisses off the business community who influence people like the Governor, not long I’d say. But I’m willing to give him the benefit of the doubt.

The incoming director of the Partnership is retired Army Corps of Engineers Col. Tony Wright. He has a reputation as a straight shooter who’s not out to please everybody. Before he got this job, he told the Partnership it needed more courage if it wants to save Puget Sound. He says he’s not afraid to "embrace the porcupine." Wright: "My previous job, I frequently tried to make everyone kind of equally unhappy. You can’t solve difficult problems from a distance. You have to get in there, become part of the solution and sometimes you get stuck with quills in the process."  John Ryan reports. http://www.nwpr.org/post/new-director-aims-shore-puget-sound-agency

Discovery of deadly salmon virus in freshwater fish puts pressure on B.C. to conduct wider study–Times Colonist

Just north of us, over the Strait, we are now seeing the spread of the Piscine reovirus (PRV) that has been affecting farmed salmon show up in fresh water trout. Our county commissioners are continuing their standoff with the State on the issue of allowing salmon farms here in our county. 

Discovery of Salmon Virus in Trout

Clean Water Act Primer – Earthfix

Good overview of the law that governs our efforts (in the USA at least)  to restore and protect our most valuable resource.:Drinking water, and the lakes, rivers and seas that are the foundation of life on earth. Clean water and clean air should be something we call can agree on, but maintaining it is where the politics begins. 

http://earthfix.kcts9.org/water/article/a-clean-water-act-primer/

Governor praises Hood Canal mitigation program–Kitsap Sun

The news article that accompanied Chris Dunagan’s blog post. Of specific interest to some of you are the roundup of stats on Puget Sound and the issues involved in cleanup of it.

http://www.kitsapsun.com/news/2012/jul/18/governor-praises-hood-canal-mitigation-program/

Pacific Ocean acid levels jeopardizing marine life–CBC

Interviews with researchers presented on the Canadian Broadcasting Channel highlights that the ocean is growing acidic faster than anyone thought.  No new science is actually presented, but the existing science is highlighted for a lay audience.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/story/2012/07/16/bc-ocean-acidification.html

Clean Water Act’s Anti-Pollution Goals Prove Elusive – Earthfix

Earthfix article on the 40th anniversary of the Clean Water Act. This article highlights how hard it is to achieve these lofty goals.

http://earthfix.opb.org/water/article/anti-pollution-goals-elude-clean-water-act-enforce/

Governor Gregoire tours Hood Canal project, among others

To show progress in Puget Sound recovery, Governor Chris Gregoire today is on her “fishable, swimmable, diggable” tour with Leadership Council chair Martha Kongsgaard, past chair Bill Ruckelshaus and new Partnership director Tony Wright. They’ll be highlighting recovery progress by visiting Hood Canal, Samish Bay and Burien.

http://www.highlinetimes.com/2012/07/17/news/tomorrow-wednesday-gov-gregoire-tour-burien-rain-

Canada funds secondary treatment plant for Victoria – Vancouver Sun

Sorry, I’m being technical here. The real title should be “Victoria is finally cleaning up it’s shit.” It’s about time. Welcome to the 21st Century.

Currently, sewage is sieved through a six-millimetre metal screen before it is piped about a kilometre into the ocean.

http://www.vancouversun.com/news/local/Three+governments+announce+deal+Greater+Victoria+sewage+plant/6941547/story.html

Copper can make salmon vulnerable to predators, UW researcher finds–Kitsap Sun

New research continues to bring in bad news on the copper that runs off our car break lining, and from bottom paint.

