Retiree ‘matriarch’ of North Olympic Peninsula environmental community

Editor note: If you are a recent resident to the Olympic Peninsula, you should read this whole article to better understand the history of the last 25 years on this place. The hard fought battles for Protection Island by Eleanor Stopps, and the ones discussed in this article about Dr. Eloise Kailin are history that is rarely available on the Internet. Enjoy.

*11/28/10 Peninsula Daily News

Retiree ‘matriarch’ of North Olympic Peninsula environmental community

By Jeff Chew
Peninsula Daily News

SEQUIM — Dr. Eloise Kailin helped fight against a nuclear power plant on the Miller Peninsula east of Sequim — and won.

That was in 1973 and led to the formation of the nonprofit Protect the Peninsula’s Future, the North Olympic Peninsula’s longest-standing environmental group.

Today, the group tackles issues affecting health, wildlife habitat and quality of life in the region, while Kailin remains active in environmental battles while sharing a 4-acre farm off River Road with her son, Harvey, where the two have built a commercial kitchen to produce apple butter.

Bob Lynette, a retired conservation lobbyist and renewable energy consultant who has worked with Kailin on the PPF board for 12 years, sees the 91-year-old retired physician as the original driving force behind Peninsula environmental activism.

Read the whole story at: http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20101128/news/311289983/retiree-matriarch-of-north-olympic-peninsula-environmental-community

Converting plastics back to oil?

A friend shared an interesting story with me, of a Japanese man who apparently has created a machine that converts plastics back into oil. I don’t know the specifics of this or possible downsides, but it’s an interesting video, with no local specific content. He currently is using it to teach children about recycling plastics. Worth a few minutes.

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Introducing the Northwest Environmental Video Channel

I’ve created a new ‘channel’ on the video site, Vimeo. http://vimeo.com/channels/salishseavideos

The goal of this site is to be the equivalent of Olyopen.net, and act as a gateway to videos on the Salish Sea. I’m putting out the call to any and all video producers, whether pro or amateur, to publish your videos onto Vimeo (it’s free), and then subscribe to this channel and publish them there.

Hope to see you on Vimeo!

Al

Contaminants in Killer Whales – Lecture 11/18 PTMSC

A member of J Pod passes by PTMSC (photo by Travis Krause)

"Contaminants in Killer Whales"

Thursday, November 18th

Natural History Exhibit

7:00 pm

Gina Ylitalo, a scientist from the Northwest Fisheries Science Center, will present information on a range of contaminants currently found in orca populations, such as PCBs, DDT, and flame retardants.The potential health effects of these toxins on other marine mammal species will be discussed as well, including fish.

"Gina was one of the scientists who analyzed the body of the orca, CA-189, who was stranded near Dungeness Spit in 2002," said Anne Murphy, executive director for the PTMSC. "This orca, named Hope by students visiting PTMSC this summer, is at the center of the story we are preparing to tell through our Orca Project, and whose skeleton we will be displaying in our new Ocean Science Hall."

The orca’s blubber when she was found contained a level of contaminants that was among the highest, if not the highest, ever measured in orcas. The PCB level discovered in the orca was dozens of times higher than concentrations know to affect the growth, reproduction and immune system of another marine mammal, the harbor seal.

Gina YlitaloYlitalo has worked for the Northwest Fisheries Science Center since 1989. Her current interests include establishing links between exposure to chemical contaminants and potential health effects on marine mammals and fish. She also works on methods for analyzing new contaminants in marine resources.

Admission to the presentation is $7 (adults), $5 (youth) and for PTMSC members, it’s $5 (adults) and $3 (youth).

High school students turn drained lake into classroom – King 5

http://www.king5.com/news/environment/Lake-Mills-Elwha-dams-classroom.html

by GARY CHITTIM / KING 5 News

KING5.com

Posted on November 8, 2010 at 6:44 PM

 

PORT ANGELES, Wash. — A group of Seattle High School students are among the first people in over 80 years to walk on the bottom of Lake Mills.

