Wednesday, June 28, 2017

Fecal Matters: Allyn Waterfront Park is OPEN for Water Recreation, Mason County

BEACH Program Update

June 28, 2017, Allyn Waterfront Park beach is re-opened to swimming and water contact recreation.  Recent water sampling showed that bacteria levels were low and safe for swimming.

Contact with fecal contaminated waters can result in gastroenteritis, skin rashes, upper respiratory infections, and other illnesses. Children and the elderly may be more vulnerable to waterborne illnesses.

Stay updated about water quality at your beaches by keeping up with us on our blog Fecal Matters, on Facebook, or join our listserv.

Julianne Ruffner, our BEACH Program Manager, is available at 360-407-6154 or julianne.ruffner@ecy.wa.gov for questions.

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Calling all lovers of the Puget Sound!

Are you interested in regional efforts to keep Puget Sound healthy and resilient? Join us in Auburn, Wed., July 19 at Green River Community College to attend our Puget Sound Nutrient Dialogue. This all-day meeting will bring together those working to understand and protect Puget Sound to discuss what we’re learning from our most recent science.

Fort Lawton West Point Lighthouse, Discovery Park, Seattle, Washington (Courtesy of Kenny Rowe)

After a decade of development, we have the state-of-the-art Salish Sea environmental computer model to help us understand changes in Puget Sound and evaluate the best solutions to reduce human impacts. This model shows us that land-based human sources of nutrients are leading to cases of low dissolved oxygen levels in the Sound. We are using this tool – in combination with ongoing field monitoring data and broad stakeholder input – to develop options to reduce nutrients in the Sound.

Join the conversation and learn how an over-abundance of nutrients affect our beloved Puget Sound. A healthy balance of nutrients is essential for a healthy food web, just as we require a balanced diet for good health. But excess nutrients from human sources can cause problems in Puget Sound just as over-eating can lead to health problems in your body. The over-enrichment of nutrients is diminishing dissolved oxygen levels that fish and other species in the Sound need to thrive.

 

Click here to register!

Join us in person


When
July 19 
Time
8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. 
Where
Green River Community College, Lindbloom Student Union Center
Address

Register by July 5 to secure your seat!


Parking and the event are free. Coffee and light refreshments will be provided. Lunch will be available for purchase at the college’s newly remodeled cafeteria.

 

How can nutrients be negative for Puget Sound? 

A healthy Puget Sound is integral to our identity and our future. There is a growing body of science and evidence that shows increasing nutrients are adversely affecting the Sound. 

This dialogue is meant to bring together stakeholders, decision-makers, scientists, and the interested public to:
  • Talk about the current state of the knowledge
  • Discuss the effects of excess nutrients in Puget Sound
  • Make connections between different areas of research
  • Identify new studies that will improve our knowledge and understanding

Just like your human body, our Puget Sound ecosystem needs balance to be healthy. Too many nutrients in the Sound can also lead to undesirable changes in the food web, over-growths of algae that wash up on our beaches, increases in jellyfish populations, and more harmful algae blooms. Beyond changing what is considered normal for Puget Sound, these problems could reduce the Sound’s ability to be resilient to increasing pressures from climate change and the growing human population in the region.

 


Stay involved! 

Learn more about the project on our website where you can also find updated information on the Puget Sound Nutrient Dialogue as it becomes available.

Subscribe to our project listserv to receive email updates. 


By: Jenny Robertson, water quality environmental specialist

Friday, June 23, 2017

Warm weather triggers air quality advisory

Higher than normal temperatures across Washington have triggered an Air Quality Advisory for sensitive groups in the Foothills of the Cascades and the Tri-Cities this weekend.

Ground-level ozone, also known as smog, is different from the ozone in the upper atmosphere that protects us from the sun’s radiation. Ozone at ground-level can cause serious health problems.

Ozone can affect your health

You can’t see ozone, so many people do not realize the harm it can cause. People with respiratory problems, the elderly, children, and pregnant women are most at risk and should avoid being outdoors if possible.


