Campaign contributors honored by United Way

By Julie Muhlstein, The Herald

EVERETT — United Way of Snohomish County celebrated its 2012 Community Caring Campaign with a recent dinner honoring top fundraisers. The campaign’s total, due in July, is expected to be slightly higher than in the previous year.

The agency that provides grants to 102 programs through 39 nonprofit organizations reported total revenue of $9.95 million in 2011.

The 2012 campaign saw a slight increase in revenue, said Neil Parekh, the local United Way’s vice president of marketing and communications. Despite the slow economy, revenues have held steady in the past few years, he said.

“We so appreciate that Snohomish County always works together as a community. It’s a testament to our county’s caring and can-do spirit,” said Dennis Smith, president and CEO of United Way of Snohomish County, in a statement after the March 6 dinner at Comcast Arena’s Edward D. Hansen Conference Center.

The Community Caring Campaign is the agency’s primary source of revenue. It includes contributions to campaigns organized at area workplaces, the Combined Federal Campaign, and the Employees Community Fund of Boeing Puget Sound. United Way also raises money for its endowment, seeks grants, and works with lawmakers to obtain state and federal money for efforts here.

The largest contributions to the 2012 campaign came from the Employees Community Fund of Boeing Puget Sound, with a gift of $1.86 million, and the Boeing Co., which donated $800,000. Together, they were named co-winners of the Premier Partner Award.

There was a tie for the President’s Award, the top organizational prize presented. The two winners were the Fluke Corporation and UPS.

Parekh said Fluke conducts an annual campaign that benefits six United Way agencies around the country, including the one here. Fluke’s local campaign raised more than $246,000, a 25 percent increase over the previous year. Since 2008, employee and corporate giving from the Fluke Corporation has totaled $1,042,952. Parekh said Fluke’s effort is United Way’s second largest local corporate campaign.

Fluke also provides a big crew of volunteers for United Way’s annual Days of Caring. Many of them working at Camp Fire USA’s Camp Killoqua near Stanwood.

“The folks at Fluke have a history, a legacy of community participation. It was important to John Fluke when he founded the company,” said Jim Lico, president of the Fluke Corporation. The Everett-based Fluke Corporation, which makes industrial testing equipment, is now a subsidiary of the Danaher Corporation.

Lico said United Way team leaders at Fluke have done a good job in recent years getting the word out to employees about campaign participation. “United Way is a great way to engage in charitable giving, an easy way,” Lico said.

The other President’s Award winner, UPS, is a longtime national partner with United Way and a past winner of United Way’s Spirit of America award, Parekh said. Locally, UPS corporate and employee giving has exceeded $400,000 since 2008, he said.

Parekh said UPS held a campaign kickoff event at Safeco Field and its employees increased their United Way participation by 44 percent, with their donations up 59 percent. There are UPS locations in Everett and Arlington.

Jessica Scrace, an area spokeswoman for UPS, said the business has been a United Way partner for 31 years. “Last year we were very proud to become the first company to have given over $1 billion to United Way nationally,” Scrace said.

Community Transit CEO Joyce Eleanor, chairwoman of United Way’s 2012 campaign, said that with all the donations the agency was able to help hundreds of thousands of people. Programs helped by United Way of Snohomish County serve about 330,000 people annually.

The dinner was also a welcome for Marysville Mayor Jon Nehring, chairman of the 2013 United Way Community Caring Campaign.

Below is the full list of award winners:

President’s Award: The Fluke Corporation and UPS.

Executive of the Year Awards: Phil McConnell, executive director Work Opportunities; Jerry Goodwin, CEO and president Senior Aerospace AMT, Absolute Manufactuing and Damar AeroSystems.

Premier Partner Award: The Boeing Co., and Employees Community Fund of Boeing Puget Sound.

Positive Change Award: Everett Public Schools; Jamco America, Inc.; and Premera Blue Cross.

Local Community Hero Award: Vine Dahlen PLLC; Target, Marysville; Tulalip Gaming Organization.

Labor Partnership Award: Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1576; International Associations of Machinists and Aerospace Workers Local 130.

Best New Campaign: American Girl.