The lake is being drained in preparation for removal of the two Elwha dams scheduled to next fall. The draw downs are the most visible steps so far the in the 20-year process of approval for the removal.

The Nathan Hale High School team was invited to study the lakes, dams and rivers by the Olympic Institute, an environmental education group that hopes the students will help the story of the largest dam removal project in U.S. history. The students are measuring the PH, flow and sediment levels in the river now so they compare them to levels after the removal.

 

Ray Troll in PT to benefit the Derelict Gear Project

Since Derelict Gear Project is about to run out of money, with dozens of submerged nets still needing to be removed, Ray Troll, the great fish artist who’s work  you have probably seen on many tee shirts etc, will be in PT to benefit the cause. Here’s the details

Protection Island Video by DNR

If you are wondering about seeing this treasure, start here.

Protection Island Video

Protection Island Aquatic Reserve ceremony Wednesday – PDN

Given that the editor of this news that you are reading is the one quoted below, our answer to Mr. King’s comment would be, “It’s about preventive maintenance rather than fixing something that’s broken.” The proposal is on the DNR web site.

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*11/1/10 Peninsula Daily News
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20101101/news/311019989/protection-island-aquatic-reserve-ceremony-Wednesday

By Charlie Bermant – Peninsula Daily News

GARDINER — A ceremony designating 23,778 acres of state-owned tidelands and bed lands around Protection Island as a state aquatic reserve is planned in Gardiner on Wednesday.

The ceremony formally designating the Protection Island Aquatic Reserve will be at 1:30 p.m. at the Gardiner Community Center, 980 Old Gardiner Road.

The state Department of Natural Resources reserve expands protection boundaries around the 400-acre island, which is at the mouth of Discovery Bay, from the west end of Port Townsend down to the Gardiner area.

The new boundaries will not increase boating restrictions or limit fishing, including treaty fishing by the Jamestown S’Klallam, Lower Elwha Klallam and Port Gamble S’Klallam, DNR said.

Restrict development

A major reason for the aquatic reserve is to restrict development.

“There will be a lot of efforts to harness tidal energy in this area,” said Port Townsend’s Al Bergstein, a board member of People for Puget Sound, which nominated the area for a reserve.

“A lot of birds and other species rely on Protection Island to feed their young, and we think it’s important that they are not disturbed by water turbines or submerged cables,” Bergstein said.

He added that there are “plenty of other places where these ventures can operate in the area.”

The reserve is on DNR-managed tidelands and bed lands.

Federally protected

Protection Island itself already is federally protected.

The Department of the Interior has established the island as a national wildlife refuge.

Protection Island is owned and operated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service as part of the National Wildlife Refuge System.

The western portion of the island is managed by state Department of Fish and Wildlife as the Zella M. Schultz Seabird Sanctuary.

Federal restrictions keep boats from approaching the island closer than  200 yards.

There is a 2,000-foot air buffer in place to avoid disturbing the sensitive wildlife.

The state aquatic reserve designation does not expand the restriction on boats or fishing.

It does not grant DNR new authority to regulate fishing or boating, DNR has said.

“DNR does not have authority to manage recreational fishing, hunting, crabbing, shell fishing or boating,” the agency said when the idea was under consideration.

“This will not be an area where fishing will be off limits,” said Kyle Murphy, DNR spokesman, during a public meeting in Gardiner in March 2009.

“We don’t regulate fishing, and we don’t regulate boating.

“We won’t restrict people’s access to the site. Use of the site is supported.”

‘It ain’t broken’

Gardiner resident Wayne King, a Jefferson County Public Utility District commissioner who spoke in opposition to the plan at the March 2009 meeting, thinks the designation will add another level of unnecessary bureaucracy.

“They say this protects the island, but I don’t know what they are protecting it from,” he said last week.

Said King during the 2009 a public meeting in Gardiner: “We already have a 200-yard buffer around the island where boats aren’t allowed.

“My question is,” King said then, “if it ain’t broken, what are we protecting?”