Ozone exposure can feel like a sunburn on your lungs and lead to additional health problems such as:
  •  Difficulty breathing – Especially during strenuous activity.
  • Lung damage – Exposure can damage the lining of your lungs.
  • Asthma – People with asthma are more susceptible to attacks during high levels of ozone.
  • Lung & throat irritation – High levels of ozone can irritate your throat and chest causing you to cough. Symptoms will pass a few hours after exposure, but can continue to do harm even after symptoms disappear.

What causes ozone?

Ozone forms when sunlight chemically reacts with nitrogen oxides (NOx) and volatile
organic compounds (VOCs) from vehicles, factories, industrial facilities and some common household chemicals that are released into the air. The higher the temperature, the greater the risk of high levels of ozone.

How do I protect myself?

There are things you can do to reduce your exposure to ozone. If you have outdoor activities planned, do them in the morning when temperatures are lower.



You can help protect yourself from ozone by:
  • Carpooling.
  • Taking the bus.
  • Riding your bike.
  • Delay refueling vehicles and boats.
  • Put off mowing.
  • Staying indoors.
  • Avoiding strenuous activity.


You can monitor the ozone levels in your area multiple ways:
  • Download the free AirNow app for iPhone or Android.
  • Visit the AirNow website.
  • Sign up for AirNow EnviroFlash, a free service that sends air quality info to your e-mail or mobile phone e-mail address. 
  • The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) provides additional Air Quality Forecast Guidance.
You can also visit Ecology’s online air quality map to see what levels are like in your area.


Commuter Resources for bus, rail and ride sharing: King County Metro Transit,  Rideshare; Sound Transit, Spoke Regional Transit, Vancouver C-Tran, Whatcom transportation Authority

By Kim Allen, Air Quality Community Outreach

Ecology has received a new request to use Imidacloprid to control burrowing shrimp

We are evaluating a new application requesting permission to use the pesticide Imidacloprid to control burrowing shrimp in Willapa Bay and Grays Harbor. The application was filed by about a dozen oyster farmers from the Willapa Grays Harbor Oyster Growers Association, who propose to use the pesticide to treat tide lands to support their aquaculture practices.

We are now in the process of evaluating the environmental impacts of the proposal – which we will request your comments and suggestions on when we issue our draft environmental report at the end of this summer.

Similar to previous permit request 

This request for a permit is similar to – but not the same as – an earlier permit application to use Imidacloprid to control burrowing shrimp. The previous permit application process ended in 2015, but following public concern over the permit, the growers withdrew it, and the permit was never used.

About a dozen of the oyster growers from the earlier permit process have now applied for a new permit.

Environmental review

Process to complete environmental review
and permit application processing.
Click image to see larger version.
We are evaluating this proposal to understand the negative impacts it could have on the environment. We’re preparing an additional environmental study to inform our decision of whether to deny the permit application or to develop a draft permit approval.

We prepared an Environmental Impact Statement for the 2015 permit process, and we will supplement it with the most up-to-date research and information available. We will develop what’s called a Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement – it will build on the environmental review from 2015.

Where are we in the environmental review process?

We’re still early in the review process. Right now we are analyzing new research and information that wasn’t available to us when we prepared the 2015 Environmental Impact Statement. This will go into a new draft report, which we will publish for public review and comments.

Even though we’re not ready for official public comments yet, we encourage anyone who wishes to share their views on the applications, or Ecology’s action moving forward, to contact us. Also, if you have information you want to ensure we consider for our supplemental environmental review, please send it to us.

Please share views, information, or comments with us on our website.

Public comment period

Once we have a draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement prepared, we’ll open a 45-day public comment period. This will be the time to review and comment on the draft environmental report. We’ll also host several public meetings on the draft report in key locations across western Washington.

We will use what we learn during the public comment period to finalize the Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement. This is a crucial step in our environmental review required under the State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA).

What’s changed since the previous permit request?

