North Olympic Land Trust Holding Opening of the Elk Creek Conservation Area–Saturday

North Olympic Land Trust, Clallam County’s only local land conservation non-profit, will hold the grand opening of its public Elk Creek Conservation Area property outside of Forks beginning Saturday, June 18, at 9am. The Land Trust, which manages and conserves thousands of acres of ecologically and economically vital habitat in the Olympic Peninsula, has made the 255-acre Elk Creek Conservation Area its first ever public recreation and education property which will be free and open to the public. 

Shuttles to the conservation area will leave from and return to Forks Tilicum Park every 10-15 minutes beginning at 9am Saturday morning and ending at noon that day. Parking will not be available on-site at the day of the grand opening. North Olympic Land Trust advises those attending the grand opening to bring hiking attire and a raincoat to enjoy the gentle 2.5 mile round-trip hike.

More info at

http://nolt.org/News/elkcreekjune.html

NW Straits Commission zeroed out of NOAA budget

From Ginnie Broadhurst, the Director of the NW Straits Commission.

“Today we learned officially through Senator Murray’s office that there is no funding provided for the Northwest Straits Initiative in NOAA’s FY 2011 spending plan that was submitted to Appropriations Committee this afternoon.  This is deeply disappointing for all of us and will certainly have significant implications for our organization. 
 
We’ve been preparing for a number of scenarios, including this one.   I am working to raise other funding sources to cover Commission and MRC costs into 2012 and we are using our Foundation staff to leverage additional funding to make sure that some projects can be funded in the coming year. 
 
I know this is going to be a lean and challenging time, but all of us at the Commission are ready to rally and look forward to finding creative solutions and keep things going. Our work is important and well respected by our partners and communities.”

 

The NW Straits Commission has been responsible for numerous significant efforts to support the Sound and Straits. They have funded the Marine Resource Committees (MRCs) that act as de facto local community subject matter experts on shoreline and water issues to the County Commissioners of 10 counties along the Strait, San Juan’s and other communities. They have funded efforts to protect eel grass, Olympia Oysters and most significantly, the Derelict Net and Fishing Gear program, that is responsible for pulling up hundreds of miles of nets and gear.

This is a  blow to recovery efforts in the Straits and North Sound. We hope that they will find a way to fund this critical efforts to save the NWC. To be clear, the reason this happened is because the Obama administration and Congress  has stopped the process of ‘earmarking’ funds for projects like this. We hope you call your representatives and let them know what you think of this issue. And that you hope that funding will be found elsewhere.

UPDATE: For clarity, there is action in the Senate to create a re-authorization of the NWSC Initiative. More information on this process will be updated in this column in the future, as I get it.

Full Disclosure: I am a member of the Jefferson County MRC, but receive no pay for my efforts. It is a volunteer effort on my part.

People For Puget Sound urges Puget Sound Partnership Council to set meaningful measures in next week’s meeting

(Seattle WA)            The conservation group People For Puget Sound today urged the Puget Sound Leadership Council to adopt meaningful recovery goals when it meets this week in Seattle. These goals will be the basis of the Partnership’s revised Action Agenda to recover the health of the Sound by the year 2020.

“We need to base these goals on what best available science tells us a healthy Puget Sound needs and what can be technically attained,” said Tom Bancroft, executive director of People For Puget Sound. “Goals should be what’s good for Puget Sound, and should not be based on current levels of funding or existing government programs.”

According to Bancroft, the Partnership should first determine what needs to be achieved for a healthy Sound, then decide what actions to adopt and how to fund what needs to be done. Degradation of the Sound, in any case, should not be allowed to continue.

The problems facing Puget Sound are interconnected and interdependent, and specific goals for recovery have to take that into account, Bancroft said. For example, Orca whales eat Chinook salmon. Chinook salmon eat herring that lay eggs on eelgrass. The Partnership’s goals must reflect this interconnectedness if the Action Agenda is to truly address Puget Sound recovery.