About 70 percent of the seabird population of Puget Sound and the Strait of Juan de Fuca nest on the island, which is located between Sequim and Port Townsend.

The island has one of the largest nesting colonies of rhinoceros auklets in the world and the largest nesting colony of glaucous-winged gulls in Washington.

It contains one of the last two nesting colonies of tufted puffins in the Puget Sound area.

About 1,000 harbor seals depend on the island for a pupping and rest area.

Habitat for birds

It also provides breeding and rearing habitat for such birds as harlequin ducks, double-crested cormorants and bald eagles.

Extensive eelgrass and kelp beds surround the island.

Dave Peeler, programs director at People For Puget Sound, said that protecting the aquatic area from development “and restoring habitat damaged from past practices will ensure that marine birds and mammals will have a safe haven and that the eelgrass and kelp beds [that] so much of our marine life depends on will be protected.”

Said Bergstein: “This is a critical action for the protection of wildlife.”

Within the last month, DNR has moved to protect more than 60,000 acres of aquatic area.

In mid-October, the agency designated the Smith and Minor Islands Aquatic Reserve and adopted its management plan protecting 36,600 aquatic acres off the west coast of Whidbey Island.

________

Jefferson County Reporter Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360-385-2335 or charlie.bermant@peninsuladailynews.com.

Superb video on local ocean acidification

Check out this 9 minute video from Oregon Public Broadcasting on the effects of ocean acidification on shellfish and animals at Tatoosh and the Oregon coast. A very good narrative of what’s happening to us right in our backyard of Tatoosh, and Hood Canal for that matter.

http://ecotrope.opb.org/2010/10/video-what-makes-oyster-larvae-unhappy/

The Leader continues to get it wrong on the SMP

The misinformation on the Jefferson County and City of Port Townsend Shoreline Master Program (SMP) continues to flow. Last week and now this week, Fred Obee seems incapable of going out and reading the document to get his facts straight. Our readers should be aware that there is a political candidate for County Commissioner who has routinely misinformed the public about the actual wording of the County and City SMP, in order to get elected. I have no idea if  the Leader or Mr. Obee are supporting this candidate, but it’s things like this that make us wonder about the impartiality of the Leader.

 

Michelle McConnel of the County Department of Community Development had this to say:

In yesterday’s editorial, Mr. Obee adequately corrects his mistake from last week, yet publishes another erroneous statement: Buffers inside the city of Port Townsend are 50 feet, but those are handled by different legislation.”

The County has repeatedly clarified that the City of Port Townsend SMP requires shoreline setbacks/buffers that range up to 200’.  It is misleading for anyone to state only the 50’ distance.

The city setbacks/buffers required actually range from 25-feet to 200-feet:  25’ in the Urban, Historic Waterfront, and Boat Haven designated shorelines, 50’ in the Shoreline Residential designated shorelines, and up to 200’ in the Natural and Conservancy designated shorelines… with some exceptions.

Get to the Source

Readers are advised to review the source documents themselves, especially when uncertainty arises.  A public review copy of the Locally Approved SMP is available at the DCD Office, the County Library in Port Hadlock and its Bookmobile, the Forks Library, and online for viewing and download.

What’s happening locally with the environment? Jefferson MRC

Jefferson County Marine Resource Committee will be meeting on Nov. 2nd at 6 to 8 PM at the Maritime Center meeting room. If you are interested in better understanding what is happening on the local front of the Marine environment, and/or you want to get more active in environmental issues around the shoreline, come by to hear a few of the issues. The public is welcome.

At 6:10 Ruth Blyther of the Nature Conservancy will talk about Biological Diversity. Also, committee reports on Marine Stewardship, Olympia Oysters, Eelgrass Protection, Drift Cell Restoration, Mystery Bay Harbor Restoration, and Maynard Beach issues will be discussed.