This is a new request for a permit, but we’re building on information learned from the 2015 process. Some examples of new or different information we are taking into consideration include:

  • Acreage
    Today, there are fewer farmers applying for a permit. The applicants propose treating less acreage – 485 acres in Willapa Bay and 15 acres in Grays Harbor – as opposed to 2,000 acres across the two bays in the previous permit. 
  • Method
    The method of applying the pesticide has changed. The growers propose spraying Imidacloprid from boats or ground equipment rather than helicopter. 
  • Best available science
    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released a new risk assessment on the environmental impacts of Imidacloprid, and neonicotinoids, generally, in December 2016. Health Canada and the European Food Safety Authority have also recently released similar risk assessments. This and other new research will contribute to our supplemental environmental review. 

Our role regulating Washington’s environment

Ecology regulates the quality of Washington’s waters. Any discharges of pollution to state waters must obtain a permit from the federal EPA called the National Pollution Discharge Elimination System permit. EPA delegates the responsibility of managing these requests within Washington to Ecology. The purpose of this permit is to ensure that pollution does not rise to a level which causes harm to people or the environment.

Sediments contain much of the aquatic life that makes up the base of the food web essential to healthy estuaries. These organisms are important food for salmon, sturgeon, and many other species. Beyond affecting just the overlying water, this permit request to use Imidacloprid to control burrowing shrimp will impact the sediment where the pesticide is applied.

Because of this, the growers applying for the permit must also get two Sediment Impact Zones approved. This is to ensure the proposed use doesn’t violate Washington Sediment Management Standards. The permit and Sediment Impact Zone determinations combined will address requirements necessary to protect Willapa Bay and Grays Harbor for a multitude of uses.

If we authorize Sediment Impact Zones – one for Willapa Bay and one for Grays Harbor – we would set requirements for how:
  • Imidacloprid may be applied to the sediment
  • The applicants ensure that the impact is contained only to the designated zones
  • The area is monitored after the discharge occurs

The state Sediment Management Standards protect Washington’s benthic environment. That is, we recognize that it’s important to protect both the overlying waters and the grounds underneath. These rules work to reduce – and ultimately eliminate – sources of pollution that harm the ecosystem and make people sick.

A view of scenic Willapa Bay from our marine monitoring research program.
Photo by: Christopher Krembs/Ecology


Working toward a healthier Washington

A cornerstone of work at Ecology is to continually reduce pollution, and to work toward more protective permit conditions.

For this specific permit to be issued, a process called Integrated Pest Management must be followed. This is the practice of continually working toward managing burrowing shrimp more sustainably, and without chemicals. We have been supportive of research into alternative control methods and will continue to support future efforts.


Stay informed

You can follow this permitting process and get the most up-to-date information by subscribing to our Aquatic Pesticide Permits listserv or checking our Burrowing Shrimp Control webpage frequently. We will also publish updates to our blog as we have new information.

By: Jessie Payne, water quality communications manager

Thursday, June 22, 2017

Fecal Matters: Allyn Waterfront Park CLOSED to Swimming, Mason County

BEACH Program Update


On 6/22/2017, a closure to water contact recreation at Allyn Waterfront Park was issued due to high levels of fecal bacteria in the water. This beach will be re-sampled next week to determine if bacteria levels have dropped. The public is advised to avoid contact with the water until further notice.

Contact with fecal contaminated waters can result in gastroenteritis, skin rashes, upper respiratory infections, and other illnesses. Children and the elderly may be more vulnerable to waterborne illnesses.

Stay updated about water quality at your beaches by keeping up with us on our blog Fecal Matters, on Facebook, or join our listserv.

Julianne Ruffner, our BEACH Program Manager, is available at 360-407-6154 or julianne.ruffner@ecy.wa.gov for questions.

Wednesday, June 21, 2017

Regional haze, it’s nothing like Jimi Hendrix’ purple haze

What do cars, dust, manufacturing operations, and national parks have in common? Regional haze.


You may have seen regional haze when trying to get a look of Mount Rainier or the North Cascades and were disappointed because you couldn’t see them easily because of a brown or white haze. That haze is air pollution and comes from a variety of sources such as vehicles, industrial and power-generating plants, and some natural sources. It can impair visibility and reduce the vibrancy of colors and other inspirational details.

