HomeMy WebLinkAbout043018_ra02is Hea
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615 Sheridan Street
Port Townsend, WA 98368
www.JeffersonCountyPublicHealth.org
JEFFERSON COUNTY
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
AGENDA REQUEST
TO: Board of County Commissioners
Philip Morley, County Administrator
FROM: Stuart Whitford, Environmental Public Health Director
Tami Pokorny, Environmental Public Health Specialist II
DATE: April 30, 2018
SUBJECT: North Pacific Coast Marine Resources Committee (NPC MRC)
Update and Discussion
STATEMENT OF ISSUE:
Environmental Public Health requests to update the Commissioners on the activities and projects of the
North Pacific Coast Marine Resources Committee (NPC MRC). This request is intended to complement
those pertaining to the 2017-19 WDFW NPC MRC Grant # 17-09766 (Amendment # 1) and associated
project -specific agreements.
ANALYSIS/STRATEGIC GOALS/PRO'S and CON'S:
The NPC MRC is one of four county -based, science -oriented groups promoting marine resources,
stewardship, and restoration on Washington's Pacific coast. The NPC MRC's mission is to: actively
promote ecosystem resilience through understanding, conserving, and restoring our marine resources.
This will be accomplished through research, education, community engagement and advocacy for our
shared marine environment and the sustainability of its coastal communities.
The NPC MRC represents a partnership between Jefferson and Clallam Counties and includes
governments, agencies and citizens focused on the western portions of each county including three
citizens from each county, the Makah, Quileute, and Hoh Tribes and the City of Forks. Representatives
from OCNMS, WA Sea Grant, the UW ONRC, and ONP also participate. Jefferson County is currently
the fiscal agent and provides committee coordination and facilitation utilizing funding from WDFW to
support priority projects.
In 2017-2019, with BoCC approval, the NPC MRC is, or will be, supporting two CoastSavers beach
cleanups; marine education and hands-on field studies through Pacific Education Institute; a project to
generate deposition and mortality estimates associated with mass marine bird beaching events through the
Coastal Observation and Seabird Survey Team; study and capture of invasive green crab by the Makah
Tribe, conduct beach morphology monitoring on two north coast beaches by WA Sea Grant; and for
Jefferson County to produce the West End Natural Resources News and support the River & Ocean Film
Festival during Forks' RainFest.
The NPC MRC is represented on the governor's Washington Coast Marine Advisory Council (WCMAC)
and is contributing to the development of a Marine Spatial Plan (MSP) for the coast. Additional topics of
Community Health Environmental Health
Developmental Disabilities Water Quality
360-385-9400 360-385-9444
360-385-9401 (f) Always working for a safer and healthier community (f) 360-379-4487
interest to the MRC include ocean acidification, crude -by -rail and other new uses of the coast, preventing
oil spills, and invasive species.
FISCAL IMPACT/COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS:
The costs for this update and discussion are negligible. WDFW funds in the amount of $80,000
(Agreement # 17-09766) reimburse operations expenditures for both counties. Amendment #I to this
agreement will provide an additional $59,054.45 to cover the project costs listed above.
RECOMMENDATION•
Environmental Public Health management recommends that the BoCC discuss the proposed MRC
projects and program.
REVIEWED BY:
f..? 44
i ip Morley, q'un Administrator
Community Health
Developmental Disabilities
360-385-9400
360-385-9401 (f)
Always working for a safer and healthier community
Environmental Health
Water Quality
360-385-9444
(f) 360-379-4487
a
Inside:
Hoh River Stabilization....2
Politics of Salmon ......... 3
Marine Spatial Plan .........6
Newest Coastsavers ..........
6
High Carbon World.....8
coASSTal .................10
Transit Center ............12
Hydration Stations .....12
Schools Investigate .........
13
Me
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Rapid Detection and Analysis of Harmful Algal Blooms:
Makah Tribe is a partner in a new scientific collaboration in the Pacific Northwest
Vera Trainer, NOAH NW Fisheries Science Center research oceanographer, Seattle
The Makah Tribe is a key collaborator in
a new project to provide an early warning for
harmful algal blooms (HABs), such as the mas-
sive, coastwide Pseudo-nitzschia bloom in 2015
that caused millions of dollars of losses to
Dungeness crab, rock crab, and razor clam har-
vesters and contributed to the death of many
species of marine mammals. Starting in July
2017, the Makah Tribe will collect and analyze
seawater samples by boat from the Juan de
Fuca eddy, an offshore hotspot for HABs that
is also known by the Makah as "The Prai-
rie". Seawater samples from the eddy will be
processed in the Makah Water Quality Lab to
allow harmful algae cells and their toxins to
be analyzed by newly trained staff within just
1-2 days. This information will be incorpo-
rated into a Pacific Northwest HAB Bulletin,
intended to help resource managers from Neah
Bay to Newport to fine-tune their decisions
continued page 11
Nick Adams, Ryan McCabe, Bich-Thuy Eberhart,
Courtney Winck, Aaron Parker andAnthony Odell (L
to R) deploying the CTD, an instrument that will be
used to measure conductivity (salinity), temperature and
depth on the boat sampling trips to the Juan de Fuca
eddy, a hotspot site for harmful algal blooms.