 

Chum Salmon on the Move in Chico Creek – Kitsap Sun

10/23 Kitsap Sun
By Christopher Dunagan
CHICO —
Chum salmon are swimming into Chico Creek a little early this year, but they’re finding no impediments at Kitsap Golf and Country Club, where a major stream restoration is nearing completion.
“Chum are spawning throughout the system,” said Jon Oleyar, a biologist with the Suquamish Tribe who keeps track of the local salmon migration. “This is the earliest they have been in Chico Creek for the past eight years.
“The fish look healthy,” he added, “and they’re a good size.”
More at
http://www.kitsapsun.com/news/2010/oct/23/chum-salmon-on-the-move-in-chico-creek/

Support your local newspaper. Subscribe.

Gregoire takes environmental tour of Puget Sound – Seattle Times

While this was covered elsewhere, perhaps you, like me, missed it. The good news here is that the Governor has come out of Olympia to see the results of the investments that the State and Federal Government has made, and it’s good for the environment, local jobs, and also to help average folks understand that there are real problems under this beautiful body of water that we need to keep working to solve. While I know that some of our readers do support shellfish farmers, it’s worth noting in this story that the Governor visited Taylor Shellfish as part of the trip, and was told of efforts in the surrounding community to clean up the water. While there are members of the environmental community that oppose Taylor and others, I find that they are much more allies than ‘enemies’. They, like us, our interested first and foremost in clean water. Without it, they go out of business and we lose our shellfish industry.

BELFAIR, Wash. —

Gov. Chris Gregoire visited a $40 million wastewater treatment plant in Belfair Friday to kick off a daylong tour of projects helping to clean up Puget Sound.

It was the first destination in a five-stop tour covering Mason, Thurston and Pierce counties.

Walking the construction site with congressman Norm Dicks and other state and local officials, the governor said the amount of money spent to improve the ailing estuary has been unprecedented. About $460 million in federal, state and local funds has been spent since 2008, creating more than 15,000 jobs, she said.

Despite those efforts, Gregoire said, problems continue to plague Puget Sound. Stormwater runoff, development and toxic pollutants threaten the sound’s ecosystem and its orcas, salmon and other marine life, along with the quality of life for the region.

Read the whole story at:

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2013174949_apwapugetsoundgregoire3rdldwritethru.html

Support local journalism, subscribe to your local newspaper!

New beach for Port Angeles voiced at idea session – PDN

10/22 Peninsula Daily News

By Tom Callis
Peninsula Daily News

EDITOR’S NOTE — Click to see the 43-page presentation to the Port Angeles City Council on the proposed Port Angeles Waterfront and Transportation Improvement Plan: http://issuu.com/peninsuladailynews/docs/ptcitycouncil.3.15.00

PORT ANGELES — The idea of establishing a beach east of the Valley Creek estuary received enthusiastic support from the City Council on Thursday during a discussion of a proposed waterfront and transportation improvement plan.

David Roberts, a state Department of Natural Resources aquatic lands assistant manager, suggested creating a beach there during the public comment portion of the meeting.

The shore between Oak Street and the estuary is one of the areas slated for a makeover under the plan, which focuses on the waterfront but also will result in new entryway monuments on the west and east entrances to Port Angeles, new “wayfinding” signs to direct traffic and pedestrians to points of interest and shopping, and a citywide transportation study.

More at
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20101022/NEWS/310229988/new-beach-for-port-angeles-voiced-at-idea-session-and-click-to-see

It’s over: Harbor-Works officially no longer exists – PDN

A sad situation, given all the money and effort put into it, but it was plagued by a massive ego in it’s leadership, and should be a lesson for any future similar efforts. Unilateral decision making in an issue like this is not a good idea. The public has to have buy in for it to work.

10/20 Peninsula Daily News
By Tom Callis
Peninsula Daily News

PORT ANGELES — Harbor-Works formally came to an end Tuesday.

The City Council voted unanimously to dissolve the public development authority 17 months and more than a million dollars after creating it.

The decision came after board members of the Harbor-Works Development Authority thanked the city for its support and urged continuing pressure on the state Department of Ecology to ensure that environmental cleanup of Rayonier Inc.’s former pulp mill site doesn’t continue to face delays.

