News Release: Coast Guard monitors sunken vessel near Clallam Bay

Cute, the Coast Guard constantly misspells Clallam Bay in the follow Press Release…Luckily it appears that the fuel tanks may not have been full…

__________________________________

SEATTLE – The Coast Guard is monitoring the salvage of the sunken fishing vessel North Pass near Clallum Bay, Wash., Friday.

The Coast Guard responded to the vessel taking when it was taking on water, Wednesday, at Slip Point near Clallum Bay with two people onboard.  Both people were recovered and safely transported to nearby Olson’s Resort in Sekiu, Wash., by a Good Samaritan.

Global Diving and Salvage attempted to raise the 95-year-old wooden fishing vessel with air bags until it was determined, when lifted, it was too unstable to tow to shore. In order to prevent the vessel from drifting into the straits and becoming a possible hazard to navigation the airbags were cut and the fishing vessel sank in approximately 150 to 200-feet of water 300 yards offshore.

Global Diving and Salvage sealed the fuel tanks with a potential of 300 gallons of diesel in those tanks.  There are no reports of a sheen.

The Coast Guard has issued a Safety Marine Information Broadcast and will continue to monitor the situation to ensure the safety of the environment and the maritime public.

For additional information contact Lt. Jennifer Osburn at (206) 391-7421 or the Joint Harbor Operations Center at (206) 217-6002.

Victoria will treat its sewage – at Last!!

Please hand out modern clothes, along with forks and knives, to our neighbors to the north. They can now take off their sabre tooth tiger wraps…welcome to the modern age (with tongue in cheek to my son in law and his family in Victoria). Mr. Floaty might have to stick around to project manage this thing and make sure it’s on time and under budget. There’s a bunch of stuff floating around out there until these plants get built.

*8/26/10 SeattlePI.Com

Joel Connelly
After decades in which Victoria and nearby cities wouldn’t get off the pot,  the British Columbia government on Thursday approved a plan to treat millions of gallons of raw sewage dumped daily into the Strait of Juan de Fuca.
"Sewage treatment will be in operation by 2016:  That’s the time-line in the plan," B.C. Environment Minister Barry Penner told seattlepi.com
…"It’s unbelievable how long this has taken:  It is long overdue but better than not doing it," Kathy Fletcher, executive director of People for Puget Sound said Thursday night.
More at
http://blog.seattlepi.com/seattlepolitics/archives/219510.asp?from=blog_last3
Listen at 8/27 KPLU-FM
Victoria’s Neighbors Heave A Sigh of Relief
http://www.publicbroadcasting.net/kplu/news.newsmain/article/0/1/1693231/KPLU.Local.News/Victoria%E2%80%99s.Neighbors.Heave.A.Sigh.of.Relief
See also 8/26 Associated Press
British Columbia government approves plan to treat raw sewage
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2012735281_sewage27.html

Oyster Cleanup Completed at Scenic Beach

I still remain skeptical about whether this was the Navy or not. As I remember it, that side of the Canal has oysters all over the beaches. It’s just odd. Even the scientists say they haven’t seen a storm create this kind of thing….. call me unconvinced.

Kitsap Sun
Oyster Cleanup Completed at Scenic Beach
By Kitsap Sun staff

SEABECK —
About 35 volunteers turned out Monday to move oysters at Scenic Beach State Park, completing the work that 65 other volunteers started <http://www.kitsapsun.com/news/2010/aug/20/dozens-turn-out-to-help-imperiled-oysters-in/>  on Friday.

The oysters had been washed up high on the beach on Aug. 11 — about the time a Navy ship, the USS Port Royal, was operating in Hood Canal <http://www.kitsapsun.com/news/2010/aug/13/ships-wake-prompts-oysters-to-wash-up-on-shore/> . Navy officials are investigating to determine whether the ship was to blame. Shellfish biologists familiar with Hood Canal say they have never seen a storm move oysters in such an extreme pattern.