Photo: Vera Trainer
Sea Turtles Arriving Soon
Tami Pokorny, NPC MRC coordinator, Jefferson County Environmental Health
The Washington Coast isn't known
for sea turtle nests and hatchlings but,
as summer arrives, so will the larg-
est sea turtles on earth. The Pacific
leatherback turtle (Dermochelys coria-
cea) weighs up to 1,500 pounds and
measures five feet or more in length.
They're marvels of nature's engineering
prowess. Virtually unchanged for 80
million years, leatherback populations
continued page 4
607KG" leatherback tagged on September
25, 2007 off the Coast of California.
Photo: H. Harris
Hoh Tribe's Model to Contribute
to Upper Hoh River Bank
Stabilization and Restoration
Khalid Marcus, Director, Natural Resources Department,
Hoh Indian Tribe
The Hoh Tribe's Natural Resources Department will
develop a sediment transport [computer] model to support
the Upper Hoh Road Bank Stabilization and other potential
restoration projects within the Hoh Watershed intended to
balance transportation and fish habitat needs.
This model will be used as a design tool to analyze sedi-
ment transport, deposition, erosion, and sediment manage-
ment for different projects including but not limited to fish
habitat restoration, riparian areas restoration and manage-
ment, sediment removal/dredging to open side channels in
flood plains to access potential fish habitats, and improving
stream crossings for fish passage (culverts/bridges).
The Upper Hoh River Road Bank Stabilization Proj-
ect currently under development by the Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA)/
Western Federal Lands
Highway Division (WFL-
HD) is planning to use a
system of engineered log
jams (ELJs) which com-
bine dolosse with logs/root
wads and placed on banks
to reduce impacts to the
existing road alignment.
The dolosse anchor the
logs/root wads in place.
Dolosse are pre -cast large
concrete objects that can
be manufactured in dif-
ferent shapes and weights
(Plural: Dolosse; Singular:
Dolos). Construction is
planned for 2018, and the
Tribe's modeling efforts
are intended to support its
benefits to fish spawning
habitat in the Hoh River.
The sediment trans-
port model will comple-
ment our partners' "HEC -
RAS" flow model and
lead to an improved final
design for the road bank
stabilization project. The model could also shed light on po-
tential risks to spawning areas from the proposed large wood
installation. If impacts are identified, supplemental corrective
modeling scenarios can be simulated to support design re-
finements. Together, the two models will also provide analysis
of the pools and riffles needed by salmon for rearing, feeding,
sheltering, and migration.
We suggest conducting bulk cores, volumetric, or other
appropriate sampling technique to get the sediment grada-
tion information needed to serve subsurface fish habitat sedi-
ment simulation depth.
Our model will rely upon the Light Detection And
Ranging (LiDAR) topographic data collected by the Hoh
Tribe in 2012 along with surveyed river channel cross-sec-
tions. If we elect to apply the new sediment transport model
for areas outside the current project extent, additional river
new channel cross sections will need to be surveyed. In such
cases the existing LiDAR data will be used to identify suit-
able cross section survey locations, as well as pools, riffles and
other features of significance to the model.
Upper Hoh River and Road showing eroded bank looking upstream. This
photo was taken on December 9, 2016. Photo: Khalid Marcus
We also intend to
use the sediment trans-
port model to analyze,
investigate, and manage
the aquatic mitiga-
tion projects proposed
through the stabilization
project to benefit fish
habitats, stream restora-
tions, and flood reduc-
tion in the Hoh River
watershed. Options
include designing log
jams to restore flow to
side channels, encourage
spawning, and create
and maintain pools and
riffles; replacing fish
passage barriers; and re-
storing floodplains and
opening side channels
to flow. The Hoh Tribe
may collaborate with
a qualified contractor
on this modeling effort
to efficiently leverage
in-house expertise and
available funds.
The Politics of Salmon Recovery
By Jessica Helsley, Executive Director
Coast Salmon Foundation and Coast Salmon Partnership
It has been a very busy and challenging couple of
months. With our state legislature working overtime to
solve the budget challenges associated with the McLeary
decision (http://www.courts.wa.gov/appellate—trial —
trial_ courts/
SupremeCourt/?fa=supremecourt.McCleary_Education), and
a federal administration that has yet to express an interest in
our natural resources (beyond removal of funding), it feels as
though the Coast Salmon Partnership has been swimming up
into a gauntlet of unrelenting upstream current.
Horace Axtell, Nez Perce elder and spiritual leader discussing the
cultural importance of salmon following the annual salmon ceremony
on Idaho's Salmon River. Photo: Gary Lane
We have been working diligently to speak up for the
Coast; to fight for restoration funding that our salmon and
rural coastal communities depend upon. Healthy forests,
rivers, and fish and wildlife on Washington's Coast are es-
sential to our communities, ecosystems and economies. We
have been working to remind our policy makers and budget
writers that the Coast continues to experience the highest
unemployment rate in the state and that we need a proactive
approach to restoration that addresses the region's highest pri-
ority restoration needs, leverages existing funding, and puts
people to work on the Coast restoring our lands and waters.