Trees working for Camano family

The Kristofersons are in the running for the state tree farmer of the year award

By Gale Fiege, The Herald

Mark Mulligan / The Herald, 2011 fileJulia Kristoferson smiles as she zips onto a platform manned by guide Jack Dawe while zip-lining Aug. 29, 2011, at the Kristoferson farm.
Mark Mulligan / The Herald, 2011 file
Julia Kristoferson smiles as she zips onto a platform manned by guide Jack Dawe while zip-lining Aug. 29, 2011, at the Kristoferson farm.

CAMANO ISLAND — The Kristoferson family is one of four in the state nominated for the Washington Tree Farmer of the Year award.

The century-old Kristoferson farm on Camano Island is now home to the family’s tourism-oriented zip-line business, Canopy Tours Northwest.

The two-year-old venture is a fun one, but it’s also a way for the family to preserve the 134-acre farm and stick to a commitment to managing their 100-acre forest for many generations to come, Kris Kristoferson said.

His sister, Mona Kristoferson Campbell agreed.

“We’re very honored to among those considered for the forest award,” Campbell said. “Learning about forest stewardship led us to entertain a business idea that is low impact and allows us to share the knowledge we gained about our forest.”

Swedish immigrants Alfred and Alberta Kristoferson bought land for a dairy farm on Camano Island in 1912. From lumber milled on site, the Kristofersons built hay and dairy barns, which today are listed on the state’s Heritage Barn Register.

When the Kristofersons moved to Camano, the old-growth trees on their land already had been clear cut. With its 100-year-old trees, the current forest is managed for a small harvest every 10 years under a stewardship plan developed with the help of Washington State University Extension. The Kristoferson family has had plenty of chances over the years to sell their property to developers, Campbell, said.

Other tree farms nominated for the tree farmer of the year award, sponsored by the Washington Farm Forestry Association and the Washington Forest Protection Association, include one on the Kitsap Peninsula, one near Chehalis and another outside of Olympia.

The award is based on the farmer’s stewardship, management plan, timber health, innovation and community involvement. The winner will be announced April 26.

For more information, go to www.watreefarm.org, www.wfpa.org, www.wafarmforestry.com and www.canopytoursnw.com.

Ship owner gets more than he bargained for: prison time

The Legislature is considering legislation that aims to prevent old vessels from turning into costly environmental problems.

By Maureen O’Hagan, Seattle Times

he Davy Crockett, scrapped illegally in the Columbia River, cost $22 million to clean up, plus its owner will serve a federal prison term. Photo: Steven Lane, The (Vancouver) Columbian
he Davy Crockett, scrapped illegally in the Columbia River, cost $22 million to clean up, plus its owner will serve a federal prison term. Photo: Steven Lane, The (Vancouver) Columbian

When Bret A. Simpson heard the hulking old barge Davy Crockett was for sale several years ago, “he saw the steel and he saw dollar signs,” said assistant U.S. Attorney Jim Oesterle.

Simpson, of Ellensburg, figured he could scrap the 400-foot former Navy ship and walk off with a tidy sum.

“He probably regrets that decision,” Oesterle said. Because in the midst of his ragtag scrapping operation, the Davy Crockett began spilling oil into the Columbia River.

On Monday, Simpson was sentenced to four months in federal prison plus a period of home detention, community service and supervised release for violations of the Clean Water Act. The mess cost $22 million in federal funds to clean up.

It was the first time in Washington that a boat owner was sent to federal prison in such a case.

But Simpson is by no means unique as a boat owner. Hundreds of derelict or abandoned vessels sit on Washington’s waterways, in constant danger of drifting or sinking. When that happens, the state Derelict Vessel Removal Program is forced to step in, sometimes at a cost of millions of dollars. There is now broad agreement the state has neither the money nor the authority to truly address the problem.

Some of that may change. Both the House and the Senate are considering legislation this week that aims to prevent old vessels from turning into costly environmental problems in the first place.

“The bill changes the focus of the Derelict Vessel Removal Program to prevention over cleanup,” said Rep. Drew Hansen, D-Bainbridge, sponsor of the House bill.

Among the provisions under consideration in both bills are some aimed at making boat owners register their vessels as required.

This would make it easier to track down the owners of problem vessels — a huge, and sometimes insurmountable hurdle in these cases. The legislation would create civil penalties for those who fail to register.

Also proposed is a pilot vessel turn-in program where an owner can give the state custody of a vessel before it’s a real problem.