The Puget Sound Partnership’s Leadership Council meets at the Seattle Aquarium on June 16 from 9 AM to 5 PM and on June 17 from 8:30 AM to 4 PM. The Council will adopt recovery goals and 2020 targets at this meeting.

The Partnership will subsequently revise its Action Agenda to incorporate the goals and 2020 targets, and the actions needed to attain them.  The Partnership is scheduled to adopt its revisions to the Action Agenda in December 2011.

A copy of People For Puget Sound’s letter to the Puget Sound Partnership Leadership Council is found at http://pugetsound.org/programs/policy/comment_letters/060911PSPltr/

The Great Bee Count – KPLU

6/13 KPLU
The great bee count
By KPLU News Staff

For a number of years, honey bee populations have been shrinking. It’s called colony collapse disorder. To help understand this bee die-off, citizen scientists are being asked to keep an eye on their gardens this summer as part of The Great Sunflower Project .

The California-based project is helping scientists map pollinators around the country, including in Washington state. Steve Sheppard, a bee researcher at Washington State University, says there are so many insects and so few entomologists that for many parts of the country there’s not even baseline information about what is there.

More at
http://www.kplu.org/post/great-bee-count

Lake Aldwell behind Elwha Dam begins its descent -PDN

6/13 Peninsula Daily News
Lake Aldwell behind Elwha Dam begins its descent
By Rob Ollikainen
Peninsula Daily News

PORT ANGELES — The surface level of Lake Aldwell is no longer being manipulated by man.

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation on Wednesday ceased management of the draw on the reservoir west of Port Angeles, Olympic National Park spokesman Dave Reynolds said.

“Everything is dependent on flow right now,” Reynolds said.

Water in the reservoir has dropped 18 feet since June 1, when the generators inside the Elwha Dam were turned off after 98 years of steadfast service.

More at
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20110613/NEWS/306139996/lake-aldwell-behind-elwha-dam-begins-its-descent

Pollution threatens shellfish-rich south shore of Port Townsend Bay – PDN

6/5 Peninsula Daily News
Pollution threatens shellfish-rich south shore of Port Townsend Bay
By Jeff Chew
Peninsula Daily News

PORT HADLOCK — Jefferson County leaders said they would work toward keeping commercial shellfish beds open after the state Department of Health last week announced that pollution from nearby boats was threatening the Broders Seafood clam farm at the southern shores of Port Townsend Bay with closure.

…The threat covers about a third of a mile of shoreline adjacent to the Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding and is within eyeshot across the water from the Port Hadlock Marina.

More at
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20110605/news/306059984/pollution-threatens-shellfish-rich-south-shore-of-port-townsend-bay

June 6th -Director Kathy Fletcher’s Exit Interview – KUOW

Director Kathy Fletcher’s Exit Interview

Steve Scher
06/06/2011 at 9:00 a.m. ShareThis
Kathy Fletcher has spent 20 years as the executive director of People for Puget Sound. She created the group to ensure governments and corporations are doing their best to keep Puget Sound clean. Before that she worked for the state trying to develop policies to clean up the Sound. Now she’s retiring, and it’s a chance to reflect on what’s been accomplished during the years she’s focused on the issue. People for Puget Sound has helped pass laws regarding copper brake pads, storm water standards and shoreline restoration. What effect have they had? What does Fletcher want to see from her successor? Steve Scher conducts Kathy Fletcher’s exit interview on June 6 at 9:00 a.m.

http://www.kuow.org/program.php?id=23593

Elwha & Glines Dam–Off goes the power

Photographer/Filmmaker John Gussman sent me a few photos from this week’s shutdown of the dam. Enjoy. Next up, the tear down will begin this summer.

_MG_3759bThe press and engineers gather.

_MG_3774bThe computer tells the tale. 0 output.

 

_MG_3778bAnd the final log entry.