More at
http://www.kitsapsun.com/news/2010/aug/23/oyster-cleanup-completed-at-scenic-beach/

Tribe’s, city’s separate plans for Rayonier site can coincide, tribal leader says

8/22 Peninsula Daily News
Tribe’s, city’s separate plans for Rayonier site can coincide, tribal leader says
By Tom Callis
Peninsula Daily News

PORT ANGELES — The leader of the Jamestown S’Klallam tribe says the city’s plan to purchase a portion of Rayonier’s former mill site and use a large tank on the property to reduce sewage overflows wouldn’t affect the tribe’s plans for developing the property.

But the 5-million-gallon tank may need to be given a spruce-up if the tribe’s Salish Village proposal pans out, said Ron Allen, tribal chairman.

Allen said the tank might need to be painted to “change its image” or more trees could be planted nearby so that it blends in with the mix of residential, cultural and commercial uses that would make up the village.

More at
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20100823/news/308239997/tribes-citys-separate-plans-for-rayonier-site-can-coincide-tribal

Dozens Turn Out To Help Imperiled Oysters in Seabeck

I’m still trying to figure out if this is a real story. Hundreds of thousands kicked up by a Navy ship? It appears as if something may have happened during the time a Navy ship was in manuveurs, but it’s very hard to comprehend how one ships’ wake could throw hundreds of thousands of oysters ashore in one swoop. Odd…

8/20 Kitsap Sun
Dozens Turn Out To Help Imperiled Oysters in Seabeck
By Derek Sheppard

SEABECK — Mary-Cathern Edwards was drawn in by the “plight of the oysters.”

Strewn high on the beach at Scenic Beach State Park, hundreds of thousands of oysters were barely surviving on the few sips of water they got each day at high tide.

Edwards and her 10-year-old granddaughter Hannah Holloway-Miller were among about 65 volunteers who showed up Friday morning to the Central Kitsap beach to save the oysters by moving them closer to the water.

More at
http://www.kitsapsun.com/news/2010/aug/20/dozens-turn-out-to-help-imperiled-oysters-in/

Boyer and Austin winning for County Commissioner race

Anti environmental candidate Jim Boyer, who has primarily run opposing the SMP and CAO and vows to attempt to overturn them if elected, has garnered the most votes in the primary for Jefferson County Commissioner. John Austin is running a strong but distance second, and Diane Johnson, also an openly anti environmental candidate, is running a distant third.  The key here is that this is the primary, and Port Townsend was not voting at this point for the south county candidates.

If you value environmental protection in this county, you need to at least vote, if not work for, John Austin’s candidacy. Make no mistake about it, years of hard work to better protect our county’s environment are at stake if Jim Boyer is elected. He has publicly opposed almost any new regulation to protect shores and critical areas, and he is strongly backed by the libertarian “Olympic Stewardship Foundation”, which is also staunchly opposed to any and all new land regulation. He is wanting to roll back the regs, which strikes me as odd, as being a Republican his normal stance is for less government waste and spending. Our county has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on the latest round of regulations, and now Boyer wants them thrown out. Talk about waste in government!

Jamestown S’Klallam tribe has its own ideas for redeveloping Rayonier site – PDN

8/11 Peninsula Daily News
Jamestown S’Klallam tribe has its own ideas for redeveloping Rayonier site
By Tom Callis
Peninsula Daily News

PORT ANGELES — The Jamestown S’Klallam tribe remains interested in pursuing the redevelopment of Rayonier’s former mill site despite deadlocked negotiations between the company and Harbor-Works.

Tribal Chairman Ron Allen said the Blyn-based tribe, which has developed 7 Cedars Casino and the Cedars at the Dungeness Golf Course, is still hopeful that it will be the lead agency for redevelopment of the fallow property — considered the largest undeveloped land on the North Olympic Peninsula — and become the eventual owner of most, if not all, of the 75-acre site.

In fact, he said, the tribe is preparing to release a conceptual drawing of a Native American cultural center that it wants to build on the eastern edge of the waterfront property.