A third provision would require owners of older, larger vessels to obtain an inspection before selling. This, said Melissa Ferris, who runs the state Derelict Vessel Removal Program, might dissuade some people from buying problem vessels when they don’t have the means to repair them.

Ferris recalled one recent case in which a young man bought a trimaran for $100. Only later did he realize “no marina was going to give him moorage because it was rotten and horrible looking and had no mast,” Ferris said.

It ran aground in a storm one weekend, and the state is billing the man for the cost of removal, more than $20,000.

“Talk about a game-changer for your life,” she said.

Boat sellers who fail to get the required inspection could be held liable for some of these cleanup costs, under the legislation.

“We’re trying to hinder some of these transactions that just happen in a bar somewhere,” Ferris said. “Is it the end-all be-all? No, but it’s a step in the right direction.”

Another provision would prohibit public agencies from selling a vessel that isn’t truly seaworthy. The agency would either have to repair it before the sale or dismantle it.

That was at the root of the problem with the Deep Sea. The Port of Seattle sold the 140-foot former fishing vessel to a scrap dealer who didn’t really have a good plan for it. The scrap dealer, a Maple Valley man with a long history of troublemaking, parked it in Penn Cove and left it. It caught fire and sank last spring, and cost $5.4 million to clean up.

Another provision under consideration would allow the Department of Ecology to board troubled vessels and check for pollution threats.

With little to no opposition to the House and Senate bills, some version of the legislation is expected to pass.

Superintendent search nears its final steps

By Kirk Boxleitner, Marysville Globe

MARYSVILLE — The search for the Marysville School District’s new superintendent is heading into its homestretch, and as he has throughout the process, MSD Board President Chris Nation is encouraging community members to take part in the selection.

The six candidates whom the Marysville School District Board of Directors have selected to move forward to the first round of preliminary interviews on Saturday, March 23, are Dr. Becky Berg, Dr. Carl Bruner, Dr. Tony Byrd, Michelle Curry, Dr. Dennis Haddock and Jon Holmen.

“Each interview should take about an hour and 10 minutes to an hour and 15 minutes each,” Nation said. “If we start at 8 a.m., we should be able to wrap it up that Saturday by 5 p.m. If members of the public want to attend and submit feedback to the Board in writing, we’d only ask that they do so for all six candidates, since that’s only fair, but they can drop in to observe them at any time during the day.”

According to Nation, the Marysville School Board will ask questions of the candidates in the MSD Service Center Board room, and narrow the selection from six semifinalists to three finalists that evening, based on those interviews, so that the three days of finalist candidates’ interviews and visits to the district — from Monday, March 25, through Wednesday, March 27 — will devote one full day to each candidate.

Marysville School District staff, parents, students and community members will be able to meet each day’s candidate during open forums scheduled at 11 a.m., 4:15 p.m. and 6:30 p.m., again in the MSD Service Center Board room.

In the wake of the applicants’ files being screened on March 15, Nation reiterated the Marysville School District’s commitment to conducting its superintendent selection process as transparently as possible.

“This is not just the decision of the Board, but of the community as a whole,” Nation said. “We wanted to make sure that the community and school district staff were involved in this process, because the new superintendent will be a leader to both, hopefully for years to come. Through observation and feedback, we hope the community will help us choose a superintendent who fits the needs of our community, because if that person doesn’t understand our relationships, especially with the Tulalip Tribes, they might not get done what’s needed. Everyone has to be on board for this.”

The Marysville School District Service Center Board room is located at 4220 80th St. NE. The full schedule for the candidate visitations is posted on the MSD website at www.msvl.k12.wa.us. For more information on the search process, contact Jodi Runyon by phone at 360-653-0800 or via email at jodi_runyon@msvl.k12.wa.us.

Snoqualmie tribe gives casino plan another look

The Snoqualmie Tribal Council is taking a fresh look at the tribe’s possible casino-expansion plan that has been controversial in the town of Snoqualmie.

By Lynda V. Mapes, Seattle Times

Lynda V. Mapes / The Seattle TimesArlene Ventura, a Snoqualmie tribal elder, urges members to make a fresh start by establishing a government and membership that meets constitutional requirements.
Lynda V. Mapes / The Seattle Times
Arlene Ventura, a Snoqualmie tribal elder, urges members to make a fresh start by establishing a government and membership that meets constitutional requirements.

