Tug(s) comes to aid of container ship

Got reports on Wednesday of two tugs assisting a freighter, but was in Sequim and missed getting a shot. Chris Dunagan reports on it in his column today, with a nice photo by Fred Felleman, the guy who spearheaded the legislative work on the tug. Thanks again to Kevin Van De Wege for helping get it passed last year. Now we need to get the funding finished. Still in limbo!

http://pugetsoundblogs.com/waterways/2010/03/03/container-ship-captain-calls-for-tug-assistance/

New scientific data on river flooding raises more concerns

King County has just posted an up to date report on scientific evidence for climate change related trends in river flooding. While specific to King County, the ramifications are just as valid for us out here, some 75 miles away. The preliminary data studies, using a variety of different climate model scenarios for the same reach of the Snoqualmie River. The models, all based on standard best practices science for modeling these kinds of events, run from 2000 to 2075 in 25 year increments. There is a ‘warm’, ‘warmer’ and ‘warmest’ set of variables. There is no modeling based on ‘no change’ or ‘cooler’. There is a reason for that. There is no scientific likelyhood that the planet is going to stay the same or cool down in the next 100 years.

What do the models say? Increases in:
-Magnitude
-duration
-frequency
-timing

Regardless of the cause of the heating up of our planet, (to politely set aside political debate on the subject), the planet is warming, and fast. We need to continue to plan for issues that are outcomes of this warming, like flooding, to increase in the above areas. This will cost money, and requires significant planning and education of the public. Especially the public along these rivers, that are likely to find their homes gone. If we don’t act, the insurance companies will take matter into their own hands and simply radically increase the payments. I for one, as a taxpayer, do not feel like bailing out a bunch of people who choose to live on a river that is likely to see significant flooding increase. How about you?

The report can be downloaded at this link.

Applications due in on Friday 2/28 for Jefferson County Planning Commission

Volunteer Application Forms for District 2 and 3 candidates for the Planning Commission are due to the Commissioners’ Office at the Courthouse by 4:30 pm this Friday, Feb 26!

Seeking Public Service Volunteers Help shape our community’s future growth and development!

There are two openings on the Jefferson County Planning Commission:
Planning Commissioner for District #2 (Cape George, Tri Area, Marrowstone) and
Planning Commissioner for District #3 (West and South County). Both terms expire
in 2014.

The Planning Commission provides a forum for public review of land use issues and
planning proposals. This appointed advisory body supports the Department of
Community Development and provides recommendations to the Board of County
Commissioners.

Topics addressed include goals, policies, regulations and zoning designations that
guide land use & development activities in our community. The group does not
review project-specific permits. Appointees represent their constituents and the
general public from their district. Regular meetings are the first and third
Wednesdays of each month, 6:30 PM, at WSU in Port Hadlock.

TO APPLY: Submit a completed Volunteer Application Form to Jefferson County
Board of County Commissioners, PO Box 1220, Port Townsend, WA 98368
before 4:30 pm, February 26, 2010.

LEARN MORE: Department of Community Development at 360/379-4450,
planning@co.jefferson.wa.us or online at
http://www.co.jefferson.wa.us/commdevelopment/PlanningCommission

Meeting in PA on storm water treatment – February 24th

“Beyond The Costly Expenditure Of Buying The Rayonier Tank: It is Time for Port Angeles to Clean Up It’s Wastes”

The City of Port Angeles often discharges raw sewage into the harbor, largely because its treatment facility isn’t equipped to handle both storm water and sanitary sewer flows during heavy rains. The City has proposed buying a five million gallon industrial tank to temporarily store overflows.

The Olympic Environmental Council is hosting a forum Wednesday, February 24, on how the City of Port Angeles can ecologically and financially benefit by looking for existing alternatives to the Rayonier tank for stormwater overflow and treating solid wastes without contaminating the Strait of Juan de Fuca. The organization believes the citizens deserve comparisons in costs and feasibility of handling stormwater and wastes that are better for both taxpayers and the environment.

The forum presentation will cover ways the City can REDUCE stormwater runoff, DETOX stormwater and sewage waste, and RECYCLE both ecologically and cost effectively for beneficial uses.

