Showing posts with label flooding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flooding. Show all posts

Friday, May 18, 2018

Boots on the Ground: WCC deploys 37 to assist flood response efforts, 35 more on standby

WCC crew readies sandbag berm near Pend Oreille River at Newport.
WCC crew readies sandbag berm near Pend Oreille River at Newport.
Today, Friday, May 18, we will have 37 Washington Conservation Corps (WCC) members deployed to Eastern Washington to help communities in Okanogan and Pend Oreille counties respond to the most severe flooding the region has seen in more than 40 years.

Late last week, rain and high daytime temperatures caused significant snowpack melt, pushing many rivers out of their banks. Many local governments directly affected by flooding requested emergency assistance from our WCC AmeriCorps members and staff.

Our WCC crews are deployed to the following communities to help fill, stack and place sandbags to keep floodwaters out of people’s homes:
  • 16 members and staff in Newport in Pend Oreille County.
  • 18 members and staff in Okanogan in Okanogan County and Cusick in Pend Oreille County.
  • Five members and staff in Tonasket in Okanogan County.

WCC members and staff filling sandbags in Cusick
WCC members and staff filling sandbags
 in Cusick.
In addition, we have six more members and staff actively supporting a Department of Natural Resources base camp in Okanogan where more than 225 DNR, regional fire district, and other interagency staff are staying during the current flood response. Our responsibilities at the camp include organizing and loading supplies like pumps and hoses, loading trucks, and supporting facilities.

Should we receive additional assistance requests, we have another 35 members and staff on standby ready to deploy to help with flood response efforts.

On Friday, May 11, Gov. Jay Inslee issued a state of emergency to make resources available as flooding and high-risk conditions continue. A total of 20 Eastern Washington counties face potential flooding.

When local disasters such as flooding occur, local and tribal government partners and state officials often request on-the-ground assistance from our WCC.

The National Weather Service is predicting more flooding as hot weather drives more snowmelt to various river systems – especially the Okanogan, Similkameen, Kettle, and Pend Oreille rivers.

The WCC provides hands-on experience, field skills, and training opportunities to young adults between 18 and 25 and military veterans. Our 300 members and 53 field supervisors across the state restore critical habitat, build trails, and protect the state’s natural, historic and environmental resources. They also respond to out-of-state and local disasters.

Learn more about WCC
Ecology's Washington Conservation Corps, an AmeriCorps program, consists of three subprograms: the original WCC, Veteran Conservation Corps and Puget SoundCorps. We are currently recruiting for three-month AmeriCorps members positions. Recruitment for the 2018-19 year will begin in July! See photos of the types of projects WCC members support during their service in our WCC Projects Flickr set and WCC Featured Projects Story Map. Learn more and apply online today.

Monday, May 14, 2018

Boots on the Ground: WCC responds to severe flooding in Eastern Washington

WCC members and volunteers filling sandbags in Okanogan
WCC members and volunteers filling sandbags at 5 a.m. in Okanogan
This past weekend, we deployed several Washington Conservation Corps (WCC) crews to help the towns of Okanogan, Tonasket, and Cusick after rain, high daytime temperatures and significant snowpack melt caused severe flooding in Okanogan, Pend Oreille, and Ferry counties.
 
Our WCC AmeriCorps members and crew supervisors spent about 16 hours Saturday, May 12, assisting community efforts to fill, stack and place sandbags to keep floodwaters out of people’s homes.

On Friday, May 11, Gov. Jay Inslee issued a state of emergency to make resources available as flooding and high-risk conditions continue. A total of 20 Eastern Washington counties face potential flooding.

When local disasters such as flooding occur, local and tribal government partners and state officials often request on-the-ground assistance from our WCC.

We currently have two WCC crews deployed to Tonasket and three to Okanogan in Okanogan County. Another crew is serving in the town of Cusick in Pend Oreille County.

A seventh WCC crew is being deployed to the Okanogan County Fairgrounds in Okanogan to set up and manage a camp base for our response partners at the state Department of Natural Resources.
  
WCC members getting sandbags ready in Tonasket.
WCC members getting sandbags ready in Tonasket.
On Monday afternoon, water levels remained lower than the flooding levels experienced on Friday and Saturday.