During these uncertain times, it is important to remember
the multiple benefits that salmon recovery brings.
From clean water to more resilient communities, salmon
recovery efforts provide a high return investment for the state
and its residents.
Reconnected floodplains reduce flood risks for com-
munities.
• Free-flowing rivers with intact floodplains provide
complex natural habitat for fish, plants, and animals.
• Adequately sized, fish -friendly stream crossing struc-
tures reduce risks to our transportation infrastructure.
• Natural shorelines and estuaries filter pollutants, sup-
port shellfish, and shelter salmon.
• Clean and reliably available water is essential for habi-
tat, drinking water, and recreation.
• Healthy forests absorb carbon, offer refuge for wildlife,
and provide economic opportunity for rural communities
and recreation for outdoor enthusiasts.
It is no secret that salmon recovery stimulates local and
rural economies in Washington (www.stateofsalmon.wa.gov):
• Every $1 million spent on watershed restoration results
in an average of 16.7 jobs.
• 80% of grant money stays in the county where a proj-
ect is located.
• For every estimated $1 million spent on watershed res-
toration, $2.2 - $2.5 million is generated in total economic
activity.
• Salmon recovery funding since 1999 has resulted in
more than $1.1 billion in total economic activity in Wash-
ington State.
Yet, despite some successes, many salmon populations
are still in trouble. Our salmon recovery efforts are working,
but in many cases, they are not moving fast enough to meet
the accelerating challenges we face. Without investment and
strong habitat protections, our efforts may well be futile.
Now more than ever, we need a renewed commitment to this
incredible resource. We need to stand up together and tell
our representatives in Olympia and Washington D.C. that
extinction is not an option. To continue our sport, tribal, and
Welcoming the salmon to Idaho's Salmon River in style.
Photo: Gary Lane
Continued from page 1
have proven themselves masters of open ocean survival in the
face of ice ages, meteor strikes and changing ocean chemistry.
They continue to roam earth's temperate and tropical oceans
although in greatly diminished numbers from the recent past.
Pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha). On the Coast, this species
spawns in the lower Clearwater and Quinault Rivers only. Photo:
Florian Graner
commercial fisheries and meet the challenges ahead to protect
habitat, we must all work together. Whether you are a salmon
fisher, a surfer, a hiker, or an avid participant in beach clean-
up events, we are stronger together.
During tumultuous times, when it feels as though my
energies are too depleted to continue the upstream journey,
I often find myself taking solace in a teaching from the Nez
Perce Tribe. The version related to me by the late tribal elder
Horace Axtell while sharing a boat in a first salmon ceremony
on Idaho's Salmon River, goes like this: There was a time
when all of the animals were told there was going to be a
great change. They all had to gather at a meeting to hear the
Creator tell them about the future. Once there, the Creator
told them that there was going to be a new people. But, in
order for the new people to arrive, all of the animals would
need to sacrifice parts of themselves for these new people;
they were going to be naked and they were going to have a
hard time surviving on their own. There was quiet and then
murmur amongst the animals, as they all were not certain
that sacrificing parts of themselves was a wise idea. Soon
however, the crowd of animals parted and the salmon swam
towards the Creator. Salmon said, "I will sacrifice my flesh for
these new people". Then, following the Salmon's leadership,
other animals stepped forward and committed to sacrifice
parts of themselves so that the people could arrive.
Now it is our turn to part the crowd and to commit to
saving the salmon. Salmon are indicators of our ecosystem's
health; indicators of our own health. They are resistant and
resilient. Listen to their story. Take reprieve for a moment in
a calm eddy, but then turn back into the current and point
yourself upstream — fight to find your way home. After all,
joining together to fight for the land of wild waves, vast rug-
ged bluffs, towering trees, and abundant rivers — our incred-
ible coastal home — is definitely something worth fighting for!
Contact Jess at jessGawcssp.org.
The Washington Coast or Bust?A leatherback hatchling departs Papua
New Guinea for a lifetime of ocean travel that may, one day, lead to
Washington waters. Photo: Scott Benson
Beginning in July, leatherbacks reach the margin of the
continental shelf, 30 miles or more from the coast of Wash-
ington. They come as adults, swimming at a rate of up to six
miles an hour in order to feast on the sea nettles (jellyfish)
and other gelatinous zooplankton that thrive here. Leather -
backs pursue them into the Olympic Coast National Marine
Sanctuary and occasionally are seen close to shore. In late
October, the migration reverses. Every two to four years,
robust adult females return across the whole of the Pacific
Ocean to the very beach where they once hatched — in Indo-
nesia, Papua New Guinea or the Solomon Islands — and lay
multiple nests of eggs. During years when female turtles do
not cross the entire Pacific they overwinter in tropical waters
just half way across the Pacific Ocean near Hawaii.