More at
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20100811/NEWS/308119987/jamestown-sklallam-tribe-has-its-own-ideas-for-redeveloping-rayonier

Read letter from Jamestown S’Klallam Chairman Ron Allen to Gov. Chris Gregoire
http://issuu.com/peninsuladailynews/docs/jamestownrayonierletter?mode=embed&viewMode=presentation&layout=http%3A%2F%2Fskin.issuu.com%2Fv%2Flight%2Flayout.xml&showFlipBtn=true

Dungeness Watershed Forum August 11th

Fresh water resources are being depleted at a rate that exceeds the rate of natural replenishment through rainfall and snowmelt.  Declining aquifers threaten reliable water supplies from wells.  Seasonal low flows in rivers and streams harm aquatic habitat for endangered fish.  Population growth magnifies these threats to the sustainability of water supplies for people and the environment.

On Wednesday, August 11, 2010, the League of Women Voters of Clallam County will sponsor the first of a series of forums on water issues in the Dungeness watershed.

The meeting will be held at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 525 N. 5th Avenue in Sequim from 7 – 8:30 p.m.

Speakers at our first Water Forum include Amanda Cronin of the Washington Water Trust and water lawyer Shirley Nixon.  Amanda will cover hydrology of the Dungeness River Basin, water use patterns and trends, and techniques for protecting instream flows – including acquisition of water rights.  Shirley will cover “Water Law 101” with emphasis on the prior appropriation doctrine and how it interacts with reality in times of water scarcity.

Additional technical experts will be available to answer questions regarding water availability in the Dungeness River Basin and offer tools for what you can do to protect our existing water supplies and ensure a more sustainable water future.

The Water Forum will allow at least 30 minutes for questions and answers.  Informational tables and displays containing more information will be available before and after the formal forum program.

CONTACT:  Sonja Rotter

PHONE:  360/452-2413

Biomass energy meeting set Aug. 6-7 – PT Leader

Through a slideshow of work by Cambridge, Mass. pediatrician Dr. William Sammons, MD, and lively discussion, Duff Badgley of nobiomassburn.org show why they think the incinerators offer a total package that is  “dirtier than coal” and decried by the American Lung Association, increases in air pollution and toxic wastes and decimates forests with false promises of long-term jobs and a hefty bill to taxpayers.

Hundreds of biomass incinerators are planned across the nation, inluding ones in Port Townsend at Port Townsend Paper, Port Angeles at Nippon, two in Shelton, and one each in Olympia and Forks, on the Olympic Peninsula alone.

“The reason we are hosting this presentation is because nobody here knows what ‘biomass energy co-generation’ means,” said Gretchen Brewer of PT AirWatchers. “We’re being asked to give our blessing to a project based solely on the fact that it’s touted as ‘green.’ Is it? Just scratching the surface of the topic raises big questions.”

Read the whole story at:

http://ptleader.com/main.asp?FromHome=1&TypeID=1&ArticleID=27472&SectionID=36&SubSectionID=55

Your vote, your choice. Our vote, our choices.

The ballots have been mailed to us, and should be arriving today, or soon.  We have interviewed some of the candidates, and read the position papers, or worked with,  all of them over the last few years. And so, here are our thoughts, on the best choices for the environment of the Peninsula, and why. The telling thing here is that there is not one Republican candidate running in these races, that can clearly articulate an environmental stand. What I have heard is “roll back protections, to create jobs”, “roll back protections to allow us to do whatever we want on our land”, and of course, that anyone supporting environmental protection is against jobs, against the ‘common’ person. All of this flies in the face of forty years of various environmental protection that has led to higher property values for anyone along the shores of our county (you can ask friends of mine or yours who used to live on the shore prior to these regs). I am more than willing to support the best candidate, be they Republican or Democrat, that is proven to support the environment along with the economy. They are not mutually exclusive.  Germany, for example, is a leader in solar panel technology, as well as clean coal. It can be done. So vote for folks who will get the job done. These are the folks below. Maybe someday, this list will include Republicans. It used to. Dan Evans comes to mind.