The Snoqualmie Tribal Council is taking a fresh look at the tribe’s possible casino expansion, including the idea of a 20-story hotel next to its casino.

The tribe canceled a meeting of its general membership in February to discuss refinancing its debt for the project, while the council takes a second look at the plan.

The project has been controversial in the town of Snoqualmie, where the hotel would be the tallest building for miles. An original proposal called for a 340-room hotel, conference center, larger casino and theater, and two new parking structures.

One estimate indicates that could pump up total revenue for the tribe’s casino property to nearly $300 million a year, including $230 million in gambling revenue. That would be a big jump from 2012, with $189 million in gambling revenue and $40 million from the casino’s restaurants and other facilities.

The city of Snoqualmie provides sewer, emergency and fire services to the tribe’s casino property, and is in negotiations about what size expansion of the Snoqualmies’ development it would or could service. The Muckleshoot Indian Tribe beat out the Snoqualmies in 2007 to purchase the nearby Salish Lodge.

Consideration of the development comes at a time when the tribe is struggling with other issues.

The tribe’s longtime administrator, Matt Mattson, is on paid administrative leave during separate investigations by the tribal council and tribal gambling commission.

Robert Roy Smith, attorney for the Snoqualmie Tribe, said he could not discuss the details of the investigations.

Tribal members also met last week to try to resolve a long-running enrollment dispute but did not have a quorum to take action.

At issue is the base roll of tribal members. “The base roll is just a mess,” said Milo Gabel, a tribal member who turned out for the meeting at the Preston Community Center on Sunday.

Members at the meeting Sunday signed a statement declaring they are true Snoqualmies, entitled to vote or hold office, because they are at least one-eighth Snoqualmie in their blood line, as the tribe’s constitution requires.

They also agreed to accept an enrollment audit done last year, so far ignored by the tribal council, and to submit it for final review.

“We have to start somewhere. This is a starting point for our tribe,” said elder Arlene Ventura, of Renton, one of 38 tribal members of all ages who gathered at the community center. They needed 40 members to take official action.

Climate change a top concern for Gov. Inslee

Washington governor’s focus on the issue goes beyond ordinary politics. He says finding solutions is both a moral obligation and an economic opportunity.

By Andrew Garber, Seattle Times Olympia Bureau

OLYMPIA — There was a telling moment just before Gov. Jay Inslee raised his right hand and took the oath of office.

He was introduced as a politician who sees climate change as “an existential threat that transcends politics.”

“More than any other president or governor before him, Jay has an electoral mandate on this issue,” Denis Hayes, organizer of the first Earth Day in 1970, told a packed audience in the rotunda two months ago.

If lawmakers did not grasp the significance of those remarks then, they do now.

Inslee talks about climate change all the time. He discussed it in his inaugural address, during most of his news conferences, when introducing a bill on the issue in the state House and Senate, even in announcing his choice for transportation secretary.

“This is about pollution with a capital P,” he said, testifying before the House Environment Committee this month on climate-change legislation. “It’s about reducing a pollutant, namely carbon dioxide, which has very, very significant impacts on Washington state, on our health, on our well-being and on our economy.”

Hayes, who is president of the Bullitt Foundation, said no one should be surprised by all this.

Inslee established himself as an authority on climate change and renewable energy in Congress. He co-authored a book, “Apollo’s Fire,” touting the potential benefits of a clean-energy economy. And when running for office, “it was the core of his campaign,” Hayes said. “He constantly referenced his … book. People knew what they were getting.”

Still, not everyone was expecting so much, so soon.

“I think there are greater, more pressing priorities at the moment,” said Senate Deputy Republican Leader Don Benton, R-Vancouver. “I think we need to look long term, and do little things that add up over time that will benefit and help the climate-change situation and the environment. But they are long-term strategies.”

Inslee, in an interview, said there’s no time to waste.

“If you have a huge problem that becomes worse over time, it doesn’t mean you should start later, it means you should start earlier,” he said. “This is not something that we just have to worry with our grandchildren. It’s happening today.”

No shortage of issues

To be sure, climate change isn’t the only thing on Inslee’s plate.