Alternative methods of handling these wastes will be presented by Tyler Ahlgren and Elizabeth Dunigan. Ahlgren was appointed to a CA Waste Water Treatment Plant Alternative Committee to design a state of the art facility that won numerous awards when it was built. He helped design an environmentally responsible flood control system that was built. He is a member of Victoria B.C.’s Sewage Alliance and is on the Board of Directors for People Opposed to Outfall Pollution (POOP) that moved Victoria to treat its sewage. He is also a member of the Clallam County Dungeness River Management Team and Dungeness Water Working Group–Management & Instream Flow Rulemaking.

Elizabeth Dunigan holds an M.A. in Whole Systems Design. She focuses on how living systems synthesize in ways that are regenerative. She holds a UW Commercial Real Estate Development certification and is an accredited professional by Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design. She designs healing gardens in hospitals, green infrastructure projects to improve the quality of stormwater, and ecological buffers by applying mushroom mycelium to break down petrochemicals carried by rain on street surfaces. She has been a board member for Groundswell NW with responsibility to implement natural clean stormwater urban green spaces.

The time of the February 24th forum will be 6:30-8:30 PM and held in the Clallam County Commissioners Meeting Room, 4th and Peabody, Port Angeles WA

Sponsored by the Olympic Environmental Council
For more information, contact Darlene Schanfald at darlenes@olympus.net

Eroding bluffs scare homeowners northwest of Sequim

Those of us that help draft laws regarding shoreline management are often villified as putting in too much regulation. I would venture to say that these homeowners would have preferred to err on the side of caution rather than find themselves 40′ closer to a 150′ bluff. I wonder how this effects their homeowners insurance, if they can get it.

2/12 Peninsula Daily News By Rob Ollikainen–Peninsula Daily News

SEQUIM — When Roger Huntman heard the rumbling beneath his feet, he knew it was time to run.

Standing near the edge of a bluff overlooking the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Huntman got out of the way before a section of his lawn calved like a glacier.

“If I didn’t run approximately 40 feet, I would have gone down with it,” said Huntman, who lives in the Monterra subdivision northwest of Sequim.

Over the course of about three hours on the morning of Feb. 1, a 150-foot section of the bluff moved about 40-feet closer to a row of homes on 100 block of Cypress Circle.

More at
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20100212/NEWS/302129992

High tides inundating some areas…global warming comes home?

Christopher Dunagan reports on the latest extreme high tides and their effects on Kitsap and Mason counties. There has been a lot of worrying about the effects of global warming raising sea levels, which may be what’s going on here. Similar situations were reported on the east coast this summer. If this is the root cause of these higher tides, we have some expensive changes to our infrastructure out here. A lot of communities are just about at ‘normal’ traditional sea levels. A 3 to 5 foot rise could be problematic to say the least!

“…Twanoh State Park on Hood Canal was under water, near Belfair. Photos on the Kitsap web site by John Stokes.

Another opportunity to photograph high tides begins today, according to Ecology officials. For information about submitting photos to Ecology, go to the agency’s EcoNet blog.

Read more: http://pugetsoundblogs.com/waterways/2010/02/01/high-tides-inundate-many-shorelines-in-puget-sound/#ixzz0eMPwcqMa

Wetlands Day – An international event

From Michelle McConnell at Jefferson County- 1971: The same year our Washington Legislature passed the state’s Shoreline Management Act (SMA), a collection of countries from around the world gathered in Ramsar, Iran to sign a treaty called the Convention on Wetlands, in recognition of the importance of and risks posed to wetland ecosystems and to take action to protect wetlands. The USA joined the Convention in 1987 and February 2nd each year is World Wetlands Day to commemorate the Convention.

Today there are over 150 ‘member states’ participating with over 1,800 Wetlands of International Significance identified around the globe. The US has 26 sites – the nearest to us here in Jefferson County, WA is the Alaksan* site between Boundary Bay and Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, just north of the border at the mouth of the Fraser River.

The Convention uses a broad definition of the types of wetlands covered in its mission, including swamps and marshes, lakes and rivers, wet grasslands and peatlands, oases, estuaries, deltas and tidal flats, near-shore marine areas, mangroves and coral reefs, and human-made sites such as fish ponds, rice paddies, reservoirs, and salt pans.