Leatherback tagged with a transmitter near the California coast.
Photo: Demian Bailey
It was previously thought that the leatherbacks that feed
here were part of the population born in Mexico and Costa
Rica but in 2000, Scott Benson, lead investigator for NOAA
leatherback turtle research in the North Pacific, and colleague
Peter Dutton discovered that their actual origin as hatchlings
is the western Pacific. Simulated dispersal models indicate
the turtles hatched in January/February usually ride currents
flowing southward and wind
up feeding in New Zealand
and Australia waters as adults.
In contrast, turtles hatched in
June/July catch a ride north-
ward past Japan, or northeast-
ward across to Hawaii and on
to Pacific Northwest waters as
adults. This path represents the
longest migration of any air -
breathing aquatic vertebrate,
longer than any whale species'.
Leatherbacks are aptly
named because, unlike all other
sea turtles, they lack a bony
shell. The surface of their backs
is skin delicate enough to bleed
when scratched. While roam-
ing the open ocean for most of
their lives, their front flippers
grow up to 3.5 - 4 feet in
length — the longest of any sea
turtle and they benefit from a
to find a hot spot for leatherbacks off the coast of Oregon or
Washington and relatively close to shore in order to replicate
the work that's been done in California," he said in a recent
telephone interview.
The Pacific leatherback sea turtle was listed as endan-
gered under the ESA in 1973 and critical habitat was de-
hydrodynamic, teardrop shape. Off the coast of Washington,
they're most likely to be found in waters between 600 and
6,000 feet in depth and 30 or more miles offshore. With the
ease of an elephant seal they dive to depths of 4,000 feet or
more and can remain submerged for an hour although most
dives are between three and eight minutes in length.
Adult leatherbacks are the only sea turtle evolved to
thrive in cold water. The have a layer of brown fat and gener-
ate metabolic heat by constantly swimming. They have heat
exchangers in their flippers and around their throats and a
greater metabolic rate than other sea turtles. Scott's studies
have found that, typically, the turtle's body temperature is
six degrees Celsius higher than the surrounding seawater. No
other reptile possesses this ability to maintain a body tem-
perature greater than its environment..
Scott would like to study Washington's leatherbacks
more intensively. "Over the years, from California's Moss
Landing Marine Laboratories, we've tagged leatherbacks with
transmitters to study their foraging ecology and movement
patterns. We've also conducted several aerial surveys trying
A leatherback eyes her photographer. Photo: S. Hansen
clared off our coast in 2012. The western Pacific leatherbacks,
which includes Washington's foraging turtles, have declined
over 80% in last 30 years. The species is one of eight of
NOAA's critically endangered "Spotlight Species".
Leatherbacks are at risk in part because they're frequently
taken as bycatch in the swordfish and tuna fisheries, espe-
cially in international waters. "The US fishing fleet is 8-10%
of international fleet. Protections such as the Endangered
Species Act are essentially lost on the international high seas.
One of most impactful things that individuals can do to help
protect sea turtles is to purchase only US -caught seafood.
Fish from the United States comes with side dish of sea life
protections rather than a side of a dead sea turtle or dead
dolphin". The US is the biggest consumer of sword fish in
the world.
For more information about Scott's work and leather -
backs, visit http://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/podcasts/2015/06/
pacific—leatherback.html. Email Scott at Scott. Benson@a noaa.
gov.
Marine Spatial Plan: Public
Comment Period Coming in
Late Spring
Jennifer Hennessey
Ocean Policy Lead, Shorelands & Environmental Assistance
Program, Washington State Department of Ecology
A Marine Spatial Plan (MSP) is currently under develop-
ment for Washington's Pacific Ocean coast. The draft MSP
will be available for public comment this summer. The MSP
provides:
• Guidance for new ocean uses along Washington's Pa-
cific coast, such as renewable energy and offshore aquaculture.
• Baseline data on coastal uses and resources to capture
current conditions and future trends.
• Requirements and recommendations for evaluating
new ocean uses through the different phases of project review
consistent with existing laws and regulations.
• Recommendations to protect important and sensitive
ecological areas and existing uses like fishing.
The draft MSP will include ecological data and informa-
tion. For example, MSP maps show the distribution of coral,
rocky reefs, kelp forests and seabird colonies — resources espe-
cially abundant along the North Pacific Coast. Other analyses
illustrate ecological hotspots and predicted distribution for
various species of seabirds and marine mammals.
Information in the draft MSP will also describe the social
and economic importance of current ocean uses as well as
the patterns and intensities of various activities like fishing,
recreation, and shipping. For example, in 2014 Washington
residents took an estimated 4.1 million trips to Washington's
Pacific Coast, spending an estimated $481 million and sup-
porting over 4,700 jobs in the region.
The draft MSP will provide guidance for potential new
ocean uses like marine renewable energy or offshore aquacul-
ture. The draft MSP will outline the data, information, and
plans required to evaluate a new ocean use project proposal. It
also will describe the effects on people, communities and the
environment that need to be evaluated during project review.