The governor is working on a budget. He’s pressuring the federal government to clean up radioactive waste at Hanford. He’s lobbied lawmakers to approve universal background checks for gun purchases. He’s looking for ways to implement the voter-approved legalization of recreational marijuana use.

Inslee is also pushing the Legislature to come up with more money for the state’s transportation system and K-12 education.

Yet there’s little doubt Inslee spends far more time talking about climate change than his predecessors, former Govs. Gary Locke and Chris Gregoire.

“I’ve had more time with him in the last three months on these issues than I had with Locke and Gregoire combined over the past 16 years,” said Rep. Jeff Morris, D-Mount Vernon, chairman of the House Technology & Economic Development Committee.

Inslee introduced a climate-change bill in the House and Senate aimed at developing ways to reduce state greenhouse-gas emissions and meet targets set by the Legislature in 2008. The measure creates a work group that’s supposed to come up with recommendations by the end of the year.

He also brought up the issue in relation to another bill he introduced dealing with long-term plans to improve water supplies in Central Washington, saying warming will reduce snowpacks, making it “absolutely necessary that we increase the water storage and water efficiency … in the Yakima River Basin because of climate change.”

(Watch Inslee speak about improving water supplies in Central Washington.)

And when he hired a new secretary of transportation, Lynn Peterson, he noted that motor vehicles are the state’s largest producer of greenhouse gases. “Lynn is very committed as I am in finding better options for people to get to and from work and reduce carbon pollution,” he said.

The governor’s staff says this is just the start of a deeper conversation on climate change.

Cliff Traisman, state lobbyist for Washington Conservation Voters and the Washington Environmental Council, said Inslee “is clearly not taking a play out of any political consultant’s playbook. That is for sure. And yes, people are surprised because he’s running against the grain. He is tackling the issue because he feels it’s a moral obligation to do so and an opportunity.”

It’s worth paying attention to that phrasing — a “moral obligation” and an “opportunity.”

That is the core of Inslee’s argument around climate change.

Moral principle

The governor uses homilies to get his points across. During testimony on his climate-change bill, House Bill 1915, he talked about watching his 4-year-old grandson play on the beach and “just seeing his face light up when he sees a crab or critter” coming up from underneath a rock.

“I can tell you with a high degree of assurance that unless you and I and other people in our state embrace a commitment that we’re going to see to it that our grandkids have that experience, they’re not going to have it. And the simple reason is the water will be too acidic to support those life-forms,” he said.

(Watch part of Inslee’s testimony on his climate-change bill.)

Richard Feely, a scientist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Seattle and an acidification expert, said the governor was probably accurate when it comes to the Pacific oyster, but the science isn’t clear yet on other species such as crabs.

When GOP Rep. Shelly Short, of Addy, Stevens County, noted any reduction in Washington state carbon emissions would be minuscule compared to what China pumps out, Inslee responded it doesn’t change the state’s moral obligation.

“I know you’re not going to roll down the window and throw anything out the window tonight worried that somebody in another district won’t follow your ethical behavior,” Inslee said. “I think that is the best answer to this issue.”

(Watch Inslee’s exchange with Rep. Shelly Short.)

Climate-change jobs

The carrot the governor uses when discussing climate change is the prospect of jobs.

When he rolled out a jobs package last month, Inslee talked about how the state can be “an example to the world of how a clean-energy, climate-change-reduction strategy is a winning proposition economically. The reason we believe this, is this is something perfectly built for the skill set of the state of Washington.”

“We will not be passive while our state is ravaged by forest fires, by the loss of our shellfish industry due to ocean acidification, by the loss of irrigation water due to the loss of snowpack,” he said. “We are better than that, and we will not accept defeat.”

Inslee has talked about spurring the development of biofuels at a commercial scale, using biofuel blends at major state ferry and vehicle-fueling centers, helping business develop technologies to produce and consume “clean energy,” and creating a Clean Energy Fund to leverage investments in clean-energy technologies, among other things.

There are few specific proposals at this point. One example he’s discussed is using the Clean Energy Fund to provide funds to utilities to develop ways to store electricity from wind farms when the power is not needed.

Inslee’s office said more ideas will be fleshed out when the governor presents a budget proposal later this month.

One purpose of Inslee’s climate-change bill is to identify job opportunities that go along with helping the state reduce carbon emissions.

