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Geoduck aquaculture: Where are we headed?
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
With the bi-partisan passage of
SSHB 2220 at the recently ended legislative session
(only one “nay” vote in combined House/Senate votes),
the methods, locations, and potential environmental
concerns surrounding geoduck aquaculture in the Puget
Sound region have finally come under public scrutiny.
SSHB 2220 requires identification of location/size of
all existing sites, something previously unknown in some
areas, notably Mason County, home of Taylor Shellfish
Farms. It also sets forth specific guidelines for
equipment identification, marine data collection for
pollution studies (done in conjunction with the
University of Washington Sea Grant Program), and has
been included in the state budget for allocation of
funds to carry out the full text of its mandate.
House of Representatives sponsor
Rep. Pat Lantz, D-26th District, acknowledged this bill
is “a first step in a long and complicated process”
involving an industry that has enjoyed state-sanctioned
privilege since before statehood.
“(This new law) supersedes DNR’s
decision to lease 25 state acres per year for 10 years,”
she says, referring to the new law’s downgrade in
leasing potential to 15 state acres per year through
2014.
Lantz remains concerned about the
potential industrialization of private tidelands. “We
can regulate private landowners,” she says. “But we
can’t tell them what to do.”
With the recent classification of
the entire west side of the Key Peninsula, from Rocky
Bay to Devil’s Head, by the state Department of Health
as suitable for commercial geoduck aquaculture, private
tideland owners may find themselves with both new
opportunity and environmental dilemmas. At a recent
geoduck forum at the Civic Center in Vaughn, an audience
question was directed to Councilman Terry Lee. “Is there
a way to protect the environment and also property
rights?” Lee’s response drew the only rumble of
disagreement from the audience that evening. His reply
was, “I believe you can (protect the environment) if you
allow the activity to occur but mitigate the negative
impacts.” This contentious issue continues to be debated
between forces both pro and con, even while the new
state regulations are being instituted.
At the county level, the Pierce
County Council Community Development Committee met twice
in May, heard yet more testimony both for and against
aquaculture, and continued to progress toward passage of
a new county ordinance (2007-34) regarding geoduck
aquaculture regulation, and docks/piers. Proposed county
regulations place even greater restrictions on
currently-used geoduck farming methods than those
imposed by the new state statute. The difference between
the two regulations (state and county) is that any
stakeholder — environmental group, shellfish industry,
or Pierce County agency — can seek to delay
implementation of the county ordinance through a variety
of legal maneuvers, progressing up to the state
shorelines regulatory body, thereby preventing the
implementation of regulation at the county level. The
likelihood of this occurring is great, as evidenced by
legal complaints filed by both the county and the
shellfish industry after receipt of Pierce County Deputy
Hearing Examiner Terrance McCarthy’s formal
recommendations regarding two Key Peninsula shellfish
applications last year — which, as a result, remain
pending.
©Copyright 2005-2009, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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