Managing air pollution so we can all see a little better

Washington and other states throughout the nation have been working to ensure that you and your kids and their kids will be able to see, and enjoy, our majestic mountain wilderness areas. It’s the same sort of far-sighted vision that motivated Theodore Roosevelt when he established our national parks.

Regional haze has reduced scenic views in national parks and wilderness areas from an average of 140 miles down to 35-90 miles in the western United States. At first blush this might not seem like a serious issue, but consider this. What if you grew up never clearly seeing the epic Olympic Mountains, Mount Baker, or Mount Rainier because our air pollution was too dense? It would certainly change our quality of life and impact our health and environment.

A report on Washington’s regional haze

We just released our 5-year progress report on regional haze. The report includes the advances we’ve made to improve visibility. It also shares visibility information about the areas in Washington that are being monitored.

Visibility is measured by collecting and analyzing particles in the air as part of an interagency monitoring effort. We do this in partnership with the National Park Service and U.S. Forest Service. In Washington, there are nine monitoring sites. We collect one 24-hour air sample at each site every three days, providing up to 121 samples a year per site.We analyze the samples for substances such as sulfate, nitrate, carbon-containing particles, sea salt, and dirt and sand — all of which affect visibility. We calculate visibility based on the types and amounts of substances in the particles.

The Federal Clean Air Act requires that we make efforts to improve visibility through a Regional Haze Plan. In 1977 the Act declared a national goal to remedy existing visibility issues and prevent future haze caused by man-made air pollution at selected national parks and wilderness areas of the United States, known as mandatory federal Class 1 Areas.
 Washington has eight mandatory federal Class 1 areas, totaling more than 3.3 million acres of land:
  •  Alpine Lakes Wilderness Area
  • Glacier Peak Wilderness Area
  • Goat Rocks Wilderness Area
  • Mount Adams Wilderness Area
  • Mount Rainier National Park
  • North Cascades National Park
  • Olympic National Park
  • Pasayten Wilderness Area

Visibility is improving

Long-term monitoring trends suggest that visibility is improving somewhat at our national parks and wilderness areas listed above.

You can learn more about these trends and more by reading our Regional Haze 5-year Progress Report.

Share your opinion on our Regional Haze Report

We’re asking people to weigh in our report and have opened a public comment period.  You can comment on our Regional Haze 5-year Progress Report through Aug. 1, 2017:
If you’d like to see more pictures of regional haze and improvements being made, visit the Interagency Monitoring of Protected Visual Environments website

By Camille St. Onge, Air Quality and Climate Change Communications

Friday, June 9, 2017

Eyes Over Puget Sound: River flows above normal

Cooler and wetter conditions earlier this year have set the stage for a favorable supply of freshwater. River flows are all above normal due to warm May temperatures melting our abundant snow pack. These conditions are creating significantly fresher conditions in Puget Sound surface waters. 

Click here to see this month's report.

























Algae blooms are limited but there are some yellow-green blooms growing in bays near the Kitsap Peninsula and in the Puyallup, Skagit and Stillaguamish river estuaries. Red algae blooms are present in the rivers feeding into Willapa Bay. Also see what is “blooming” in the sediments of Puget Sound.

What's Eyes Over Puget Sound?

Eyes Over Puget Sound combines high-resolution photo observations with satellite images, ferry data from travel between Seattle and Victoria BC, and measurements from our moored instruments. We use a seaplane to travel between our monitoring stations because they are so far apart. Once a month, we take photos of Puget Sound water conditions and turn those out, along with data from our stations, in the monthly Eyes Over Puget Sound report.

Thursday, June 8, 2017

Ecology helps to keep climate change discussions going

Gov. Jay Inslee (right, center), Ecology Director Maia Bellon (right, front), and members of the Inslee administration meet with Chilean President Michelle Bachelet and other Chilean dignitaries.

Ecology Director Maia Bellon accompanied Gov. Jay Inslee to discuss climate change with President Michelle Bachelet of Chile on June 7 in Seattle, Wash.