“This is an economic race and an economic imperative as much as it is an environmental one,” Inslee said in an interview. “We are competing with other countries for the first launch of these new technologies. … We don’t want to finish second or third.”

Skeptics in Legislature

It’s not clear how the governor’s proposals will fare this session.

Republicans, who control the Senate, say the state’s focus should be on jobs, education and the economy. Some even question that carbon emissions are causing climate change.

“Whenever you speak in absolutes about the science being concluded, history is replete with people being proven wrong,” said Sen. Doug Ericksen, R-Ferndale, chairman of the Senate Energy, Environment & Telecommunications Committee.

The Senate last week did pass Inslee’s climate-change bill, but Ericksen’s committee removed language talking about problems associated with global warming.

That was a major bone of contention in the Senate — how definitive the state should be in saying there is a climate-change problem, said Ted Sturdevant, the governor’s legislative-affairs director.

Specifically at issue is whether the Legislature should say that “Washington state is facing negative impacts from climate change,” Sturdevant said. “That’s where there is a divide here in terms of their comfort level in saying that, and the governor’s desire to say that.”

The distinction is important, he said, because Inslee feels “that responding to climate change here is both seizing an opportunity and responding to a problem. The governor wants to make sure this conversation acknowledges both of those things.”

In the end, the governor’s office agreed to take the language out. It has not yet decided whether to ask House Democrats to put it back in.

McCoy’s measures salute veterans and military families

Armed-forces training, experience recognized in legislation sent over to Senate

Clint Robbins, Legislative News, March 13, 2013

OLYMPIA — Here’s a definitive “no-brainer” we can all recognize: Men and women who have come out of the Armed Forces honorably should certainly receive respect and recognition for their service when they are pursuing a college education or professional licensing.

The House of Representatives today passed House Bill 1858 and House Bill 1859, sponsored by state Rep. John McCoy, to write this recognition into state policy.

“Colleges and universities should have a policy in place by December 31, 2014, to recognize and award academic credit for military-training courses or programs,” McCoy said of his HB 1858. “The policy must be submitted to the Prior Learning Assessment work group for evaluation. Schools must provide a copy of their policy to award academic credit for military training to enrolled students who have listed prior or present military service in their application.”

McCoy’s HB 1859 directs that military training and experience should satisfy requirements for professional licensing if the training or experience is documented and substantially equivalent to the requirements in state law.

“The Department of Defense is thrilled with the House passage of HB 1858,” said Mark B. San Souci, Northwest Regional State Liaison, Defense State Liaison Office, Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, Military Community and Family Policy.

“There has been good progress with the Washington State Prior Learning Assessment Group established in 2010 legislation,” San Souci added. “Passage of this measure continues that progress by requiring our college and universities to develop policies to provide earned academic credit for our new veterans when we have already paid for their training with our hard-earned federal-tax dollars. We are extremely grateful for Representative McCoy’s proactive approach to this issue to aid our new veterans and American heroes.”

“The Department of Defense is also thrilled with the passage of HB 1859 because it complements House Bill 1858 which has also already passed the House,” San Souci said. “This second bill leverages what Washington state regulatory agencies and boards are working hard to make possible — specifically, that newly separated military members should receive occupational-license credit, where deserved, for their military education and training. After all, this previous education and training has already been paid for by people’s federal tax dollars. If passed in the Senate and signed by the governor, Representative McCoy’s efforts on this issue and other, similar matters will greatly help our new veterans reach their academic goals — and then secure rewarding employment. We are extremely grateful for Representative McCoy’s proactive approach to this issue to make sure there are reasonable programs and policies for our new veterans and American heroes.”

Dry spring and summer forecast for Western states

Source: USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service

WASHINGTON, March 15, 2013 – March streamflow forecasts show a decline in nearly every Western state and basin, according to water and climate experts.

USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service National Water and Climate Center hydrologists predict dry conditions to continue from the less-than-average precipitation during February, which indicates reduced spring and summer water supply for much of the West.

“With only one month remaining in the snow season, it’s highly unlikely the snowpack will recover to normal levels over the Four Corner States,” hydrologist Tom Perkins said.

Although other parts of the country got more snow, it didn’t have impact in the western mountains, he said.

“What fell in the West didn’t really amount to much,” Perkins said. “New Mexico, Utah and Colorado are especially vulnerable, because their reservoirs are at low levels due to sustained drought conditions.”

