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Key Pen News Sponsors Geoduck Forum
As part
of its ongoing mission to report news affecting local
residents in a fair and balanced manner, the Key Pen
News has joined forces with the Key Peninsula Community
Council and Shellfish Partners (a cooperative consisting
of Pierce County Water Programs, Tacoma-Pierce County
Health Department and Pierce Conservation District) to
sponsor a gathering at which Key Pen residents can learn
more about the issues surrounding geoduck aquaculture on
public and private tidelands.
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Geoduck Forum Panelists
Greg Combs, Washington State Department of
Health
Topic: The
process used by DOH to classify and monitor
tidelands for commercial geoduck cultivation
Greg Combs, from DOH
Office of Shellfish and Water Protection, is
a public health adviser who works in the
shellfish restoration program and the
recreational shellfish program. The emphasis
of the restoration program is to organize
activities to identify and correct pollution
problems that impact shellfish growing areas
so that shellfish in those areas are safe to
eat. The recreational shellfish program
focuses on preventing illnesses by
classifying recreational shellfish areas and
providing public health information to
recreational shellfish harvesters. Both of
these programs work closely with local
governments, tribes, and other state
agencies.
Bill Dewey, Taylor Shellfish Co. public affairs
manager and owner of Chuckanut Shellfish, Inc.
Topic: The advantages of
geduck farming to the community
During
his 25 years as a
shellfish farmer, Bill Dewey has taken an active
role on behalf of the industry on environmental
and human health issues and shellfish farming
regulations. He serves on a number of
boards and committees locally and nationally.
Originally appointed
by Gov. Lowry, he is currently in his third term
representing the shellfish industry on the Puget
Sound Council. He is president of the
Pacific Shellfish Institute and chairs the Mason
County Planning Advisory Commission.
He was recently
appointed by U.S. Commerce Secretary Carlos
Gutierrez to serve on NOAA’s Marine Fish
Advisory Committee. In March, the National
Shellfisheries Association honored Dewey with
the David H. Wallace award in recognition of his
service in promoting research, understanding and
cooperation among shellfisheries scientists,
culturists, managers, producers and regulators.
Sarah Dzinbal, Washington State Department of
Natural Resources assistant division manager
Topic: DNR’s intertidal
geoduck leasing monitoring
Sarah Dzinbal manages six
statewide programs, including the geoduck
aquaculture program, the wild stock geoduck
fishery, and the derelict vessel, dredged
material and invasive species programs. Prior to
working for DNR, she worked with the state
Department of Ecology, monitoring pollutants in
marine waters and sediments. Before this, she
worked for ten years in the submarine telecom
cable industry, conducting geophysical surveys,
cable installations and ROV work
internationally. Sarah has a Master of Science
in marine geophysics and geotechnics, and a
Bachelor of Science in geology.
Laura Hendricks, Henderson Bay Shoreline
Association co-founder
Topic: Environmental concerns based on
documentable science
Laura Hendricks is the co-founder of Henderson
Bay Shoreline Association, which is focused on
aquaculture industry regulation and science
required for new, intensive methods prior to any
further expansion. Hendricks has been an
outspoken advocate and lobbyist on behalf of the
environmental community on the topic of
aquaculture. A former realtor and CPA, she has a
master’s degree in finance.
Terry Lee, Pierce County
councilman
Topic: Pros and cons of landowner property
rights
Terry Lee represents District 7, which includes
the Gig Harbor and Key Peninsulas, Fircrest,
University Place, W. Tacoma, and Fox Island. He
is a lifelong resident of Council District 7,
living in University Place for 26 years and in
Gig Harbor for the last 34 years. He graduated
from Central Washington University, where he
majored in chemistry and zoology, and then
completed postgraduate studies in nuclear
physics and radiology. Lee served on the
Peninsula Advisory Commission (PAC) from
1983-1991 and on the Pierce County Planning
Commission from 1991-2002, as chair for the last
seven years. The PAC was the first land use
advisory commission in Pierce County. As chair
of that body, he helped create the Burley-Minter
Sensitive Area that reduced densities; the PAC
also created the Rural Special designation with
reduced densities in some of the valleys. While
on the Planning Commission, he worked to develop
the Pierce County Comprehensive Plan and many
community plans for the county. |
The
public forum will be held on Thursday, April 5, from 6
to 9 p.m. at the Key Peninsula Civic Center.
