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Culvert replacement
to improve passage
By
Danna Webster, KP news
Key
Pen drivers may have noticed detours at the end of July
for 118th Avenue. The detours were needed for a Minter
Creek culvert restoration project spearheaded by South
Puget Sound Salmon Enhancement Group (SPSSEG). The group
is replacing culverts that block fish migration.
“My
organization saw Minter Creek as a high priority,” says
Jason Lundgren, project manager for SPSSEG. He lists the
many partners involved with the project, including
counties, tribes, the Pierce Conservation District, the
state Department of Ecology; U.S. Fish and Wildlife, the
National Fish Wildlife Foundation, and private landowners.
“The
more people involved — the more complex the project,” says
Lundgren.
According to Lundgren, the goal is to increase access to
salmon spawning and rearing habitat for four native
salmonid species by replacing the five worst fish passage
structures along Minter Creek, Hugh Creek, and Little
Minter Creek. The restoration project is not affiliated
with the Minter Creek Hatchery but it was the hatchery’s
scientific studies that established the importance of the
Minter Creek salmon stream.
The
need for the restoration was established by a culvert
inventory done by the Pierce Conservation District
completed in 2000. Restoration projects are awarded as a
result of a highly competitive process among 40 Water
Resource Inventory Areas (WRIAs). Each WRIA has its own
citizens and technical group who compete for funding. The
funding comes from state and federal government
departments of Fish and Wildlife.
In
addition to the complexity of many partners, the project
is further challenged because it is now in the final year
of a three-year implementation requirement. One of the
culverts was finished on private land in 2002, and since
then there have been lots of reviews and design changes,
and the cost of steel and fuel has played havoc. SPSSEG
hopes to complete four of the five projects for Minter
Creek but, according to Lundgren, they will probably hand
the fifth one over to the counties.
The
culvert replacement started at the intersection of State
Route 302 and 118th Avenue on July 25 and will move north
along 118th Avenue. It is the second of the five projects.
SPSSEG expects to finish the work in three weeks but
Lundgren warned that the “sites get looking pretty messy.”
It becomes a big construction site with heavy machinery
used to pull the old culverts, making it necessary to
block off the creek and route it around the project. The
first phase of each project involves “gathering fish and
critters…to move them downstream,” says Lundgren. “It’s
usually pretty exciting moving fish from streams.”
After work completion, native plants and trees will be
planted at the sites and volunteers are needed to assist
in restoring the work areas. Interested volunteers may
contact Jason Lundgren at 360-412-0808.
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