United States Senator: Patty Murray

-Patty has continuously fought for environmental protections, including the Neah Bay rescue tug, along with other environmental jobs programs. She can be counted on to do the right thing, given the conflicting issues of the Senate. Additionally, she supports with actions as well as words, veteran programs, so badly lacking after 8 years of war. There is no reason to change this sitting Senator for anyone else.

United States Representative – 6th Congressional District: Norm Dicks

– Norm has demonstrated his support for environmental protection consistently, along with supporting military needs, and job creation. He owns property on Hood Canal, and understands the need to make proper choices for it’s protection. Another example of an incumbent who has earned his keep.

State Representative: Kevin Van De Wege

– Kevin’s has done an outstanding job of getting things done for the environment. After 10 years of trying, Kevin and another Representative got the Neah Bay Rescue tug funded permanently. That alone, from an environmental point of view, earns him the ability to return. A fabulous outcome to protect our Straits. He also listened to people about eliminating fire retardant from our clothing and bedding, and after looking at the facts, and the information that showed that Europe ended the use with no uptick in deaths by fire, Kevin changed his mind. This is enormously satisfying that a politician was willing to modify his beliefs based on science and not the pressure from industry lobbyists. No doubt, a champion for our jobs and our environment.

State Representative Position 2: Steve Tharinger

-Steve has been a great supporter for the environment, including participation in the Puget Sound Partnership meetings here,  among other issues. The two challengers are running out of anger over the Jefferson SMP, which neither Dwyer or Tharinger had anything to do about. You draw your own conclusions. Anti-environmental candidates vs. someone who supports protections. It seems clear.

Jefferson County Commissioner, Dist. 3 – John Austin

This is simple. John has supported, against angry opposition, the Jefferson County Shoreline Master Program. His opponents not only don’t believe in protection of our shorelines, they actively either worked against it for the last five years, or are members of the organization, The Olympic Stewardship Foundation, that is opposing all protections in our county. A vote for either candidate other than John, will serve to roll back hard fought protections that were implemented at enormous cost and the input of thousands of hours of volunteer time.  One of his opponents, has refused to even discuss her thoughts on the SMP.

Think of this, where were these opponents when the hundreds of volunteer hours were being given to put together this SMP?  Now they are here, claiming that the public had no input, which is totally untrue. Over 40 people gave up over 4 years of meetings to give input. The SMP cost the state and county hundreds of thousands of dollars to implement. Vote for the candidate that has a proven track record of supporting a strong protection of our shores. As well as his support for substance abuse programs, home nurse programs, and other beneficial support of our ‘health’ environment.

Having gone to the Democrats fish fry today, I looked for and didn’t find the other democratic candidates running against these folks. Why weren’t they there? How could someone who supports either party, not show up at the largest, most influential yearly celebration of their party?  Just think back, Obama always showed up when possible even though he new some places were Hilary camps. You can’t just walk away from your party because you don’t get their support. This is how the sausage gets made. If you don’t like it, change your stripes.

State to take new look at how much fish is safe to eat.

ed- It is somewhat upsetting to read that the tribes found out (through a grant paid for by the taxpayers of the state), that levels of toxins were far higher than thought, or safe, and yet we have had no warning and apparently you could assume they were selling this to restaurants and grocery stores. So the question is, “is it safe to eat crab and flounder caught in Puget Sound?”  The answer appears, at least from reading this article, to be ‘no’.  The good news here is that this approach turns pollution control on it’s head. Instead of allowing pollution and reducing consumption, we now are saying that we are going to allow consumption and reduce pollution to achieve healthy goals.

The problem I see is that how do I know that I’m getting safe fish, if the levels have changed but the pollution is still out there in the fish? That seems oddly backwards. Like pretending that the current safe levels aren’t a factor. I think I need better reporting to assure me that I’m just reading this wrong.