The draft MSP also creates a process for coordinating across
all levels of government, and ensuring stakeholder input on
new ocean uses.
Find out more and get involved — visit the marine spatial
planning website at: www.msp.wa.gov. Check out the latest
news, information on projects and resources, the online map-
ping tool and sign up to get email updates. Keep an eye out
for the comment period and comment on the draft MSP this
summer.
Contact Jennifer at jennifer.hennessey@ecy.wa.gov.
Meet the Newest CoastSavers
Jon Schmidt, Washington CoastSavers Coordinator
Washington CoastSavers "is an alliance of partners and
volunteers dedicated to keeping the state's beaches clean of
marine debris through coordinated beach cleanups, education
and prevention." The 2017 Washington Coast Cleanup on
April 29th engaged 1,300 volunteers who removed more than
twenty tons of trash from at least sixty beaches on the outer
coast and the Strait of Juan de Fuca.
Tracy Brigham and her group camped on Second Beach and removed
three large tires from the beach during the Washington Coast Cleanup.
Photo: Courtesy of CoastSavers
It takes a strong steering committee, a diverse range of
partners and a tremendous number of volunteers to success-
fully implement beach cleanups and the CoastSavers Pro-
gram. Our two newest steering committee members greatly
contributed to the success of our efforts. Becky Mabardy,
from the Pacific Coast Shellfish Growers Association (PC -
SGA), recruited and organized shellfish farmers on the South
Coast to participate in the beach cleanup. Meggan Uecker,
solid waste coordinator for Clallam County, served on the
Recycling Committee in advance of the cleanup and helped
sort recyclable plastics from the beaches around Clallam Bay.
I asked Becky and Meggan to discuss their jobs, their
roles in the CoastSavers alliance and how to make a positive
difference in reducing plastic pollution.
1) Where is your favorite beach and what's your favorite
beach activity? Now-
!L--
Becky:
ow-
i
Becky: First Beach at La
Push is my favorite beach and
surfing is my favorite activ-
ity. I also enjoy snorkeling,
fishing, beach combing, and
a bonfire with some beer and
friends.
Meggan: There are so
many wonderful and unique
beaches. I just love to walk
the beach and beach comb
and absorb the fresh, replen-
ishing energy of the ocean.
2) What is your current
job?
Becky: I am outreach and
projects coordinator for the
Pacific Coast Shellfish Grow-
ers Association. We represent
shellfish growers in WA,
OR, CA, AK and HI, who
farm oysters, clams, mussels,
and geoduck. I work closely
with PCSGA members on a
variety of issues important to
their livelihoods, including
the coordination of bi-annual
beach cleanups. Since 2001,
PCSGA has led industry -
motivated beach cleanups in
south Puget Sound. While
the vast majority (80%) of
Becky: The easiest way for me to reduce the amount of
plastic I use is by minimizing single use items and buying
local products. In my purse, I almost always carry a refillable
water bottle, an insulated container for tea and coffee, a spork
for meals on the go, and a stuff -able reusable bag. I also often
ask servers and bartenders for no straws when I order a drink.
Lourdes Collins and her family helped clean the beach near Point Grenville
during the Washington Coast Cleanup. Photo: Courtesy of CoastSavers.
the debris collected is not Becky Mabardy, outreach and projects coordinator for the Pacific
related to shellfish farming, Coast Shellfish Growers Association (PCSGA) and her team in
the shellfish growers are com- action. Photo: Courtesy of PCSGA
mitted to this tradition of
environmental and community stewardship.
Meggan: I am the Clallam County Solid Waste Coordi-
nator. My job includes education, outreach and technical as-
sistance on waste reduction and recycling for Clallam County
residents and businesses.
3) What do you do personally reduce the amount of
disposable plastics you use?
Meggan: I try to make
packaging choices that utilize
less or no plastic. I think try-
ing to consume less overall is
one of the most effective ways
to reduce disposable plastics.
I try to think reuse, reduce
and recycle.
4) What is the value of
beach cleanups?
Becky: Beach cleanups
inspire action to help remove
trash and debris from water-
ways and change behaviors
that allowed these items to
reach the water in the first
place.
Meggan: It's a fantas-
tic excuse to get out on the
beach and try to make better
the impact of human society
on these important areas.
5) What advice would
you give to someone who is
concerned about the negative
impacts of marine debris on
wildlife?
Becky: We are all con-
nected and have a shared
responsibility for the health
of our community and the
environment. My advice is
to self -empower through
knowledge and action. Marine
debris exists because of the
products we consume. If we
care about marine debris impacting wildlife, then we also need
to educate ourselves on unfriendly earth products such as micro
plastics in skin products, and buy and fill a growler instead of
beers in a 6 -ring holder. Also, get out on the beach and do your
part by participating in beach cleanups.