This marks a significant milestone in the work to re-establish the Elwha as a major salmon stream. The reasoning is simple yet the work hard and expensive: The government is doing this because the dam produces a small amount of electricity, it was built with no way to allow the migrating salmon to bypass the dam, and the river has a short run from the Straits into a major wilderness area, which will give the salmon a strong chance to survive and thrive.

Hopefully, we will be seeing wind and water turbines that can out produce this dam get setup over the next few years.

To purchase these or any of the other photos that John is taking, go to his web site:

https://www5843.ssldomain.com/elwhaimagebank/store/index.php?p=home

All photos are the property of John Gussman and cannot be reproduced beyond this blog without his written permission. Thanks John!

178 lb halibut caught in Straits last week – Seattle Times

I assume that this is a record catch for the Straits, not heard of one this big in the past, but I seem to remember that halibut traditionally got much larger than this. A case of ‘changing baseline’ that we are excited to catch a fish smaller than we used to? Or am I mistaken? Any older fishermen that can clarify the size of this catch in historical terms?

5/26 Seattle Times
Monster halibut caught in the eastern Strait of Juan de Fuca
Posted by Mark Yuasa

Geoff Meredith of Puyallup had family visiting from Virginia, and managed to show them what a true “Barn Door” halibut looks like by landing a 178 pound halibut last Friday off Green Point in 85 feet of water.

More at
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/reeltimenorthwest/2015154817_monster_halibut_caught_in_the.html

Upgraded wastewater treatment plant makes the Stilly sweet

While out of the area news, I thought I would publish this because of the quote of the plant manager drinking the treated sewage water as proof that it’s cleaned. We like that idea.

5/28 Everett Herald
Upgraded wastewater treatment plant makes the Stilly sweet
By Gale Fiege, Herald Writer

ARLINGTON — The city’s public works director is so proud of Arlington’s newly expanded and upgraded sewer plant that he’s sad the project is finally over after six years.

And don’t force him, but James Kelly is willing to prove his pride by drinking the water that flows from the plant into the Stillaguamish River.

“If you can get over the gag factor, it’s perfectly safe and probably better water than you would find in much of the world,” Kelly said.

More at
http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20110528/NEWS01/705289948/-1/News

Elwha Dams Power Down

So here we go…a larger gamble on saving and restoring one of the great salmon runs of the west coast.

5/28 Associated Press
Dams power down in the largest US dam removal
PHUONG LE, Associated Press

PORT ANGELES, Wash. (AP) — The Elwha River on Washington’s Olympic Peninsula once teemed with legendary salmon runs before two towering concrete dams built nearly a century ago cut off fish access to upstream habitat, diminished their runs and altered the ecosystem.

On June 1, nearly two decades after Congress called for full restoration of the river and its fish runs, federal workers will turn off the generators at the 1913 dam powerhouse and set in motion the largest dam removal project in U.S. history.

Contractors will begin dismantling the dams this fall, a $324.7 million project that will take about three years and eventually will allow the 45-mile Elwha River to run free as it courses from the Olympic Mountains through old-growth forests into the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

More at
http://www.seattlepi.com/news/article/Dams-power-down-in-the-largest-US-dam-removal-1399989.php

Pollution lower, risks remain for marine life – Seattle Times

5/28/11 Seattle Times
Pollution lower, risks remain for marine life
By Craig Welch
Seattle Times environment reporter

It can happen almost immediately.

Copper dust from car brakes gets flushed into a stream by storms. Inside half an hour, the ability of nearby baby salmon to interpret smells can get thrown out of whack. When a predator approaches, the fish don’t flee, increasing the odds they’ll be gobbled up.

This potentially deadly change in fish behavior can happen at extremely low levels of pollution, the same levels washing into Puget Sound during heavy rain. It’s one of the many ways stormwater runoff still presents trouble for Puget Sound.