 

7/25 Seattle Times
State takes new look at how much fish is safe to eat
By Cassandra Brooks
Seattle Times staff reporter
From the shores of Lake Washington to the Duwamish River and other state waters, signs alert locals about toxic fish:
Warning: Fish from these waters contain high levels of mercury.

Caution: Trout contain high levels of DDT.

Advisory: Shellfish contain high PCBs, do not eat!

Under state law, Washington’s lakes, streams, estuaries and nearshore coastal waters only need to be clean enough for residents to safely consume one serving of fish a month.
Yet, for many state residents, local fish and shellfish are a much bigger part of their diet than that, whether it’s bass caught from the dock of a lake, a dozen oysters served up at a waterfront restaurant or salmon grilled on a backyard barbecue.
And for many tribes across Washington, fish are not just central to their diet but a core part of their cultural and spiritual lives as well.
More at
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2012448836_tribalfish26m.html

A spill in Port Ludlow…sewage this time

7/22 Peninsula Daily News
Valve error blamed for sewage spill that’s closed Port Ludlow Bay
By Charlie Bermant – Peninsula Daily News

PORT LUDLOW — Tuesday’s spill of 5,000 gallons of partially treated sewage into Port Ludlow Bay was because of a “routine operation that went awry,” said the president of Olympic Water and Sewer Inc. on Wednesday. The 1 p.m. spill prompted the Jefferson County Public Health Department to issue a health advisory forbidding any swimming until Friday. The spill occurred during a routine maintenance check after a valve did not close, said Olympic Water and Sewer president Larry Smith.
More at
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20100722/news/307229996/valve-error-blamed-for-sewage-spill-thats-closed-port-ludlow-bay

Puget Sound Chemistry Transformed by Climate Change and Runoff – Scientific American

Puget Sound is becoming more acidic thanks to a combination of agricultural runoff and rising carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere

A combination of carbon dioxide emitted by human activities and nutrient runoff is transforming the chemistry of Washington state’s Puget Sound, according to a new study.

Read the whole story at Scientific American:

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=puget-sound-chemistry-transformed-by-climate-change-abd-runoff

-This threatens our entire shellfish industry, as well as other possible life forms. Runoff is one of the major causes, a reason that we value better shoreline management to slow or stop shoreline runoff. Also, stormwater runoff is another cause, which comes from roads with improperly created storm sewers.  Getting funding at the state level to correct these as quickly as possible is key.

While I have your attention: It may be a good time to review the map, commissioned by People For Puget Sound, done by the UW GIS group. It shows the exact locations of every one of the 4500 manmade storm sewers that empty to the Sound, along with 2123 natural drainages, and 297 DOT created drainages, including bridges.

http://pugetsound.org/pressroom/press-releases/042309stormdrains/?searchterm=storm%20water%20map

John Bailey Sr. 1929- 2010

John Bailey Sr. passed away today, July 11th at Kai Tai in Port Townsend.  John was the partner of Betty Champlain of Port Townsend. He was the father of my wife, Megan, her brothers John Jr. and Bill, along with two sisters, Debbie and Robin.

John and Betty had many happy years together in Port Townsend. They  enjoyed gardening together and sailing a small sailboat around the bay. John was an accomplished woodworker and sailor.

John and his ex-wife, noted sailing writer Jo Bailey, burned a love of sailing into the whole family by sailing the Sound and San Juans in the late 50s and 1960s.

John was a professional photographer, and worked for a number of newspapers in the northwest, ending as a reporter and city editor with the Tacoma News Tribune.

John was the father of not only my wife, who is a Physician’s Assistant, but of esteemed local sailor John Bailey Jr, who many of us have chased around the buoys watching the stern of “Pinger” shame us into becoming better sailors. Son Bill, sailed away from Port Townsend in the late 80s, and has voyaged around the world with his wife, Lisa, and they are currently skippering big sailboats for the elite in Europe.