In 2015, Washington and Chile established a memorandum of understanding regarding climate change, sustainability, and clean energy at the international climate summit in Paris, COP21. Wednesday’s meeting was a chance to follow-up on that agreement and discuss potential next steps for cooperation.

According to Bellon, the conversation with President Bachelet was positive and focused on a range of topics, including similar climate change impacts that Chile and Washington contend with, such as drought and ocean health. Discussions also included renewable energy and economic transformation.

After the United States withdrew from the Paris climate accord earlier this month, Bellon tweeted, “I remain as committed as ever to protecting our environment. I will not give up on our future.” Finding common ground with other states and with nations like Chile that recognize the threat climate change poses plays an important role in maintaining that momentum toward finding solutions.

Washington has been a longstanding leader when it comes to addressing climate change. In 2008,
the state Legislature was the first in the country to adopt limits on greenhouse gases, and, last year, Ecology adopted the nation’s most progressive rule to cap and reduce carbon pollution, the Clean Air Rule.   

Bellon said when Washington adopted the Clean Air Rule, it was a watershed moment in the country’s history because it was the first time a state adopted a regulation to limit carbon pollution under a state clean air act.

Despite the wavering federal commitment to combat climate change, Gov. Jay Inslee said that it is imperative for Washington and other states to continue to take action.

“Washington state is leading the way on climate issues where Washington, D.C., is failing,” Inslee said following the decision to withdraw from the Paris agreement.

To learn more about what Gov. Inslee is doing to combat climate change, visit the governor’s news site

By Camille St. Onge, Climate Change and Air Quality

Wednesday, June 7, 2017

Fecal Matters: Bay View State Park is OPEN for Water Recreation, Skagit County

BEACH Program Update

June 7, 2017, Bay View State Park beach is re-opened to swimming and water contact recreation.  Recent water sampling showed that bacteria levels were low and safe for swimming.

Contact with fecal contaminated waters can result in gastroenteritis, skin rashes, upper respiratory infections, and other illnesses. Children and the elderly may be more vulnerable to waterborne illnesses.

Stay updated about water quality at your beaches by keeping up with us on our blog Fecal Matters, on Facebook, or join our listserv.

Julianne Ruffner, our BEACH Program Manager, is available at 360-407-6154 or julianne.ruffner@ecy.wa.gov for questions.

Tuesday, June 6, 2017

Washington water law protects your water resources

Did you know today marks the 100th anniversary of Washington’s first water law, the foundation for how we manage our water resources?

That's right! On June 6, 1917, the newly adopted Washington Water Code established “prior appropriation” as the means for establishing rights to surface water – rivers, streams, springs, or lakes. This means that anyone applying for and receiving a water right first has priority over those applying later. This tenet of water law is known as “first in time, first in right.”

The new law recognized that water is essential for life but not an unlimited resource. No one owns our water resources. They are held in common by the citizens of Washington and under the prior appropriation doctrine, you must obtain a water right to use the waters of the state. And, importantly, new water users cannot impair (which is a legal term meaning to “cause harm”) the water rights of others who already have water rights.

Since 1917 the water code has governed the work of Washington state to ensure that adequate water supplies are available now and into the future for our homes, farms, industries and natural environment.

Other state agencies managed our water until the Legislature gave the assignment to the Water Resources Program when it created the Department of Ecology in 1970. But much has changed in water management since 1917. Over the past 100 years, water law has evolved because of court decisions related to conflicts between water users, the role of tribal treaty rights, and environmental concerns that have increased protection for important fishery resources and species threatened with extinction.

Commemorating the anniversary

We’re using this centennial to invite all Washingtonians to learn more about water law and the importance of protecting our water resources.

Our water law is complex. To help people better understand our state’s water law and what it may mean to them, we are developing a four-part video series. You can watch the first one, about the history of water law, on our 100 Years of Water Law webpage.

The other videos will address where water comes from, how it is managed, and the implications of climate change. We will use our website and other social media about the past, present, and future of water management in our state.

Join us in our recognition of this anniversary. Visit our webpage and stay tuned for more!