However, the National Weather Service is predicting a second flood crest later this week that could be higher than the first as hot weather drives more snowmelt to different river systems in Eastern Washington – especially the Okanogan, Similkameen, Kettle, and Pend Oreille rivers.

The WCC provides hands-on experience, field skills, and training opportunities to young adults between 18 and 25 and military veterans. Our 300 members and 53 field supervisors across the state restore critical habitat, build trails, and protect the state’s natural, historic and environmental resources. They also respond to out-of-state and local disasters.

WCC disaster response program
 
Our WCC crews have responded to local floods, wildfires, oil spills and landslides and have also been deployed to provide disaster relief and recovery assistance for communities affected by floods, hurricanes and tornadoes around the nation. Four WCC crews are designated disaster response crews but any crew has the potential to be deployed.

Hundreds of readied sandbags on pallets waiting to be deployed in Tonasket.
Sandbags readied in Tonasket.
  • Members and staff are trained to safely and effectively:
  • Clean up homes, roads and structures
  • Install emergency repairs such as roof tarps
  • Manage volunteers and donations
  • Remove hazard trees and debris
  • Set up and operate emergency shelters
 Learn more about WCC
 
Ecology's Washington Conservation Corps, an AmeriCorps program, consists of three subprograms: the original WCC, Veteran Conservation Corps and Puget SoundCorps. We are currently recruiting for three-month AmeriCorps members positions. Recruitment for the 2018-19 year will begin in July! See photos of the types of projects WCC members support during their service in our WCC Projects Flickr set and WCC Featured Projects Story Map. Learn more and apply online today.
 

Friday, April 20, 2018

Habitat projects to expand fish access throughout Chehalis Basin

Barrier culverts on Bush Creek near Elma to be replaced with fish-passable structures.
The Chehalis Fisheries Task Force will replace these barrier culverts on Bush Creek near Elma with fish-passable structures, opening up 8.2 miles of upstream forested habitat for salmon, steelhead, and cutthroat trout. Photo courtesy Chehalis Lead Entity
While every day is Earth Day at Ecology, this year's celebration falls on Sunday, April 22. It is fitting then that Saturday, April 21, is World Fish Migration Day, a one-day global-local event to create awareness on the importance of open rivers and migratory fish.

In coming months, 17 barrier culverts preventing or reducing the ability for migrating fish to reach 32.5 miles of crucial stream habitat in the Chehalis River basin in Grays Harbor and Lewis counties will be redesigned or reconstructed.

The work is part of the broader, two-pronged Chehalis Basin Strategy to restore degraded aquatic species habitat and reduce the damage from severe flooding in the Chehalis River basin.

Ecology’s Office of Chehalis Basin, the Chehalis Basin Board and Washington State Recreation and Conservation Office are actively working with community groups, tribal governments, and state agencies to put the ambitious collection of potential actions in place.

The $4 million investment builds on work the strategy guided from 2015 through 2017 to provide $5.6 million in grants to improve barriers and provide access to nearly 65 miles in the basin as well as undertake other habitat improvements.

Unique river basin faces flooding, aquatic habitat challenges

The Chehalis River basin covers 2,700 square miles in southwest Washington and drains to the Grays Harbor estuary on the Pacific coast. Besides the Chehalis River, the basin includes the Black, Elk, Johns, Hoquiam, Humptulips, Newaukum, Satsop, Skookumchuck, Wishkah, and Wynoochee rivers, and their tributary streams.

Uniquely fertile and abundant, the Chehalis basin has suffered for decades from devastating flooding – five of the largest floods in the basin’s history have occurred in the last 30 years. In addition, the Chehalis’ once strong salmon runs are fraction of their historic levels.

Projects bolster two-pronged strategy: Reduce flood damages, improve aquatic habitat

Fish passage improvement projects in Grays Harbor County will open important habitat areas in Bush, Geissler and Sand creeks and a smaller Chehalis River tributary flowing under Mattson Road. In Lewis County, the projects will boost fish access in Berwick, Frase, and Prairie creeks.



Migrating Chinook salmon.
Migrating Chinook salmon.
While the Chehalis is Washington’s only river basin without any federally-listed endangered salmon species, fish there are still in trouble. According to Kirsten Harma, watershed coordinator for the Chehalis Lead Entity, coastal wild salmon runs are only 10 percent of what they were just 100 years ago.