Meggan: Reduce and eliminate plastic use as much as
possible and when you are out enjoying the beach, take a bag
to pack out some trash lying in your path. Small actions add
up so do what you can do to lessen your impact, and when
possible, take larger actions like donating money to organiza-
tions that work on this issue, or galvanize the larger commu-
nity through activities or volunteering.
Contact Jon Schmidt at jon@coastsavers; Becky Mabardy
at beckymabardy@pcsga.org; and Meggan Uecker at mueck-
er@co.clallam.wa.us
Meggan Uecker, Solid Waste Reduction Coordinator, WSUExtension
Clallam County. Photo: Courtesy ofWSUExtension.
Addressing a High -Carbon World
Means Getting at the Root Problem
Julia A. Sanders, deputy director, Global Ocean Health
Carbon pollution is the largest unchecked waste stream
in human history, and yet because it's invisible, it's easy for
folks to ignore.
Compare plastic pollution in the ocean: nearly everyone
has an opinion on plastics, has heard of the "Great Pacific
Garbage Patch," and is thoroughly outraged at the idea. But
let's compare the two pollution sources (or as I like to put it,
compare what's visible with what's world -changing): plastic
pollution in the ocean accounted for about 5-13 million tons
in 2010, while carbon pollution was responsible for about 32
billion tons in 2015, approximately 8 billion tons of which
was absorbed by the ocean. That puts carbon dioxide pol-
lution at a full order of magnitude larger than plastics. And
yet it's the rare person outside of the ocean health world that
understands the impacts of a high -carbon ocean. I generally
get a dull -eyed gaze when I mention "ocean acidification" in
the larger world, outside the insulated sphere of my peers.
Most people find the topic too overwhelming, and shy
from it. But the answer is simple, and has been proven across
the globe: effective, fair carbon policy. Nine states on the East
Coast have figured it out —from Maine to Maryland (minus
New Jersey), they form the Regional Greenhouse Gas Ini-
tiative, or RGGI (http://www.rggi.org). A brief Fact Sheet
summarizes the findings of the most recent RGGI report,
and State Pages show individual programs and investments in
each RGGI state.
More than $1.3 billion in RGGI auction proceeds were
invested in programs including energy efficiency, clean and
renewable energy, greenhouse gas abatement, and direct bill
assistance. By using simple tools, RGGI has managed to
consistently outperform their target emissions reductions,
while growing their economy and reducing energy costs for
the average consumer. Many would have you believe that
carbon policies unfairly burden those, like fishermen, who
rely on fuel for their living, or will drive businesses away, but
the facts prove otherwise.
In order to encourage fishermen, shellfish growers, tribes,
and coastal communities to speak up for strong carbon
policy, Global Ocean Health formed the Working Group on
Seafood and Energy, an association which meets monthly to
learn about the latest in policy development and to develop
a strategy to ensure the most effective policies take shape lo-
cally.
If you're fearful of the impacts of a high -carbon world; if
you're affected by sea level rise or ocean acidification, think
about directing some of your efforts towards supporting
strong, fair, carbon policy. We're happy to help you un-
derstand the underlying mechanisms and point the way to
becoming powerful champions for the waterfront. Contact
Julia Sanders at julia@globaloceanhealth.org.
nmgsmaugustnd, rug,,,oun,-n onmevvasnmgcon�o.,wnnexpert
speakers, tadlitated discussion, and hands-on demonstrations.
AUGUST 8 AUGUST 15 AUGUST 21
Padilla Bay Reserve Olympic Natural Resources Center Northwest Maritlme Center
ML Vernon, 6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. Forks, 7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. PL Townsend, 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.
Event details coming soon. Questions? Contact Meg Chadsey, Washington Sea Grant mchadsey@m,edu
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RainFest 2017
Forks' annual spring festival celebrated art, poetry, music
and nature during the fourth week in April this year. Art
Weekend led off with art and quilt shows, classes, book sales,
a visit by Poet Laureate of Washington Tod Marshall, and a
community dance to the music of Loose Gravel. This year,
the traditional Umbrella Parade was re -labeled the "Undersea
Umbrella Parade" and moved to River & Ocean Days on the
following weekend. While kids and their parents followed
Fin the Migrating Salmon down Spartan Avenue, many
Forks residents and visitors from far and wide, wrapped up a
morning of beach walking, collecting and hauling as part of
the Washington Coast Cleanup. In the afternoon, as the rain
began to fall, NPC MRC members and friends, including the
Forks STEM Rovers (ROV Club) and the Clallam Bay Envi-
ronmental Science Club, gathered in the RAC for a concert
by Forkestra and What the Tide Washed In as they prepared
educational displays and readied the space for the day's finale,
the River & Ocean Film Festival.
A very special thanks to MRC members Deb Kucipeck,
Katie Krueger, Chiggers Stokes, Ian Miller, Frank Hansen,
Roy Morris, Rod Fleck for their help and support!
Most of all, thank you, NPC MRC, for making this all
Mike Tetreau entertains as part of "What the Tide Washed In" and Ian
Miller, emcee of the River & Ocean Film Festival. Photos: Tami Pokorny
Forkestra performing at the Rainforest Arts Center during RainFest.
