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The Lorenz Road geoduck dilemma:
One family’s solution, one community’s growing concern
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
Owned since 1911, a 30-acre, 3,000-foot waterfront
compound (including low tidelands) on Lorenz Road is the
center of a local controversy. Across Mayo Cove from
Penrose State Park, Reeder family descendants Jod Soeurs,
his sister Ona Reinke with husband Cliff Reinke, all
reside in the original farmhouse. Soeurs’ brother,
Orrin, and his wife, Therese, own a second home on the
site. The eldest sister, Juel Erickson, lives in
Seattle. Three siblings are retired with fixed incomes;
the property is mortgage-free. They say that while
property tax payments are now doable, rising values are
worrisome.
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Siblings Ona Reinke and Orrin Soeurs on the
beach
of the 30-acre property where each has a
home.
The family hopes to lease the tidelands to a
goeduck
farmer, which has caused controversy
throughout
the area. Photo by Vic Renz |
“We have protected and loved this
land for nearly 100 years,” says Ona Reinke. They figure
easily within 10 years, possibly sooner, taxes will
overwhelm their capacity to absorb them. Orrin Soeurs
says previous generations paid their own taxes, and they
would do the same.
“I don’t feel right passing on a
burden to the children,” he says. “This land is
irreplaceable. It’s one of the last untouched places
left along the peninsula (aside from the parks). It’s
our family history; we will never sell any of it while
any of us (four) are alive. Once we’re gone, unless it’s
self-supporting, developers could move in as they have
at Driftwood Point.”
While exploring financial options,
the siblings say, they came to believe geoduck
aquaculture would be a source of ecologically viable
income.
Bill Taylor, owner of Shelton-based
Taylor Shellfish Farms, visited the family in summer
2005. According to the family, he said about one acre
(200 or so linear front shoreline feet) would sustain
cultivation. Taylor reportedly indicated theirs was the
only suitable geoduck farming tract in Mayo Cove, due to
sand and mud erosion as well as pollution. The
application submitted Feb. 6 by Taylor Shellfish, an
agent on Souers’ behalf, and the Pierce County Planning
and Land Services master application dated Feb. 2, give
the site area about 5 acres “net developable, minus any…
environmentally constrained lands.” Documents from
BioAquatics International, the company that did the site
eelgrass/macroalgae survey in December 2005, state, “All
the surveyed area, with the possible exclusion of
southerly portions, lies within WDOH (Washington
Department of Health) approved shellfish harvest area.”
No date for a required hearing has been set.
According to neighbors Cynthia
Johnson-Kuntz and Richard Kuntz, a Souers family member
called them about the family’s intentions. After
inquiring, they were satisfied the area Orrin pointed
out to them accurately represented what he understood to
be the potential farm. Owners of about 200 feet of
nearby waterfront themselves, the two became curious and
eventually visited Totten Inlet in Olympia, camera and
notebook in hand, to see for themselves.
Cynthia Kuntz says they discovered
30 of the inlet’s 33 miles of tidelands are now geoduck
farms. The State Department of Natural Resources owns
the second class tidelands; no permits for aquaculture
were required. On the sunny afternoon they visited
low-tide beaches, they reported observing no one
enjoying the shore anywhere, as far as they could see.
They did see workers — installing geoduck tubes,
harvesting geoducks, laboring at various tasks along the
beach.
Kuntz says, “We did not see one
recreational boat; only boats to and from shellfish
beds.” They spoke with beachfront homeowners, took
photographs, and chatted with a young workman who
enthusiastically explained his harvesting duties until a
superior in a boat saw him, docked, and sent him back to
work.
Far removed from the vision
described by the Soeurs, who received their information
from Taylor, the Kuntzes said what they saw horrified
them. They returned home and shared both their findings
and their decision to oppose geoduck farming in Mayo
Cove with the Soeurs. They created “No Geoduck Farm,” a
not-for-profit organization whose by-laws are pending.
Kuntz says they genuinely like their neighbors. Both
families agree their decisions to be on controversial
opposite sides have created tension; both remain
steadfast, however, in their opposing positions.
Kuntz says, “TSF sells themselves
as stewards of the environment; that scared me. (Our
association) was created for the purpose of stopping
this farm... To us, it’s all about property rights.
Legally we’re concerned about safety; it’s also about
the environment.”
“We really had no idea this
(opposition) would happen,” Ona Reinke says. “We had
only the best intentions. Pierce County planner Ty Booth
walked the beach. And it’s our land. (When) we began to
receive some unkind commentary and email… we stopped
(trying to explain).”
Her husband, Cliff, mentions
property rights. “(Other people’s) right to view our
property does not supersede our right to use it.” He
says Taylor indicated the farming bed would be visible
less than 5 percent of summer’s long days and not in
winter’s short days at all. The Souers are convinced no
harm will come to either their land or the surrounding
area. “We are relying on science and Bill Taylor,” Orrin
says.
Just after the Fourth of July,
signs saying “No Geoduck Farm. Keep Penrose Safe”
started appearing. Anti-farming efforts from several
local organizations continue with door-to-door
canvassing. The Soeurs are aware the Mayo Cove Shoreline
Association is actively seeking ways to halt the permit.
Their brochure states the association is “committed to
working together with state and local governments to
stop the reckless commercialization (of) our pristine
Puget Sound Beaches.”
Orrin invited a member of “Save Our
Shoreline,” another local anti-aquaculture group, to
come see for herself in early July; at press deadline he
hadn’t heard from her yet. At their visit to Totten
Inlet, the Kuntzes met a waterfront owner willing to
talk with the Soeurs about her experiences with geoduck
farming. In an email to KP News on July 19, Kuntz stated
the owner had contacted the Soeurs family and received
no reply.
“We’re short on sleep,” Orrin says,
“but not enough to change course. This is not an easy,
overnight money scheme. We’re in it for the harvest, and
that won’t come until the end of the six-year lease with
TSF.” He says they will “wait out” any permit delay. “If
anything (appears to be) ruining any part of our land,
we will address it immediately,” he says.
Pierce County Councilman Terry Lee
acknowledges this new aquaculture’s lack of science. He
recently sponsored a resolution affecting both shellfish
businesses and upland tideland owners, and is working
with state Rep. Pat Lantz to initiate an intertidal
programmatic environmental impact study during the
upcoming legislative session. At a meeting with the
Department of Natural Resources about a month ago, Lantz
requested a halt to state tidelands aquaculture
auctioning pending scientific study. DNR declined;
leases on 9 acres of Key Peninsula tidelands at four
separate sites are scheduled to close on Aug. 4. DNR
plans to auction 25 acres per year, up to 250 Puget
Sound tideland acres over a 10-year period.
Dedicated to preservation of
property rights, Lee is also “absolutely opposed to
going in later and attempting to clean up damage” done
to the environment as a result of unsound practices
whose long-term effects are not yet known. Due to a
pending lawsuit concerning a permit on Bainbridge
Island, the county prosecuting attorney advised Lee that
a moratorium on geoduck farming until baseline science
can be obtained. His office has requested documents from
Island County, where aquaculture is also being
established.
Geoduck farming is a burgeoning
industry, changing the way residents of, and visitors
to, the Pacific Northwest enjoy and use salt waterfront,
both public and private. According to Lee, the next
aquaculture challenge to waterfront will be commercial
mussel farming, a related form of aquaculture his office
is following. Lee’s office is attempting to work with
the appropriate agencies to introduce legislation and
guidelines that allow economic growth, and also protect
the shorelines.
©Copyright 2005-2009, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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