Why protect wetlands?
· Wetlands provide fundamental ecological services and are regulators of water regimes and sources of biodiversity at all levels – species, genetic and ecosystem.
· Wetlands constitute a resource of great economic, scientific, cultural, and recreational value for the community.
· Wetlands play a vital role in climate change adaptation and mitigation.
· Progressive encroachment on, and loss of, wetlands cause serious and sometimes irreparable environmental damage to the provision of ecosystem services.
· Wetlands should be restored and rehabilitated, whenever possible.
· Wetlands should be conserved by ensuring their wise use.

Learn more at http://www.ramsar.org

Local WETLANDS
Based on Ramsar’s definition, consider the 500+ miles of local lake, river and marine shorelines here in Jefferson County under SMP jurisdiction with the array of marshes, estuaries and tidal flats. While there are certainly documented opportunities for restoration of damaged areas, we’re fortunate to be quite wealthy in wetlands. And while a formal assessment hasn’t been conducted, it seems our Locally Approved SMP is well aligned with the Convention’s mission of ‘conservation and wise use’. Sounds like the SMA’s target of balancing appropriate development and protection…

See where local wetlands are currently mapped in Maps 8 -10 of the Final Shoreline Inventory & Characterization Map Folio and with the Critical Area maps habitat layer on the County’s interactive mapping site jMAP.

*Alaksen. 24/05/82; British Columbia; 586 ha; 49º06’N 123º10’W. National Wildlife Area; Migratory Bird Sanctuary. The site forms part of the Fraser River delta, includes arable land and grassland containing scattered wetlands varying from fresh to brackish, and mud and sand flats supporting three main vegetation types. An important link in the chain of wetlands used by waterbirds migrating between Arctic breeding grounds and southern wintering grounds. Up to 40,000 geese of the Wrangel Island breeding population and up to one million other shorebirds stage and winter here. Up to 25,000 ducks occur in fall and 10,000 Melanitta perspicillata congregate to feed on the tidal flats in late summer. More than one million people live in the Fraser River valley. Ramsar site no. 243. Most recent RIS information: 2001.

Best regards,
Michelle

KUOW on Monday 1/25 – Kathy Fletcher and David Dicks on the State of the Sound

On January 25th, 2010, Kathy Fletcher of People For Puget Sound and David Dicks who heads the Puget Sound Partnership  were on KUOW Weekeday (94.9FM or http://kuow.org) discussing the state of the Sound and progress on its clean up. This is an excellent quick overview of the problems facing the Sound for the average person.

http://www.kuow.org/search.php?page=1&chSummaries=1&txtKeyWordSearch=david+dicks&sa.x=0&sa.y=0&sa=Search
This is where you can listen to this online.

Puget Sound Partnership taking a low profile this year?

*1/27/10 Tacoma News Tribune
Puget Sound Partnership plans light session
ROB CARSON; Staff writer

The state agency charged with restoring the health of Puget Sound by 2020 is keeping its head down this legislative session.

The Puget Sound Partnership is putting its political muscle behind just two bills, neither of which proposes strong proactive action on major problems facing the Sound.

David Dicks, the Partnership’s executive director, laid out the agency’s strategy for the session to a board of the agency’s top advisers last week in Olympia.

…. “It’s always the same story: ‘It’s not the right time,’” said David Troutt, natural resources director for the Nisqually Indian tribe. “We need to stop the bleeding now. There is absolutely no reason we should not be doing something right now.”

Kathy Fletcher, executive director of the environmental group, People for Puget Sound, also expressed frustration.

“What’s the partnership’s proactive strategy?” she demanded.

Dicks asked for patience.

More at
http://www.thenewstribune.com/news/local/story/1045411.html

Environmental Lobbying Day A Big Success!

Over 400 people descended on Olympia to attend the Environmental Lobby Day 2010, to advocate for clean water, safe baby bottles, and sustaining the budget for environmental protections.  We had 14 people from the Peninsula, including Gray’s Harbor and Port Townsend.

Thanks to Representatives Kessler, Van De Wege and Senator Hargrove for taking the time to meet with us.

In 2008, Environmental Priorities Coalition successfully passed all four environmental priorities.