Photo: Tami Pokorny
The 2017 Undersea Umbrella Parade led by Fin the Migrating Chum Salmon. Photo: Lonnie Archibald
Credo
Holly J. Hughes, a Washington Fisherpoet
Make a place for the glint in the seal's eye that second before
it rolls back its slick head, slips silent beneath the surface.
Make room for the shimmer ofsalmon, splitting the sun,
leaping
for the stream of its birth, even knowing what's ahead
Carve out a corner for the crab who grasped the blade
of the cleaver that sliced it in two, wouldn't let go.
That light, dazzling dark sea ahead, remember it, remember
how it seeps from billowing cumulous when you least expect
or how the sun finds the crack in the horizon's solder to empty
out its cargo at dusk, a slick sheen across the water.
How the green spinning earth and blue brimming sea go on
and on
even when we're not looking, and that perhaps, if we can pay
attention for even a second, remember just this, it may not
make us whole, but it could be a good place to begin.
NPCMRC volunteers fill Silver and Chiggers Stokes examine the
COASST Marine Debris Program toolkit at a training held in Forks
last December. Photo: Tami Pokorny
Community partnerships for
marine debris monitoring: A
COASSTa1 Approach
Hillary Burgess, Science Coordinator for COASST
With support from the North Pacific Coast Marine
Resources Committee, the Coastal Observation and Seabird
Survey Team (COASST) has launched a new marine debris
monitoring program. The program aims to document marine
debris deposition on beaches, potential environmental im-
pacts, and sources of debris and, ultimately, to reveal patterns
that have direct relevance to prevention and management of
marine debris.
The marine debris program is divided into two compo-
nents: tasks to be completed on the beach and tasks to be per-
formed elsewhere — for example, at a picnic table, at home, or
in a community center. COASST has been piloting the idea
that different people can be responsible for each category (the
beach tasks and "lab" tasks) and other models of participation
in several communities on the Olympic Peninsula. Partner-
ships with Forks High School, Port Angeles High School and
the Port Townsend Marine Science Center have facilitated
involvement by local youth. To learn more about COASST
and to get involved visit their website at http://depts.washing-
ton.edu/coasst/involved/volunteer.html
NPC MRC volunteer and Forks High School science teacher john
Hunter, and his helper Axel, document one of the larger pieces of ma-
rine debris that they found on First Beach during a training in June.
Photo: Hillary Burgess
Continued from page 1
regarding potential closures of beaches to shell-
fish harvest, thus protecting human health and
reducing the severe economic disruption that
such closures can have. The loss of a single razor
clam opener (2-5 days) on Washington beaches
results in almost $6 million in lost expenditures
and over 65 jobs (2008 dollars).
Vera Trainer, Bich-Thuy Eberhart, Nick
Adams (NOAA Northwest Fisheries Science
Center, Seattle), Anthony Odell, Rich Osborne
(UW ONRC) and Ryan McCabe (University
of Washington) visited Neah Bay on 10 April
2017, to train the Water Quality Program
personnel, Aaron Parker, Dana Sarff, Ray Colby,
Courtney Winck, Maria Roberts and Adrianne
Akmajian, on the use of equipment needed
to assess the abundance of harmful algae, the
quantity of their toxins in seawater, and the
associated environmental parameters, such as
temperature and salinity with depth throughout
the water column. This project, led by NOAAs
Northwest Fisheries Science Center and the
University of Washington, is bringing together
state and federal agencies, tribal partners, and re-
searchers at US and UK universities and is joint-
ly funded by NOAAs Monitoring and Event
Response to Harmful Algal Blooms (MERHAB)
program, the Makah Tribe, the Olympic Region
Harmful Algal Bloom (ORHAB) partner-
ship through a surcharge to Washington State
shellfish licenses to University of Washington
Olympic Natural Resources Center.
Ryan McCabe, Anthony Odell, Bich-Thuy Eberhart, Courtney Winck, Aaron Parker (L
to R) watching Nick Adams (front) prepare the CTD for deployment off the dock.
Photo: Vera Trainer
Bich-Thuy Eberhart instructing Courtney Winck, Maria Roberts and
Adrianne Akmajian (L to R) on how to analyze toxins in seawater in
the water quality lab. Photo: Vera Trainer
Ryan McCabe and Aaron Parker (L to R) rinsing the conductivity sen-
sor on the CTD after it was deployed. Photo: Vera Trainer
Coast and Rivers to Inhabit
Forks Transit Center
The City of Forks, in partnership with Clallam Transit and
the NPC MRC, has installed a new art display on the upper
walls of the Forks Transit Center. Beautiful scenery and under-
water images from the coast, rivers and
creeks of the West End were interpreted
and enhanced digitally by local artist
Vern Hestand and enlarged to fill eight
panels. Additional photos taken by
accomplished local photographers as
well as esteemed Washington cinema-
tographer Florian Graner add interest
and information about the tremendous
variety of habitats and wildlife to be
appreciated along our rivers and coast.