More at
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2015176223_stormwater29m.html

Shell looking at B.C. coast for oil/gas terminal

5/27 Vancouver Sun
Shell says it’s looking at B.C. Coast for new LNG terminal
By GORDON HAMILTON, Vancouver Sun

Shell Canada says it is investigating the potential for a new liquid natural gas terminal to be located on the B.C. coast.

Shell “is interested in, and currently exploring LNG opportunities along the B.C. coast,” Stephen Doolan, of Shell’s media relations department said in an email to The Sun.

“We are early in the evaluation process so do not have specific details but are pursuing opportunities,” he said. “Natural gas is a key area of growth for Shell. In terms of LNG, we will continue to invest in our global leadership position as demand continues to grow.”

More at
http://www.vancouversun.com/business/Shell+says+looking+Coast+terminal/4853663/story.html

Gray’s Harbor Paper Mill Shuts Down – 240 people out of work

A decrease in paper use, a recession with decreased overall demand, and you get the already hurting town of Hoquiam slammed with a the equivalent of a business tornado. My heart goes out the families that will be affected, along with the businesses that they supported. I don’t think that tourism is going to fix this. -Editor

By KING 5 News
KING5
updated 5/26/2011 6:18:50 PM ET
HOQUIAM, Wash. — After years of struggling to stay profitable in the current economy, Grays Harbor Paper LLC finally folded Thursday.
The president of the company, Patrick Quigg, announced the Hoquiam mill will shut down, effective immediately.
Grays Harbor Paper employs about 240 people, who help produce copy and printing paper for businesses and organizations across the Northwest, including the City of Seattle, City of Portland, and Nike. Potentially all will be laid off.

Read the rest of the story at:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/43184298

Tidepools and mooring buoys: Changes proposed for The Landing waterfront in Port Angeles–PDN

Not sure how an amphitheater at  a creek’s mouth is an appropriate use. Do you? – Editor

 

5/26 Peninsula Daily News
By Tom Callis
Peninsula Daily News
PORT ANGELES — Paul Cronauer has plans to change the appearance of the shoreline near his waterfront building, The Landing mall.
He has filed for a shoreline substantial development permit with the city to install three mooring buoys north of his building, artificial tide pools and expand public access to the mouth of Peabody Creek.
The first two proposals will be heard at the city Planning Commission’s June 8 meeting, when it meets at 6 p.m. in council chambers at City Hall, 321 E. Fifth St.
More at
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20110526/NEWS/305269983/tidepools-and-mooring-buoys-changes-proposed-for-the-landing

More on local ocean acidification

There’s a lot riding on how marine creatures will adapt to acidifying oceans. The animals that dissolve in more corrosive seawater range from oysters, a bedrock species in the Northwest’s lucrative commercial shellfish industry, to krill and pteropods, tiny sea snails propelled by wing-like feet that make up more than half of the diet of some young Alaska pink salmon.

And here are two pertinent pieces of news for anyone living in the Northwest.

  1. Surprisingly corrosive waters have already been found off our shores.
  2. It surfaced decades before scientists expected to see it.

Read the rest of the story at:

http://daily.sightline.org/daily_score/archive/2011/05/24/the-acid-test

Recent samples done by People For Puget Sound on their sailing around the Sound have found levels below 8. The danger is real, and mounting.

State overestimated oil-pollution levels in Sound – Seattle Times

State overestimated oil-pollution levels in Sound

The amount of petroleum that reaches Puget Sound in runoff and stormwater — once compared with the size of an Exxon Valdez spill every two years — appears to be dozens of times lower than initially thought, new studies show.

By Craig Welch

Seattle Times environment reporter

In September 2008, the head of the state Department of Ecology told a PBS Frontline team that so much oil washes into Puget Sound that it equals an Exxon Valdez spill every two years.

A few months later, the agency attempting to restore Puget Sound made a slightly different case. It declared that an Exxon Valdez-size spill of “toxic chemicals” poured into Puget Sound every two years.