The Coalition’s 2010 legislative package includes:

  • Working for Clean Water bill is about creating jobs, rebuilding our local economies, and cleaning up polluted waterways like Puget Sound and the Spokane River.
  • Safe Baby Bottle Act to protect children’s health and the environment by phasing out the harmful chemical bisphenol A (BPA) from baby bottles, food and beverage cans, and other consumer products.
  • Sustain Environmental Protections in the Budget to ensure adequate funding for the core environmental protections that make Washington State a healthy place to live.

Video of the event on Youtube

Jefferson Land Trust 2009 Annual Meeting – 1/26

Unfortunately the Land Trust has chosen to hold their annual meeting on the same day that environmentalists from around the state have been asked to come lobby in Olympia. Hope you Land Trusters can do both!@

What: Jefferson Land Trust 2009 Annual Meeting- Guest Speaker Gene Duvernoy . Exec Director of Cascade Land Conservency

Where: NW Maritime Center – 431 Water St.

Time: 7 to 9 PM

More info: 360.379.9501

Democrats meeting in Tri-Area Center – January 26th 7PM

If you can’t make it down to Lobbying Day (or even if you can!) stop by the Democrats monthly meeting. This is the next best thing to going to Olympia, as it can help you keep promoting environmental issues to the local elected leaders. While the program this month is on Gaza, with a speaker who just returned from there, if you have an environmental issue to raise, let them know. I’m sure they’ll slot you in. A good discussion might be to ask about rallying support for the upcoming in-stream flow work, known as WRIA . WRIA stands for Water Resource Instream Areas. We need to continue to support these efforts to sustain instream flow for salmon habitat.  http://www.jeffcodemocrats.com/

North Olympic Sierra Club Meeting 1/27

North Olympic Sierra Club Meeting
John Fabian (of the Hood Canal Coalition) will be discussing the Pit to Pier Project
Wednesday, January 27th, 2010 – 6:30 PM
Gardiner Community Center (980 Old Gardiner Road, Sequim, WA)
Your attendance is most welcome
Questions:  Contact Group Chair, Josey Paul at (360) 928-0116 or josey@starband.netNort

The debate on Don Flora’s ‘scientific’ letter to the community

A good roundup of the scientific firestorm of Don Flora’s supposedly scientific analysis of shoreline ecology. If you haven’t been reading this, you should read Chris’ overview, and then read Flora’s document and the reply from the scientific community, which are listed at the end of the article.

http://pugetsoundblogs.com/waterways/2010/01/15/a-few-observations-about-science-and-shorelines/

First call – Storming the Sound Conference for Educators

Storming the Central Sound Conference:
Save the date and Call for presentations

Theme: Restoring Puget Sound: Taking Action through Education, Outreach and Service

Save the Date!
Date: Friday, March 26, 2010
Time: 9:00 to 4:00 PM
Location: Seattle Art Museum, Downtown, 1300 First Avenue

Storming the Sound is a one-day conference for environmental and sustainability educators in the Central Puget Sound region. This is a great opportunity for teachers, non-formal educators, environmental organizations with education programs, and students with an interest in a career in environmental education to:
·         Learn about other Puget Sound environmental education programs.
·         Bring home practical strategies and tactics you can use.
·         Gain skills and insights with experts and capable peers.
·         Share insights and network with other educators.
·         Engage and grow in sessions where everyone is a participant.
·         Exchange ideas and experiences to help you develop new perspectives and approaches.

Call for Presentations: Conference planning committee invites submissions of abstracts for presentations.  Deadline: February 5, 2010
Click on the link below to see topic ideas and to submit your proposal online.

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/2010StormingtheCentralSoundCallforPresentations

A complete web site for the conference and online registration is coming soon!
Registration will open on February 1, 2010.  Stay tuned!

Registration fee is $20, which includes lunch, coffee/tea and snacks. (Note: If this fee is an obstacle to attend, please inquire about scholarships, see contact below.)