At stake
are questions of private property rights, the potential
“industrialization” of portions of newly classified
peninsula shorelines, and broad concerns regarding the
acknowledged lack of long-term science to ensure the
continued health of Puget Sound. Efforts are underway in
Olympia to craft compromise regulations intended to
satisfy both environmental and industry concerns. In
May, the Pierce County Council expects to discuss
proposed drafted interim county geoduck farming
regulations. The April forum is designed to provide
attendees with information pertinent to both of those
bodies, to have questions answered, and to give citizen
input to the presenters.
“Commercial geoduck farming is a sensitive issue that
impacts the entire community,” says Rodika Tollefson,
Key Peninsula News executive editor. “This controversial
subject deserves continued public attention, and the
purpose of the forum is to provide local residents with
an opportunity to learn more.”
Speaking
for the Community Council, President Barbara Trotter
says, “We see this forum as the first step in a process
of informing our community and ourselves on all sides of
this issue... We plan to make a recommendation to Pierce
County Council as they discuss this issue later this
year.”
The forum
will include presentations from panelists representing
different sides of the issue, a question and answer
period, and citizen comment. Confirmed panelists include
Pierce County Councilman Terry Lee, Taylor Shellfish Co.
Inc. Public Affairs Manager Bill Dewey, Henderson Bay
Shoreline Association President Laura Hendricks, and
Department of Natural Resources Assistant Division
Manager Sarah Dzinbal. Other presenters may be included
as the organizers finalize plans.
Dewey,
with for Shelton-based Taylor Shellfish, is a 25-year
shellfish farmer. He has taken an active industry role
in environmental and human health issues and shellfish
farming regulations. In an email response, Dewey says,
“Shellfish growers look forward to meeting more of our
neighbors and discussing the opportunities and issues
geoduck farming presents to the Key Peninsula.”
Dzinbal
represents DNR’s aquaculture program. She will provide
background on the state’s Geoduck Aquaculture Program,
an update on the current status of the leasing program
and the environmental monitoring program nested within
it.
Lee, who
has extensive land-use background, including as a former
Pierce County planning commissioner, will address the
pros and cons of landowner property rights. He
acknowledges the characteristics of geoduck aquaculture
as “a collision of (three) special interests:
environmental concerns, economic development, and
private property rights.”
Hendricks, co-founder of Henderson Bay Shoreline
Association, represents a coalition of environmental
organizations and concerns throughout the South Puget
Sound region. The environmental groups’ stated mission
is to promote “aquaculture industry regulation and
science required for new, intensive methods prior to any
further expansion.” Hendricks’ topic addresses
environmental concerns, from documentable, available
science perspectives, in opposition to geoduck farming.
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Forum details
The Geoduck Aquaculture Information Forum is
on Thursday, April 5, from 6 to 9 p.m. in
the VFW Room of the Key Peninsula Civic
Center, 17010 S. Vaughn Road, Vaughn.
To
read KP News series on geoduck farming,
which concluded in March,
click here. |
Pierce
Conservation District’s Erin Ewald says, “The issue of
geoduck farming, property rights, and the environmental
effects of land use has brought a lot of attention to
the Key Peninsula and its natural resources. There are
important points to be made on each side. This forum has
the opportunity to engage participants into positive
discussion on these topics and encourage them to make
educated decisions about their community and its
future.”
All
panelists have been asked to also answer the question:
“What are the short and long-range outcomes
(commercially, economically, and recreationally) of this
activity on the Key Peninsula?” District 26 House of
Representatives and Senate legislators have been invited
to provide a short statement regarding this important
issue on the Key Peninsula. An audience
question-and-answer session will follow all panelist
presentations; the event will conclude with an
opportunity for citizens to provide public comment.
“The KP
News has become an objective and reliable source of news
regarding the issues that impact local residents. We are
proud to be a major sponsor for this event and
collaborate with other sponsors who feel this topic is
important,” says KP News Publishing Board President
Irene Torres. “We hope the community will turn out to
hear the issues, and as a result, be better informed
about them.”
Where do the “rights” of all
parties begin and end? It is a contentious question with
no legal end in sight, subject to re-review, appeal upon
appeal, headed up the legal food chain, where eventually
it will be decided by legislative action and/or the
courts.
©Copyright 2005-2009, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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