“Undersized and poorly aligned culverts – the pipes that go under roads – are one of the greatest limitations to salmon productivity in many of the Chehalis’ tributaries. These recently funded projects will allow streams to function naturally again, providing the conditions fish need,” Harma said.

The non-profit community group focuses on creating healthy salmon habitat by identifying and implementing voluntary on-the-ground aquatic restoration and protection projects. The projects, she said, also can have a dual benefit.
 
“Naturally functioning rivers help people, too, because undersized culverts also temporarily back up water. Some of these projects will have the added benefit of helping reduce flooding of our transportation corridors and private lands in the Chehalis basin.”

Grays Harbor County projects to open up 19 new miles to fish


The private, non-profit Chehalis Basin Fisheries Task Force will manage three multi-site projects in Grays Harbor County to improve fish passage to about 15 miles of stream habitat. 

Fish barrier on Sand Creek near McCleary.
Fish barrier at Sand Creek near McCleary. Photo
courtesy Chehalis Lead Entity.
The task force is one of 14 regional fisheries enhancement groups across the state and focuses on producing salmon for sport and commercial fisheries and restoring and protecting stream habitat. Task force Chairman Lonnie Crumley said his organization will:
  • Open fish passage to about 8.2 miles of upstream forested habitat in Bush Creek near Elma by replacing fish barrier culverts with fully passable structures at three separate road crossings.
  • Correct five fish passage barriers in Sand Creek near McCleary to open up 5.5 miles of forested habitat upstream, including adding gravel substrate and large woody debris to improve fish spawning grounds. 
  • Work toward providing unimpeded fish passage by designing and permitting three new culvert corrections on Geissler Creek outside Montesano so fish have access to 1.5 miles of forested stream habitat.
“These three projects are critical. Salmon, steelhead and cutthroat need unrestricted access to shaded stream reaches to spawn and rear. Upstream areas also serve as important nurseries for juvenile fish during their fresh water life prior to migrating out to sea,” Crumley said. “Providing new access to these important habitat areas on Bush, Sand and Geissler creeks is one way we can help ensure that there will be salmon in the Chehalis basin for coming generations.”

The Grays Harbor Conservation District will redesign the Mattson barrier, a small farm crossing, to open access to 4.1 miles of fish habitat on a small tributary creek near Oakville draining directly to the Chehalis River.
 
Fish will get access to 13 new miles of Lewis County stream habitat

Berwick Creek near Chehalis with low stream flows. Improvement work will open up 3.3 new miles of fish habitat.
After Lewis County Conservation District corrects this barrier
in Berwick Creek new Chehalis, migrating salmon and trout
will have access to 3.3 miles of forested upstream habitat.
Photo courtesy Chehalis Lead Entity.
In the southeast, Lewis County will manage the replacement of an impassible culvert and oversee the realignment of the Frase Creek channel to open 3.5 miles of highly forested riparian area to Coho, steelhead and cutthroat trout. The county also will replace a culvert and add large, woody debris to Prairie Creek to open up 4.9 miles of forested upstream habitat.

There are two projects slated for Berwick Creek near Chehalis. The Port of Chehalis will design two replacement culverts to make about 1.4 miles of upstream habitat fully accessible to salmon and trout while the Lewis County Conservation District will redesign a blocked culvert to improve fish passage and access to another approximately 3.3 miles of upstream habitat.

“These gains for fish would not have been possible without the groundwork laid by local organizations working on salmon recovery projects in the Chehalis basin for the past 20 years,” said Gordon White, interim director for the Office of Chehalis Basin. “Besides funding and support from our office, these groups are bringing additional funding, experience, and passion to ensure fish remain a permanent part of the basin landscape.”

Multiple entities help guide basin habitat restoration plan

The projects are part of the Chehalis Basin Aquatic Species Restoration Plan to support habitat functions, ecosystem processes, and boosting populations of fish and semi-aquatic species while creating flood and climate-resilient systems that support human needs in the Chehalis basin.

The plan is overseen by steering committee is made up of voting representatives from the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, Quinault Indian Nation, and Confederated Tribes of the Chehalis Reservation, and non-voting members from Ecology, Washington Department of Natural Resources, and the Chehalis Lead Entity.