For questions please contact:
Justine Asohmbom at Dept of Ecology, juas461@ecy.wa.gov or (425) 649-7108, or
Ann Butler at People For Puget Sound, abutler@pugetsound.org, or (360) 754-9177

Storming the Sound conference planning committee: People For Puget Sound, Department of Ecology, NAME, King County Extension, Cascade Interpretive Consulting LLC, King County, Snohomish County

Helping Haiti

Off topic of our community, but worth noting.
Help for Haiti: Learn What You Can Do

Pit To Pier – A reversal and a second reversal- Canadians buy into 1/4 of Pit to Pier- PDN

As you can see from the comment by the PDN publisher, apparently there was a mistake in the PDN source on the story. I feel better in that I’m not the only one making mistakes today (I inadvertently went to Seattle for a board meeting that I have gone to for two years every third Weds!). Luckily I had other business down there…No problems Mr. Brewer, I’ll leave this up for a day or so, so that the correction can be noted.

Not sure yet whether Chris Dunagan’s article was a mistake, or whether this reversal happened just afterwards. But as I said before, it’s appears to be another new chapter.
1/13 Peninsula Daily News
Canadian firm buys quarter share of ‘pit to pier’ gravel mining project near Hood Canal Bridge
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/article/20100113/news/301139979
By Jeff Chew
Peninsula Daily News

SHINE — Athabasca Minerals Inc. of Canada will purchase a 25 percent stake in the Thorndyke Resource “pit to pier” gravel mining project now under Jefferson County planning review.

According to a statement from the publicly traded company based in Edmonton, Alberta, it will invest $3 million and assume a minority partnership in Thorndyke Resource, the company formed by the Fred Hill Materials family to develop and operate the pit-to-pier project proposed south of the Hood Canal Bridge.

Fred Hill Materials proposes building a 4-mile-long conveyor belt to Hood Canal to move gravel to a 1,000-foot pier and load it on barges for transport.

Alex Hill, Fred Hill Materials and Thorndyke Resource chief executive and a grandson of the company’s founder, said Athabasca brings additional experience and financial backing to the pit-to-pier project.

The rest of the story is here…

Pit to Pier funding falls through – End near?

Well, well well. Not totally surprising, given the economy. But here it is… end of the story or just another chapter closing?

1/10/10 Kitsap Sun —Financing Deal for Hood Canal Pit-to-Pier Project Falls Through
By Christopher Dunagan

POULSBO —  A Canadian company and the Hill family of North Kitsap have broken off a relationship that could have brought $3 million to a pit-to-pier gravel project proposed in Jefferson County.

Athabasca Minerals Inc. of Edmonton, Alberta, and Thorndyke Resource of Poulsbo never completed the terms of an agreement, which would have given Athabasca a 25 percent ownership <http://www.kitsapsun.com/news/2009/sep/11/pit-to-pier-mining-operation-expands-ownership/>  in the pit-to-pier project.

Alex Hill, owner of Thorndyke Resource, said he has received “considerable investment interest” in the project.

“After further considering their (Athabasca’s) proposal, we have chosen another funding alternative more beneficial to the Thorndyke Resource project,” Hill said.

More at
http://www.kitsapsun.com/news/2010/jan/10/financing-deal-for-pit-to-pier-project-falls/

Poisoned Waters: Puget Sound in Trouble Port Angeles Showing

A small but enthusiastic crowd showed up on Friday night to view the Puget Sound special edition of the acclaimed Frontline show on Puget Sound, “Poisoned Waters.” Following the viewing, their was lively discussion  with representatives of various environmental organizations including People For Puget Sound, Local 2020, WSU Clallam County Extension, and Puget Sound Starts Here/ECO Net.

If you are interested in having this shown at your organization, feel free to contact me.

When Jan 08, 2010
from 07:00 pm to 09:00 pm
Where Clallam County Board of Commissioners Meeting Room, Port Angeles
Contact Name Al Bergstein
Contact Email albergstein@gmail.com

Thanks for helping People For Puget Sound achieve goal!

People for Puget Sound achieved their goal of raising $350,000 for the winter fund drive. This money will go to help fund restoration ecologists, scientists, policy experts and other staff to continue to drive the work to restore Puget Sound. This work includes habitat restoration, scientific research,  legislative priorities and lobbying, Last year, the unique GIS mapping of storm water runoff points in PS  was paid by People For Puget Sound funds. Your donations. This groundbreaking work has allowed scientists and legislators to much better understand the issues behind funding storm water runoff projects. Thanks again for your donations. This site, while not funded by P4PS, is created and managed by one of their board of directors, and is done to further their goals of education of the public.