Department of Ecology News Release - June 10, 2020

Chehalis Basin projects receive $4.7 million to create jobs, restore habitat

Oxbows on the Chehalis River provide habitat for salmon and other native aquatic species.

CHEHALIS  – 

Using Washington Department of Ecology funding, a steering committee working to restore aquatic ecosystems in the Chehalis Basin is directing $4.7 million in state grants to support local jobs and fund 20 aquatic habitat restoration projects.

Projects in Grays Harbor, Lewis, Mason and Thurston counties range from on-the-ground efforts to acquire land, remove fish passage barriers, install woody debris, and relocate and restore stream channels, to designing large-scale habitat restoration plans. Some grants are aimed at helping local organizations develop and implement new habitat projects.

Project funding also will help support about 60 part- and full-time jobs, while volunteers are expected to contribute more than 800 hours.

“It’s exciting to see a variety of priority projects receive funding,” said Emelie McKain, aquatic species restoration plan manager for state Fish and Wildlife. “In addition to restoring important habitat, these projects will benefit communities in the basin by creating jobs, and improving local water quality and floodplain functions, while offering resiliency to climate change impacts.”

Oregon spotted frog lifts head and eyes above the water.

Oregon spotted frog.

In addition to salmon and other native fish species, the state’s second-largest river basin also provides habitat to Washington’s largest diversity of amphibians, such as frogs and salamanders. The steering committee approved funding for two projects focused on protecting and improving habitat for the federally threatened Oregon spotted frog.

 


McKain said the aquatic species restoration projects are expected to protect:

  • Up to 414 acres of riverside and floodplain habitat
  • One mile of off-channel habitat
  • 2.25 miles of riverbank

The projects will restore:

  • 15 acres of riverside habitat
  • 0.7 miles of instream habitat
  • More than 10 miles of accessible streams for migrating fish

They will create:

  • Designs for large-scale restoration projects for 11 miles of habitat
  • 10 new large-scale restoration project opportunities with interested landowners
  • Five new riparian- and floodplain-focused project opportunities with interested landowners
  • About 60 jobs—including at least seven new dedicated project sponsor roles.

The steering committee selecting restoration projects is made up of representatives from the Quinault Indian Nation, Confederated Tribes of the Chehalis Reservation and Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.

The projects are part of the broader Chehalis Basin aquatic species restoration plan that supports the Chehalis Basin Strategy to restore aquatic species habitat while reducing flood-related damage in the Chehalis Basin.

As restoration projects get underway, the steering committee and Chehalis Basin Board will identify critical information gaps to help guide future restoration efforts. The board was established by the state legislature to provide long-term oversight of the strategy.

Ecology’s Office of Chehalis Basin administers legislative funding to put the combined fish and flood strategy in place and works closely with the board, local government representatives from Grays Harbor, Lewis, and Thurston counties, the Chehalis and Quinault Indian tribes, basin farmers and other landowners, and local conservation and salmon recovery entities.

The Chehalis Basin encompasses 3,400 miles of perennial streams and rivers in southwest Washington. Besides the Chehalis River, the basin includes the Black, Elk, Johns, Hoquiam, Humptulips, Newaukum, Satsop, Skookumchuck, Wishkah, and Wynoochee rivers, and their tributary streams.

Contact information

Curt Hart
communications
360-701-1220
Twitter: ecologywa
Emelie McKain
Aquatic Species Restoration Plan Manager
360-810-0473
Rachel Blomker
communications
360-701-3101