Christopher Dunagan reports.   http://www.kitsapsun.com/news/2012/jul/11/copper-can-make-salmon-vulnerable-to-predators/

Chinese Smoke Reaches the Pacific Northwest – Cliff Mass

Cliff Mass did some meteorological investigation into smoke seen in our air. Here’s his conclusion:
Would love to see more work done internationally by our legislators at the Federal level to help address this.

http://cliffmass.blogspot.com/2012/07/asian-smoke-reaches-north-america.html

Governor’s Surprise Pick For New Head of Puget Sound Partnership

From Martha Kongsgaard, the Leadership Chair of the Partnership. This announcement was totally unexpected, and it remains to be seen as to the reasons why. But on it’s surface, putting an ex-Army Corp of Engineers person at the head of the cleanup efforts, at least to this reporter, seems an odd choice and odd timing. Gerry O’Keefe had only recently become the Director, so we assumed he would be in until after the election.

This kind of appointment could have the tendency to de-focus the Partnership on the smaller organizations that actually get the huge bulk of work done at low cost, like Streamkeepers, HCCC, NOSC and others, in favor of big ticket projects that generate much larger jobs. While these big projects are important also, we continue to see the NGOs struggle for funds while the Partnership gets large funding for their offices and centralized marketing efforts, that to date, have had marginal success.

It is unfortunate, because with Gerry O’Keefe in control, we had finally started to see HQ staff leadership,rather than representatives, show up at regional events like the NW Straits Commission, which rarely happened under David Dicks. The Partnership is not so big a bureaucracy that they can’t actually plan ahead and show up for these critical localized planning events. We hope that Col. Wright will get out of the office a lot, as Gerry seemed to be doing. It really helps to get the leadership into the trenches. They often seemed quite isolated as to what we on the ground are actually doing.

To be clear, Col. Wright has a reputation as outspoken, and as someone who gets things done, but the Corp are not the first group you think about when you consider saving Puget Sound. We wish Col. Wright well, and hope that he grows in this job into thinking bigger than just engineering projects that the Corp have worked on.

If we find more information about why this change happened, we will keep readers informed.

    Here’s the announcement:


Puget Sound Partnership friends,

I am writing to let you know that Gov. Chris Gregoire today appointed retired Army Corps of Engineers Col. Anthony Wright to lead the Puget Sound Partnership. Wright is currently a vice president at Normandeau Associates, a consulting firm specializing in environmental issues, and will be taking a leave of absence to serve as director of PSP. Those of us who have been laboring in the field of Puget Sound restoration certainly recognize Tony, in his role as the district engineer and commander of U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Seattle District, as an outspoken advocate and a practical but visionary leader around issues pertaining to the recovery of this national treasure. At the Corps. while overseeing 1000 employees and an annual budget of over $650M, he served as a vocal and active member of the Ecosystem Coordination Board and the Puget Sound Federal Caucus. His 25 years of engineering, management, and regulatory experience throughout the United States and abroad coupled with his long standing passion for Puget Sound make him an obvious choice for director during the implementation phase of our region’s recovery plan.

As he joins us at the helm, we say good bye to Gerry O’Keefe who came aboard as the deputy director of the Partnership in March of 2010 and who rose to director in February of last year. During his important tenure, Gerry brought a steady hand to the Partnership, especially internally, overseeing the development of the crucial performance management and accountability functions for the region’s recovery work. He has hired a full complement of expert internal managers making our operations run professionally and a group of the region’s best-in-class environmental specialists whose work in the field brings capacity to jurisdictions and governments as they link to a single agreed upon plan for recovery, the Action Agenda. The team assembled under his leadership works with expertise, deep passion, and to acknowledged great effect. He also aggressively led the region in a process to reach a first of its kind agreement about what we mean by ‘a recovered Puget Sound’ and developed the methodology to measure our progress against it. Finally, Gerry has guided the complex public and scientific process of up-dating the Action Agenda, the road map to recovery, which is now, mid-summer, nearly complete. We wish him the very best. He will be missed.

With Gerry leaving and Col. Wright joining us, we take pause to consider how far we have come and how far we have yet to go. The signature work of this generation of Puget Sound inhabitants is to break with the traditional and widely accepted historical distinctions between people and the environment, markets and ecological health and to restore resilience to the ecosystem we all depend upon. This work will not be complete in our life time; not under the leadership of our current Puget Sound champion, Governor Gregoire, nor seven governors hence. This is a never-ending project, let us not kid ourselves.