By Barbara Brooks, Water Resources Program

Monday, June 5, 2017

Eyes Under Puget Sound: Critter of the Month – Tube-Dwelling Anemone

Wildflower season is upon us here in the Pacific Northwest, and this month’s critter is a reminder that the marine environment has “flowers” of its own! Meet the tube-dwelling anemone, a delicate blossom at the bottom of Puget Sound.

The tube-dwelling anemone Pachycerianthus fimbriatus,
photographed at the Seattle Aquarium

Blooms of many colors 

With their wispy crown of tentacles, tube-dwelling anemones might easily be confused with tube worms, but they actually belong to the phylum Cnidaria, which also includes corals and jellyfish.

These tube-dwellers are not true anemones; they are in a special group called cerianthids, and Pachycerianthus fimbriatus is the only one found in Puget Sound. They range in color from white to purple to orange, and often grow in large groups that look a bit like flowers in a meadow.

P. fimbriatus can be found from southern Alaska to Baja California, in depths of up to 268 meters (about 800 feet). In our sampling, we encounter them most frequently in Bellingham Bay, Sinclair Inlet, and the South Sound – places where they can easily burrow into the soft mucky sediment.

Different-colored individuals of
Pachycerianthus fimbriatus at the Monterey Bay Aquarium;
photo courtesy of Dave Cowles at inverts.wallawalla.edu

Down the tubes

P. fimbriatus has a soft, vulnerable body, so it burrows into the mud and creates its own protective dwelling around it. Its building materials are not sand or mud as you might expect, but a special type of thread secreted by the animal, called a ptychocyst (pronounced “TIE-co-sist”).

All cnidarians have nematocysts (stinging cells) but ptychocysts are unique to tube-dwelling anemones. The ptychocyst threads are woven together to form a thick, slippery casing that projects above the sediment’s surface, and may extend up to 1 meter (3 feet) in the mud below.
P. fimbriatus with its sea slug predator,
Dendronotus iris, climbing its tube.
Note the slug’s coiled white egg mass in the background.
Photo courtesy of John Yasaki, Oakland, CA.

The anemone can retract its entire body into the tube, which comes in handy when it encounters its main predator - the giant nudibranch, Dendronotus iris. The nudibranch grazes on the anemone’s tentacles, and also cleverly lays its eggs on the outside of the anemone’s tube, so its young are born right on top of their meal. All this snacking doesn’t necessarily mean death for the anemone – it has tentacles to spare, and can live up to 10 years.

Lord of the rings

P. fimbriatus can be easily identified by its two distinct rings of tentacles. The outer ring is long (used for reaching out to catch the small crustaceans it likes to eat) and the inner ring is short, used for transferring food to the mouth.

P. fimbriatus, close-up view of tentacle rings from above.
Photo courtesy of Mike Munroe, http://www.mikejmunroe.com/

In some species of tube anemones, the tentacles are also able to absorb ultraviolet rays and glow with a fluorescent light.

A preserved P. fimbriatus specimen with its
tube cut open to reveal the animal inside.

Race against slime

Although a living tube-dwelling anemone is a pretty sight underwater - with its colorful tentacles waving in the current - nothing makes us marine scientists groan more than seeing one in a freshly collected sediment sample.

When we catch P. fimbriatus in our benthic grab, the fine threads of its tube become a tangled mass, turning into a black slimy goo ball that entangles everything it touches. We try to separate these animals from the rest of the sample as soon as possible to avoid creating a giant mess!

By: Dany Burgess & Angela Eagleston, Environmental Assessment Program


Critter of the Month

Our benthic taxonomists, Dany and Angela, are scientists who identify and count the benthic (sediment-dwelling) organisms in our samples as part of our Marine Sediment Monitoring Program. We are tracking the numbers and types of species we see in order to understand the health of Puget Sound and to detect any changes over time.

Dany and Angela share their discoveries by bringing us a Benthic Critter of the Month. These posts will give you a peek into the life of Puget Sound’s least-known inhabitants. We’ll share details on identification, habitat, life history, and the role each critter plays in the sediment community. Can't get enough benthos? See photos from our Eyes Under Puget Sound collection on Flickr.