Debi lives in Olympia, where she is a family counselor.  Robin and her husband, Doug, live in Long Branch, WA, and sews professionally for a living.

John was lately living in Port Townsend, and did a bit of photography for the local sailing club.

Rest in peace, John Sr.

IMG_0051

John and Betty 2006

Peninsula Doctor’s Son Killed in Afghanistan

Dr. Richards, the father of the fallen marine detailed in this story, is a very close friend of our family, and a musical partner of mine in many weekly jam sessions. It is easiy to forget, with a volunteer army, that there are real sacrifices having to be made on behalf of this 8+ year war. This is truly another tragic reminder, of the very real human cost to the US for this war. A father and son is lost, and his musical voice is gone forever.  I have raised a son, and the long memory of all the events, little and big, that went into his life is what we are left with. We can tax ourselves forever and a day and  eventually recoup the monetary costs of this war, but we will never recoup our human losses. Megan and my heart goes out to Dr.Richards. And to all the families of soldiers who will never come home again, or have come home radically altered from the way they left, either emotionally, physically, or both.

Click here to zoom...

An obit of William Taylor Richards is found here.

http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20100708/news/307089991/peninsula-doctors-son-killed-in-afghanistan

Dept of Ecology Sends Oil Spill Equipment to Gulf – NW oil spill safety net frayed

A fallout of the Gulf fiasco is now that our state is sending both Navy oil skimming vessels, temporarily lowered our oil spill preparedness standards,  and sent essentially our  entire stock of boom and dispersants to the Gulf as well as barges that could be used in the event of a spill here.  This seems like a very bad idea. While personnel can be rapidly deployed, the notion of emptying our supplies and lowering standards is exactly the wrong idea. Accidents and mechanical failure are what this is all about. You have to be prepared for accidents. By emptying our stocks for this futile effort in cleaning up the Gulf, it leaves us more vulnerable to it happening here. We have this beautiful environment here because we didn’t lower our standards or enforcement, we raised them! The Gulf is in this predicament because they have allowed themselves to be controlled by the oil industry and it’s cheerful, “can’t ever happen here” lobbyists and spokespeople, and regulators who lowered the standards!.  We need to not let our guard down. The tragedy in the Gulf is not going to be changed one bit by our sending all our supplies there, but it could be a fiasco for us.

Update – 7 July: It appears that DOE is also considering  sending our rescue tug to the Gulf. I am checking today with DOE on this and other issues.  It appears that neither the Port of Port Townsend, nor county officials were alerted in advance, nor asked if this was a concern to them locally. Discussions appear to be under way with the State, the Feds, our elected federal officials, the Navy, the Tribes and others. There should be clarification on this coming later today, or tomorrow.

——————————————————————————————

OLYMPIA – Navy Region Northwest will soon send five oil-skimming vessels to help with the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill response in the Gulf of Mexico, pending receipt of Washington Department of Ecology’s (Ecology) official notification on Tuesday, July 6.

Oil-skimming vessels collect oil spilled on water. The Navy earlier sent two of its nine skimmers as well as several smaller work boats from Washington to the Gulf.

Ecology regulates two Navy oil-transfer facilities in Puget Sound. The Navy will keep its two remaining Puget Sound skimmers at their regular stations.

Ecology and the Navy have agreed that the Navy will maintain standing measures, and add interim measures, to help prevent and be sufficiently prepared for any spills that might occur in Washington while the skimmers are helping the Gulf response. These standing or interim measures include:

  • Continuing the requirement for all Navy vessels to be pre-boomed while in port, even if the vessel is not being fueled.
  • Restricting fuel transfers over water to daylight hours – unless there is a documented necessity to support an operational mission. Non-daylight transfers must be approved by a Navy on-scene spill coordinator.
  • Following established Navy directives, orders and other measures that already apply to fuel transfers while in port. These include enhanced staffing levels during all fuel transfers, to include having supervisory personnel on deck and watching from topside to prevent spills. It also means ensuring fueling crews are fully qualified in the Navy’s spill prevention and response procedures.
  • If an oil or hazardous material spill occurs, the Navy must ask the U.S. Coast Guard to activate the services of the Marine Spill Response Corp., National Response Corp. or other private spill-response contractors in Washington to assist with response equipment and personnel. The Coast Guard has confirmed this action will be taken, if requested. Both Ecology and the Coast Guard have agreed to adopt an aggressive, enhanced response posture until the Navy equipment returns from the Gulf.
  • Updating the Navy’s state oil-spill contingency plan that outlines the response actions it will take to minimize environmental impacts from a spill.

“We believe these spill prevention and preparedness measures will help ensure Navy is ready and capable of mounting a rapid, aggressive and well-coordinated response to any spill that might occur while their skimmers are out helping with the Gulf spill response,” said Ecology Spills Program Manager Dale Jensen.

Earlier this week, the U.S. Coast Guard and Environmental Protection Agency announced they had lowered federal oil-spill preparedness standards, including cleanup equipment, to get more resources – especially skimming vessels and other skimming systems – to the Gulf.

The new temporary measures require industry and entities like the Navy to maintain enough equipment to respond to a much more modest but more likely spill of 2,100 gallons.

Washington state law, however, requires the oil industry and other entities that transfer large amounts of fuel over state waters, to be able to respond to a worst-case spill scenario. In some instances, that means oil-handling facilities must be prepared to respond to spills involving millions of gallons of oil and other petroleum products.

Jensen said Ecology has received numerous requests by private spill contractors to send equipment to the Gulf. Ecology quickly established a process to track and evaluate each request from the regulated community. The state agency also is tracking what its federal response partners, including the U.S. Coast Guard and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, have sent.

Ecology has let experienced response personnel, the state’s entire stock of about 15,000 gallons of chemical dispersants and 1,400 feet of fireproof oil boom, several shallow water barge systems, and more than 50,000 feet of oil containment boom go to the Gulf so far. See how Washington is helping the Gulf spill response.

Jensen said, “We are doing all we can to help our neighbors in the Gulf while preserving a core level of spill response readiness in Washington. It also means, however, that everyone must be extra vigilant about keeping oil out of Washington’s waters. It doesn’t matter if you’re at the helm of an oil tanker or if you’re a weekend boater. We need your help in preventing all oil spills, regardless of size.”

A 2004 draft study commissioned by Ecology estimates that if a major spill were to occur in Washington waters, the state could suffer nearly $11 billion in economic losses, and more than 165,000 jobs across the state would be adversely affected, along with the environmental damage.

On May 10, Ecology and the Marine Spill Response Corp. held unannounced oil-spill response drills in five critical locations in Puget Sound to test the company’s agreement with Global Diving & Salvage Inc. to temporary backfill for more than 25 experienced responders as well equipment MSRC had sent to the Gulf. The call-out test was successful.

Salmon running Dagger Falls on the (Salmon) not Snake River

I stand corrected on this, as I think I actually got this originally from someone who mis labeled it. While not directly related to us here on the Peninsula, it’s all about what we are working to save and restore. Enjoy the weekend and get outside!

Major action by U.S. Senate to help Puget Sound

We still need to get this bill passed. The bill now moves to the Senate floor for a vote. – editor