Neither is correct, according to new calculations of polluted runoff and stormwater the state published Tuesday. In fact, the amount of petroleum that reaches the Sound appears to be dozens of times lower than former Ecology Director Jay Manning told Frontline.

The confusion over precisely how much toxic stuff gets into the Sound underscores the complexity of tracking pollution rushing across the disparate landscapes that feed this vast water body. The data underlying the state’s grasp of so-called toxic loading grew more sophisticated between 2008 and 2011.

But the inaccurate claims also reflect an eagerness within Gov. Chris Gregoire’s administration to seize on easy-to-grasp anecdotes that highlight Puget Sound’s ecological troubles.

“These studies did exactly what they should have: They refined over time our understanding of the problem,” said Manning, who’s now Gregoire’s chief of staff. “As a result, we now know that the relative contribution of petroleum to pollution in Puget Sound is lower than anticipated — by a significant margin. Do I regret my previous statement? I do. But we have to follow the science.”

Read the rest of the story at the Seattle Times web site. Support local journalism…

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2015080382_pugetsound18m.html

Hood Canal council could get millions from Navy for mitigation projects

Some could look at this as a brilliant plan by the Navy to shut down environmental opposition to their plans to continue the militarization of the Hood Canal. Remember that with two sub bases we will have at least twice the closings of the Hood Canal Bridge, all unannounced. It’s already difficult to know when to leave for meetings and medical appointments in either Bremerton or Seattle. – Editor

5/9 Kitsap Sun
Hood Canal council could get millions from Navy for mitigation projects
By Christopher Dunagan

HOOD CANAL — Hood Canal Coordinating Council could be put in charge of environmental restoration projects worth millions of dollars, as the Navy moves forward with construction of an explosives handling wharf at Bangor.

Under federal law, the Navy must provide mitigation for environmental damage caused by the $715-million wharf, currently going through an environmental review process.

Instead of identifying its own mitigation projects, the Navy favors making payments to a government entity such as the Hood Canal Coordinating Council, which would ensure that restoration projects fit into the larger goals of restoring Hood Canal, said Lynn Wall, environmental planner for Naval Facilities Engineering Command Northwest, based in Silverdale.

More at
http://www.kitsapsun.com/news/2011/may/09/hood-canal-council-could-get-millions-from-navy/

An environmental scorecard from Olympia

5/9 Crosscut
An environmental scorecard from Olympia
By Daniel Jack Chasan

A major bill to allow more transfers of development rights to dense areas fares well, as does the phase-out of coal plants. But the effort to impose a tax on oil products for helping with stormwater projects around Puget Sound got little traction.

More at
http://crosscut.com/2011/05/09/environment/20897/An-environmental-scorecard-from-Olympia/

—-

Why I’m worried about the expansion of the Naval base

So do we really want double the amount of Navy subs and subsequent support staff? Everything is a secret, and everything is national security. Speak up now to stop expansion of the sub base, or forever hold your silence, and complaints – editor

5/6 Kitsap Sun
Navy’s floating acoustics lab doing work in Hood Canal
By Kitsap Sun staff

BANGOR — Residents have wondered for weeks, “What’s that white, windowless building being pushed up and down Hood Canal by a tugboat?”

It’s a floating Navy laboratory called M241, revealed Chief Dale Davis, Naval Base Kitsap spokesman. It provides an enclosed, protected structure with a moon pool — an opening in the floor — and a lift for placing test equipment in the water.

M241 is operated by the Naval Surface Warfare Center, Carderock Division, Detachment Puget Sound. The detachment provides management and logistic support for West Coast ship and submarine acoustic trials.

The M241 was brought to the Bangor waterfront in the summer of 2009 when facilities on Fox Island were closed. It will remain at Bangor as part of ongoing research, development, testing and evaluation projects.

What exactly it’s doing out there is secret.

http://www.kitsapsun.com/news/2011/may/06/navys-floating-acoustics-lab-doing-work-in-hood/