At this point, it looks like water supply conditions will end up below average for most of the West’s rivers. Water resource managers will need to make some difficult decisions in the coming months due to this shortage, Perkins said.

There are a few exceptions to the dry forecasts. Spring and summer streamflow forecasts as of March 1, are calling for near normal levels across Oregon, Washington, Idaho and western Montana. Below normal flows are predicted over the rest of the Western U.S.

Although some are at normal levels now, March 1 snowmelt runoff forecasts trends indicated worsening conditions as compared to the Feb. 1 report. Forecasts decreased 5 to 10 percent in Washington and Oregon; 10 to 20 percent in Montana, Idaho and Utah; 10 to 15 percent in Colorado. Forecasts increased 5 to 10 percent in north-central New Mexico, but this was not enough to make up the shortfall.

“Although NRCS’ streamflow forecasts do not directly predict drought, they provide valuable information about future water supply in states where snowmelt accounts for as much as 50 to 80 percent of seasonal runoff,” according to Perkins.

In addition to precipitation, streamflow in the West consists largely of accumulated mountain snow that melts and flows into streams as temperatures warm into spring and summer.

The March forecast is the third of six monthly forecasts issued each year between January and June by the national center. The forecast compares the current level of water content in snowpack in the 12 Western states with historical data to help the region’s farmers, ranchers, water managers, communities and other stakeholders make informed decisions about water use and future availability.

The snowfall, air temperature and numerous other factors taken from remote climate sites ultimately contribute to water supply. Typically, decision-makers and water managers wait until April for a more complete picture that accounts for these variables before making final management decisions

NRCS will continue to monitor levels across the Western states to provide the most up-to-date water supply information each month.

“USDA streamflow forecasts play a vital role in the livelihood of many Americans,” said Jason Weller, NRCS acting chief. “With much of this region greatly affected by drought, our experts will continue to monitor snowpack data and ensure that NRCS is ready to help landowners plan and prepare for water supply conditions.”

Since 1935, NRCS has conducted snow surveys and issued regular water supply forecasts. NRCS installs, operates and maintains an extensive, automated system called Snow Telemetry, or SNOTEL, designed to collect snowpack and related climatic data in the Western United States and Alaska.

View March’s Snow Survey Water Supply Forecast map or view information by state.

Other resources on drought include the U.S. Drought Monitor and U.S. Seasonal Drought Outlook map, which forecast drought conditions through March 31. For information on USDA’s drought efforts, visit www.usda.gov/drought. And to learn more about how NRCS is helping private landowners deal with drought, visit the NRCS site.

 

New rules restrict white sturgeon fishery

By Wayne Kruse, The Herald
Say goodbye to smoked sturgeon — a world-class delicacy — unless you can find a tribal source.

Another catch-and-eat fishery goes by the board with the announcement that the state Fish and Wildlife Commission made big changes in sturgeon rules at a March 1 meeting in Moses Lake.

Starting May 1, recreational fishermen will be limited to one white sturgeon per year, statewide. Then, beginning Jan. 1, 2014, the new regulation requires the release of all white sturgeon in Puget Sound, its tributaries, the Washington coast and the lower Columbia below Bonneville Dam.

Catch-and-release fishing for the species will be allowed in all those areas.

The change is designed to address ongoing concerns about declines in the lower Columbia white sturgeon population, but why the other closures?

The state says white sturgeon drift up and down the coast, in and out of bays and tributaries, and that those harvested, say, in Port Susan, almost certainly include Columbia fish. Some observers say there is not enough scientific evidence to support that contention, or at least to the degree of drift, but the commission acted anyway.

Another rule change approved by the nine-member citizen panel appointed by the governor increases the daily walleye limit from eight to 16 fish in Lake Roosevelt. The change addresses an overpopulation of walleye in the big Columbia River impoundment, and particularly a lack of larger fish.

Closer to home, one of the nearly 70 sportfishing rule changes adopted by the commission reduces the daily catch limit of cabezon to one fish in Marine Areas 4-11 and 13, and sets the minimum length at 18 inches. Also, the cabezon season was reduced to May 1 through June 15.