Funding for the display was provided
by the WA Department of Fish and
Wildlife with additional support from
the City of Forks and Clallam Transit.
0
Four New "Hydration Stations" Debut
What's a hydration station? It's a place for a quick sip
from the fountain or to fill a mug or bottle with delicious
cold water. It's also part of a local effort to reduce our com-
munity's reliance on single use disposable water bottles and
Forks High School's new hydration station
is a joy to use. Photo: Bill Henderson
This sign accompanies the Transit Center's hydration
station. Eagle photo: Chris Noren
plastic packaging generally.
Plastic waste, including water
bottles, is a scourge to beaches
and underwater habitats world-
wide.
Four new stations were pur-
chased by the NPC MRC and
installed by partner organizations
for the benefit of thirsty locals
and visitors. Two were placed
at Forks High School. One is
located inside the Forks Visitor
Center and a fourth serves Forks'
finest in the Transit Center.
Peninsula College and the Forks
Library already provides hydra-
tion stations.
The hydration stations au-
tomatically tally the number of
plastic bottles avoided. Funding
for the four new stations was pro-
vided by the WA Department of
Fish and Wildlife with additional
support from the Quillayute
Valley School District, the Forks
Chamber of Commerce, the City
of Forks and Clallam Transit.
Forks artist Vern Hestand digitally painted eight images of the coast
and rivers as part of the Transit Center display. He holds the lower Sol
Due Riverpanel created from a photograph by Forks area fishing guide
Mike Zavadlovv, Photo: Tami Pokorny
City of Forks Public Works Director Paul Hampton and crewmember
Joe Gaydeski install a panel depicting spawning sockeye salmon. Photo:
Tami Pokorny
Forks and Quileute Tribal Schools
Investigate Ocean Health
Nicole Harris, Education Specialist, National Marine
Sanctuary Foundation for NOAA's Olympic Coast National
Marine Sanctuary
As Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary and Feiro
Marine Life Center conduct the Ocean Science field trips
(now in their 10th year), students are looking at ocean health
through the investigation of our intertidal organisms and the
connection to the complex marine food web.
Eighty Forks 6th grade students "dove" into the Sanctu-
ary with Florian Graner's underwater film Discover the Olym-
pic Coast showcasing the wilderness shoreline, diverse habitats
and organisms of the coast through the eyes of a harbor
seal. Following the film, students created a marine food web
model, discussing the impacts on our marine food web with
a changing ocean, changing prey and changing predators.
In addition to experiencing the film and exploring the
ocean food web, Forks 4th grade students met the Sanctu-
ary's newest education team member, Big Mama. Big Mama
is a 43' walk -inside inflatable humpback whale modeled after
a living and swimming humpback whale that has visited
Olympic Coast and the Straits of Juan de Fuca for the last
several decades.
Twenty-six Quileute Tribal School (QTS) 3rd through
6th grade students met Ocean Science Educators at Second
Beach to look at ocean health through intertidal exploration
of the Usual and Accustomed Areas of the Quileute Tribe.
With the dynamic environment of the Olympic Coast,
m _ V- ..9 =
Nicole Harris of the OCNMS shares a Second Beach find with her
field trip students. Photo: Melissa Williams
tidepool exploration is always new and exciting as we survey
the tidal zones: splash, high, mid and low tide. Students and
educators discussed the adaptations of the organisms in each
zone, while connecting the individual species to the marine
food web. Before leaving the beach, students and educators
conducted a beach cleanup while discussing the impacts of
marine debris to intertidal and ocean animals. Following the
beach activities, students met in their classroom where they
watched Discover the Olympic Coast and learned the impor-
tance of each organism, including humans, in maintaining a
healthy and intact marine food web.
Celebrating a fine day at the beach. Photo: Melissa Williams
North Pacific Coast MRC
c/o Tami Pokorny
JCPH 615 Sheridan Street
Port Townsend, WA 98368
NPC MRC
Tami Pokorny
Coordinator, Editor
Phone: 360-379-4498
tpokorny@co.jefferson.wa.us
Khalid Marcus (Hoh Tribe)
Jennifer Hagen (Quileute Tribe)
Dana Sarff (Makah Tribe)
Rod Fleck (City of Forks)
Tami Pokorny (Jefferson County)
Deb Kucipeck (Clallam County)
Roy Morris (Citizen 1, Clallam,
Commercial Fishing)
Rich Osborne (Citizen 2, Clallam,
Science)
John Hunter (Citizen 3, Clallam,
Education/Environment)
Vacant (Citizen 1, Jefferson,
Economic/Scientific)
Chiggers Stokes (Citizen 2, Jefferson,
Recreation)
Jill Silver (Citizen 3, Jefferson,
Conservation/Environment)
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KPC M RC Printed on 30% Post Consumer Waste Recycled paper
Thank you, Pacific County MRC and Long Beach, WA for a wonderful2016fall Summit of the Coastal Marine Resources Committee Program!
Photo: you,
Pokorny