Around the Sound: Ongoing and future restoration, redevelopment, and recreation

The cleanup and restoration of Port Gamble Bay (above)  is
providing opportunities for seafood harvesting and recreation. 
(This is the last post of a three-part series on our cleanup, restoration, and preservation efforts at Port Gamble.)

Port Gamble Bay on scenic Hood Canal was once home to a saw mill that operated for 142 years. The historical operations on this property resulted in the release of pollutants from wood waste and pilings. In the past two weeks, we highlighted our cleanup efforts in the bay, which included one of the largest creosote-treated piling removal projects in Puget Sound, and the resulting restoration and preservation efforts.

An even larger vision exists around cleanup and restoration of Port Gamble Bay. The in-water cleanup and restoration and preservation efforts build on past and future momentum to continue to transform this productive and high-quality bay.

Following decommissioning of the old wastewater treatment system, the associated wastewater will be removed, and 90 acres of geoduck tracts will be reopened to harvest. Pope Resources is developing a plan to revitalize the Port Gamble Town and make it a destination for local and regional recreation.

The Port Gamble S'Klallam Tribe led a beach debris removal project,
illustrating the need for continued stewardship to keep our beaches clean.
The Kitsap Forest and Bay Coalition continues to work with partners to secure additional forested upland property to expand on the nearly 1,900 acres already permanently protected for future generations. And the Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe is working with landowners to restore and preserve more land along the mill property.

Future Port Gamble efforts include:
  • Decommissioning of the Port Gamble wastewater treatment plant in 2017.
  • Removing the existing wastewater outfall pipe from Hood Canal by January 2019.
  • Opening up of 90 acres of geoduck tracts in Hood Canal north of Port Gamble Bay once wastewater treatment plant is fully decommissioned and Department of Health approves reopening.
  • Removing sediment stockpiles at the mill and disposing of contaminated sediment at an approved disposal facility in 2017; to be finished by March 2018.
  • Cleaning up the mill site uplands in 2017 and beyond. We will continue to work with Pope Resources, tribes and stakeholders to oversee final cleanup actions for dioxins/furans, which have been detected in upland areas of the site.

The Port Gamble cleanup is an excellent example of the positive outcomes and opportunities that can result from cleaning up contaminated spaces. These cleanup efforts helped galvanize local communities and stimulate restoration and protection of this historic area, to be enjoyed by generations to come.



By Celina Abercrombie and Cheryl Ann Bishop, Toxics Cleanup Program 

Thursday, June 1, 2017

Fecal Matters: Freeland County Park CLOSED to Swimming, Island County

BEACH Program Update


On 6/1/2017, Island County Public Health issued a no contact health advisory for Freeland County Park beach. The closure was issued due to high fecal bacteria levels in the water. This beach will be re-sampled next week to see if bacterial levels have dropped. The public is advised to avoid contact with the water until further notice.

Contact with fecal contaminated waters can result in gastroenteritis, skin rashes, upper respiratory infections, and other illnesses. Children and the elderly may be more vulnerable to waterborne illnesses.

Stay updated about water quality at your beaches by keeping up with us on our blog Fecal Matters, on Facebook, or join our listserv.

Julianne Ruffner, our BEACH Program Manager, is available at 360-407-6154 or julianne.ruffner@ecy.wa.gov for questions.

Fecal Matters: Bay View State Park CLOSED to Swimming, Skagit County

BEACH Program Update


On 6/1/2017, a closure to water contact recreation at Bay View State Park was issued due to high levels of fecal bacteria in the water. This beach will be re-sampled next week to determine if bacteria levels have dropped. The public is advised to avoid contact with the water until further notice.

Contact with fecal contaminated waters can result in gastroenteritis, skin rashes, upper respiratory infections, and other illnesses. Children and the elderly may be more vulnerable to waterborne illnesses.

Stay updated about water quality at your beaches by keeping up with us on our blog Fecal Matters, on Facebook, or join our listserv.

Julianne Ruffner, our BEACH Program Manager, is available at 360-407-6154 or julianne.ruffner@ecy.wa.gov for questions.