Hot item

With an overdue state permit finally in hand, Mark Spada said the Snohomish Sportsmen’s Club will make its first plant this year of big triploid rainbow trout — in Blackman’s Lake — by the end of this week. The plant likely will consist of about 200 fish, running between 11/2 and 6 pounds, club spokesman Spada said.

The lake lies on the north edge of Snohomish, with pier fishing and boat access.

Everett derby

The seventh annual Everett Blackmouth Derby runs Saturday. Sponsored by the Everett Steelhead and Salmon Club, the event features a first-place prize of $3,000. Second is worth $1,500 and third $500 in this team event; up to four anglers per boat at a cost of $100 per boat. Tickets are available at John’s Sporting Goods, Everett; Greg’s Custom Rods, Lake Stevens; Ted’s Sport Center, Lynnwood; Harbor Marine, Everett; Three Rivers Marine, Woodinville; Bayside Marine, Everett; Ed’s Surplus, Lynnwood; and Performance Marine, Everett.

For more information visit www.everettblackmouthderby.com.

Salmon forecasts mostly positive

With the possible exception of Baker Lake sockeye, summer salmon opportunities look positive, according to Tom Nelson, host of “The Outdoor Line” on ESPN Radio 710. And even the Baker run, although expected to be down to 20,000 fish this year compared to 35,000 in 2012, should be enough to ensure a good season on the lake but perhaps not in the river.

Speaking of north Sound chinook and coho forecasts, Nelson said, “there are no bad predictions. We haven’t seen numbers like this since 2001.”

Nelson was particularly enthusiastic about the Marine Area 9 selective chinook fishery, saying that not only will there be more kings coming through, but more crossing Possession Bar. That should make it unnecessary to run west to Port Townsend for your clipped-fin kings, he said.

Tulalip Bay, he said, is expecting 10,000 chinook back, twice last year’s 5,000 fish. The Snohomish River hatchery run is predicted by biologists to be 6,800 fish this year, compared to 3,900 last year, and 3,600 wild stock chinook (must be released) compared to 2,800 in 2012.

“Altogether, that’s another 10,000 chinook over the bar and around the corner for us this summer,” Nelson said. “The only caveat is that some of those fish won’t be available if the selective chinook fishery is opened late. Our North of Falcon negotiators have to try to get it open by July 1.”

And, Nelson said, you’d best get your chinook fishing in by mid-August. After that, a big run of pinks will be vacuuming up every bait and lure dropped overboard.

Puget Sound coho are expected to present another major opportunity.

“Are you kidding me?”, Nelson said. “Almost 900,000 coho due back to Puget Sound? That’s a 10- to 15-percent increase over last year, and 2012 was flat out the best coho fishing I’ve ever seen in the Sound. It was like going to the fish market, day after day.”

River fishing is also looking good, Nelson said, with a solid snowpack in the Cascades to provide summer water.

Elsewhere, the big news is on the Columbia River. Salmon managers expect a big jump in fall chinook this summer, to 677,900 fish — substantially above the 10-year average and possibly the best fall king run since 2004. Of that number, the “upriver brights” that make up the Hanford Reach sport fishery are expeced to reach 432,500 fish. If they do, that would be a record for the run, according to state biologist Joe Hymer in Vancouver. It would eclipse the old mark of 420,700 set in 1987.

North sound seminar

Master Marine in Mount Vernon presents a repeat of its popular spring salmon seminar March 16, 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., free and open to all interested anglers. Speakers will cover marine electronics (John Keizer of Salt Patrol), secrets of San Juan Island salmon fishing (John Martinis), and dirty downrigger tricks (TJ Nelson). There will also be speakers on cutting herring and shrimping, among other subjects. Chili dogs for lunch, too.

Master Marine is immediately adjacent to the west side of I-5 in south Mount Vernon; go to the web site or call 360-336-2176.

Springers

The lower Columbia spring chinook fishery continues to build, but slowly. State checks for the week of March 4-10 sampled 422 boats and 1,113 fishermen with 38 chinook and 5 steelhead.

Local blackmouth

The San Juans are still the place to be for winter blackmouth fishermen, according to state creel checks. At the Washington Park ramp in Anacortes on Saturday, 41 anglers in 22 boats had 11 chinook. At the Cornet Bay ramp, access point for many fishermen to some of the banks on the east end of the Strait, 40 anglers in 19 boats had 30 fish. Areas 8-1 and 8-2 were slow.