Now, as into the future, it does or does not get done because of the Partnership’s very talented and dedicated staff, remarkable and devoted Boards, Panels and Scientists, and the legions of concerned and engaged citizen partners who ring this stunning estuary and who work for both the present and for those we will never know, but who are coming whether we plan for them and safeguard this place or not. We all deserve what Jane Jacobs called a durable prosperity, a resiliency that expresses equally our rights and responsibilities to each other in a world with a reduced carrying capacity. This announcement, although of great import in the moment and to the people involved, is a mere punctuation mark in the long horizon ahead of us. We need to get back at it today and everlastingly by keeping our eyes on the prize – the protection of this national treasure, what some call Cascadia or Salmon Nation or to paraphrase the author Tim Egan, any place that salmon can get to, or what Wm. Dietrich calls “a universe in a mountain cradle,” this geographers’ delight, Puget Sound, the Salish Sea – out at least seven generations.

Feel free to give me a call any time or e mail me with any concerns you have during this time. And thank you for the role you play in this effort. It will take all of us.

Martha

M A R T H A K O N G S G A A R D
C H A I R, L E A D E R S H I P C O U N C I L P U G E T S O U N D P A R T N E R S H I P
martha@kongsgaard-goldman.org

Next Tribal struggle for saving fish– Land Use

.If you want to know the next phase of the struggle to restore Salmon, then this article clearly lays it out. The Tribes are pushing to have the Feds, State and Local governments do a better job of protecting salmon habitat. That means more restrictive use of shorelines and watersheds. We’ve had a free pass over the last 100 years to develop just about any piece of ground for a price. That, I predict, is about to end. We will have to set aside with zero development (or reverse development) a lot of ground. Why? Read on..

W. Wash. tribes say tribal fishing rights at risk http://www.seattlepi.com/news/article/W-Wash-tribes-say-tribal-fishing-rights-at-risk-3677013.php

Washington Conservation Voters’ 2011-2012 Legislative Scorecard

If you are wondering how your representative voted as it relates to conservation votes, here’s the link. As you can see, our legislators did pretty well, but still attempted to get the Growth Management Act changed to voluntary in certain areas. That was not in supporting environmental goals. You need to sign up to view this.

http://wcvoters.org/scorecard/2012

Spectacular film of Orcas chasing Dolphins

Thanks to Jules for sharing this with us. An amazing film of orcas hunting dolphins at Hyacinthe Bay BC (north of Nanaimo). And thanks to Grind TV for getting it up online!

http://www.grindtv.com/outdoor/blog/33983/pacific+white-sided+dolphins+take+flight+to+evade+killer+whales/

Coast Guard declares drill ship safety zone in Puget Sound- ADN

The Coast Guard has declared a 500-yard safety zone to keep people away from two drilling ships when they leave Seattle for the Alaska Arctic this summer. Shell Oil has been preparing two drill ships in Seattle to explore for oil and natural gas this year in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas off Alaska’s north coast. Environmental groups oppose the drilling because they fear an oil spill in ice-choked ocean waters. http://www.adn.com/2012/06/22/2515670/coast-guard-declares-safety-zone.html

Anderson Lake Remains Closed–Toxin Levels High – PDN

The level of a fast-acting nerve poison in Anderson Lake has leaped to more than 500 times the warning level, according to results of tests taken last week. The lake between Port Townsend and Chimacum, which was closed May 3 this year because of elevated levels of toxins produced by blue-green algae, remains closed to recreation. The level of anatoxin-a, which can quickly cause convulsions and stop breathing, was measured at 534 micrograms per liter of water. The safety threshold is 1 microgram per liter.    Anderson Lake toxins highest of the year http://peninsuladailynews.com/article/20120617/news/306179993/anderson-lake-toxins-highest-of-the-year