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Elected officials take cleaner-water tour

Gov. Chris Gregoire renewed her pledge to work for a clean, healthy Puget Sound by 2020 during a five-stop, three-county tour of South Sound on Friday. Joined by U.S. Congressman Norm Dicks, D-Belfair; his son, Puget Sound Partnership Director David Dicks; state Department of Ecology Director Ted Sturdevant and others, the governor visited a wastewater-treatment plant under construction in Belfair, shellfish-growing and habitat-protection projects in Oakland Bay near Shelton, the Nisqually Delta estuary-restoration project and projects to clean up Commencement Bay in Tacoma.

Published: 10/16/10 12:05 am | Updated: 10/16/10 1:20 pm
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Gov. Chris Gregoire renewed her pledge to work for a clean, healthy Puget Sound by 2020 during a five-stop, three-county tour of South Sound on Friday.

Joined by U.S. Congressman Norm Dicks, D-Belfair; his son, Puget Sound Partnership Director David Dicks; state Department of Ecology Director Ted Sturdevant and others, the governor visited a wastewater-treatment plant under construction in Belfair, shellfish-growing and habitat-protection projects in Oakland Bay near Shelton, the Nisqually Delta estuary-restoration project and projects to clean up Commencement Bay in Tacoma.

Sounding a mixed message of jobs creation and environmental protection, the governor said cleanup and restoration work in Puget Sound has included 600 projects, 15,000 jobs and $480 million in federal, state and local funding since 2008.

“We are in the midst of the greatest recession since the Great Depression,” she said. “But we are not going to take a timeout in our efforts to recover Puget Sound and Hood Canal.”

The tour kicked off in Belfair, where an advanced wastewater-treatment plant is under construction to initially replace some 200 on-site septic systems in Mason County’s largest unincorporated community.

The $44 million project scheduled for completion next year is designed in part to reduce nutrient-loading at the southern end of Hood Canal.

“Getting the nitrogen out of the water is key at this end of the canal,” David Dicks said. “It’s a very sensitive place.”

The next stop on the tour was Twin Rivers Ranch at the northern tip of Oakland Bay. It’s the most productive Manila clam-growing bay in the nation, according to commercial shellfish growers.

Driving southeast toward Shelton, the contingent stopped at an oyster and clam nursery owned by Taylor Shellfish Farms.

The nursery served as a backdrop as Shelton city officials talked about nearly $75 million in water and sewer projects designed partly to improve and protect water quality in the bay.

Many of the projects were made possible by federal stimulus money, Shelton Commissioner of Public Works Dawn Pannell said.

“When I hear people say the federal stimulus spending isn’t helping the economy, I get a little mad,” she said. “It’s made a huge difference here in Shelton.”

At the same time, Mason County officials, the Squaxin Island tribe, shellfish companies, and state and federal agencies have put a big dent in an explosion of bacterial contamination that in 2006 threatened to shut down shellfish harvesting in the bay, said John Konovsky, environmental program manager for the tribe.

Actions to fence livestock out of streams and repair and replace failing on-site septic systems in the watershed have made a big difference, he said.

“We have, at least for the moment, tamed the bacteria in Oakland Bay,” Konovsky said.

Similar stories:

  • Shellfish industry doing well at local, state levels

  • Dicks a go-to guy for federal funding for state

  • Thurston, Mason counties get $2 million for salmon recovery

  • Portage Bay shellfish area on threatened list

  • Ecology clears way for county to get $7M loan for Birch Bay work

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