July 1, 2010

OLYMPIA – The Federal Government today took a major step to augment the monumental collaborative efforts already underway to restore Puget Sound by 2020.  The Puget Sound Recovery Act, sponsored by Senator Maria Cantwell and co-sponsored by Senator Patty Murray, is designed to strengthen cleanup of the Puget Sound. It won the approval Wednesday of the key Senate Committee on the Environment and Public Works (EPW).
“As the second largest estuary in the nation and the core of our region’s identity and prosperity, it is absolutely critical to restore and preserve this important body of water for generations to come,” Senator Cantwell said. “With the passage of the Puget Sound Recovery Act, the ongoing cleanup of Puget Sound will benefit significantly from the creation of a federal grant program to support a more comprehensive effort and complement the great work of the Puget Sound Partnership. I am proud that with the committee’s passage, we have taken a significant step toward restoring Puget Sound and protecting everything from animal habitats, to tourism, to our precious environment and our regional economy.”
"Yesterday’s passage is an important step in giving Puget Sound the protection it deserves," said Governor Gregoire. "I applaud Senator Cantwell and Senator Murray for their leadership and continued support as this bill moves forward."
“This is a big step forward,” said David Dicks, executive director of the Puget Sound Partnership. “We are on the path to move from the kids’ table to the big table with the Great Lakes and the Chesapeake Bay in terms of the federal government’s commitment to our national treasure – Puget Sound.”  
The Great Lakes, Chesapeake Bay and a handful of other “great water bodies” have enjoyed formal Clean Water Act “program” status for years, ensuring consistent federal attention and funding.  
Achieving this federal status was one of the goals that Governor Gregoire and the Washington State Legislature had in mind in 2007 when they created the Puget Sound Partnership and mandated the creation of an Action Agenda to restore Puget Sound by 2020.  That plan was finished in December 2008 and has been widely supported.
Recognizing Washington’s leadership, the Puget Sound Recovery Act takes a new approach that would provide the national attention and strong federal involvement, up to $90 million per year, while supporting Washington State’s leadership and existing stakeholder effort.
“Federal support will be tethered to the Action Agenda’s priorities and therefore result in greater coordination and leverage for both State and Federal efforts.  This codifies our Action Agenda’s citizen-based effort.  I applaud Senators Cantwell and Murray for this achievement” said David Dicks.  
Bill Ruckelshaus, chairman of the Puget Sound Partnership’s Leadership Council and the first head of EPA, said “We in Washington State greatly appreciate the efforts of this committee to fashion legislation that will put the federal government on a course to play a major supportive role in the restoration of Puget Sound.  Congressman Dicks and Senators Murray and Cantwell have already helped get a major increase in federal funding, this bill will take the Puget Sound Partnership’s efforts to the next level.”
The bill now moves to the Senate floor. 

Big Oil’s History in Puget Sound

Wondering how Puget Sound fares with Big Oil? From People For Puget Sound: Here’s how Puget Sound’s Big Oil industry has over the years lobbied against environmental protections, put its workers at risk, and spilled product on the Sound’s waters:

http://pugetsound.org/sound-spotlight/062110oil/

Oil Spill Activism: A Hole in the Bottom of the Sea

*6/28/10 Huffington Post
Brenda Peterson
What can we do, besides sit paralyzed before Gulf oil spill images of BP burning sea turtles alive, desperate fishermen waiting for clean-up jobs, and a toxic gusher hours away from the threat of gale-force winds? For those of us who also live by water, we can get involved in protecting our own shores from increased offshore drilling and future oil spills.
That’s why I joined my Seattle neighbors here on the serpentine Salish Sea (Puget Sound) for the "Hands Across the Sand" <http://http://www.handsacrossthesand.com/>&#160; event. On Alki Beach, 168 of us joined hands at low tide. It was high noon and we stood, mostly barefoot in the cool, sinking sand, chanting "No More Offshore Drilling!" and "We Need Clean, Alternative Energies!"
…"Talk to each other," one of the organizers advised. And we did. A Sierra Club <http://http://www.sierraclub.org/welcome/>&#160; volunteer handed out bumper stickers: "Chill the Drills in the Arctic." People for Puget Sound <http://pugetsound.org/>  handed out postcards to our governor and legislature, "No Oil Spills in Puget Sound: Fully Fund Washington State’s Oil Spill Program." Though we have no offshore drilling here, 15 billion gallons of oil travel through our waters. We have four huge refineries to receive and process them.
More at
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/brenda-peterson/oil-spill-activism-a-hole_b_627076.html