More at
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20101020/NEWS/310209976/its-over-harbor-works-officially-no-longer-exists

Ringside seats to real politcal fallout

We here in the US are getting a ringside seat to the fallout of the UK population electing a “cut spending and government” politician. There are many here in our county  (and country) who advocate such action here. While the cuts to the British Government proposed today by David Cameron’s coalition government are astounding, we don’t yet understand it’s affect on environmental issues there. Over the next few weeks, I’ll attempt to parse what is going on there, and translate it into what would happen here in our counties if similar deep cuts happened. More to come. Feel free to do your own analysis, if you wish, and publish it here. I’ll likely take all comments that come in and reform it to an article later.

Orcas in Admiralty Inlet!

Lots of reports of orca sitings by the Orca Network. They went by in large numbers last week and again this week.

Fraser River system revived by biggest sockeye salmon run in nearly 100 years

It’s a great thing to see at least a one time run of sockeye come back in such great shape. It’s worth understanding that this is only one of the species of salmon, and that other runs are decimated and some species almost extinct.  So we can cheer this, but be cautious of the inevitable backlash of people who don’t believe in environmental protections (and their political supporters) using this to tell the general public that there is ‘nothing wrong’.  This is one victory for Canada, and we need to step up efforts so that we can see this kind of returns for all species of salmon. Some folks I’ve talked to who are knowledgeable seem to think that the sockeye experienced a particularly favorable year of ocean climate for them. Maybe less predators?  More food? Whatever it was, we are glad.

10/18 Globe and Mail
MARK HUME

At the mouth of what may be the world’s richest salmon river, Greg Schuler is wading slowly through a massive school of dead fish, doing fisheries research the hard way.

A senior technician with the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans, he is counting fish by hand, lifting each on a forked spear, then lopping off its tail with a razor-sharp machete to make sure it isn’t tallied twice.

“It’s all in the wrist,” he says as he cuts a salmon in half with a flick of his blade, a movement he can repeat up to 3,000 times a day.

Some of the fish have spawned in the river and washed downstream, but others have died in Shuswap Lake, before laying their eggs.

More at
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/british-columbia/fraser-river-system-revived-by-biggest-sockeye-salmon-run-in-nearly-100-years/article1760086/

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Goat that killed Bob Boardman shot dead…

This whole sad story should raise the question of whether or not this non native species of goat, introduced by ‘well meaning’ naturalists in the 20s, should be taken out of the ecosystem up there. There is good reason to believe that our epidemic rates of giardia (the protozoa that infects our intestines) in all our upper mountain streams and lakes have been put there by these goats (along with other animals and humans, to be sure). are caused by these animals watering in the streams.  As most old timers know, prior to the 20s and 30s, you could safely drink out of most streams in the Olympics. Now, almost all streams are infected, and the goats are doing damage to other upland parts of the park.  I have had giardia once (from drinking from a natural spring in Colorado in the 70s). It is not a fun problem to have. And the drugs that are used to kill it are very hard on your liver.

We insist on putting animals, even deer, in our landscape and then when they attack we seem amazed. I for one wouldn’t mind culling this heard agressively, at least making the survivors not want to get near humans. We put them there, we should have the option of taking them out of the environment when they become known pests.

10/19 Associated Press
Killer goat had been aggressive before
The Associated Press

A mountain goat that fatally gored a hiker, then stood over the man and stared at people trying to help, had shown aggressive behavior in the past, Olympic National Park officials said Monday.

Robert Boardman, 63, of Port Angeles, died Saturday after he was attacked by the goat while hiking on the subalpine Switchback Trail in the park. The trail is popular with residents of nearby Port Angeles, which is about 195 miles northwest of Seattle.

Park rangers later found the goat, saw blood on it and shot the animal.

More at
http://www.thenewstribune.com/2010/10/19/1387671/killer-goat-had-been-aggressive.html

NOSC reports record summer chum numbers in Chimacum Creek!

Check out the numbers on their blog. Very good news.

http://summerchumrestoration.blogspot.com/