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Interim geoduck regulations head for DOE
By Chris Fitzgerald, KP News
On Oct. 16, at a standing-room only final hearing on
Proposal 2007-34s2, “Establishing Interim Regulatory
Requirements for Geoduck Aquaculture Operations and
Other Aquaculture Practices…,” the Pierce County Council
passed the ordinance unanimously, followed by audience
applause. Council Chair Terry Lee, representing District
7 and the shoreline-rich Gig Harbor and Key peninsulas,
said, “This has been a very organized effort by the
community to address some serious threats to our
shorelines. There’s still a whole baseline of science
that needs to be addressed, and I’m hopeful that we’ll
have a better understanding when we complete our update
of the shoreline master program.”
Ordinance 2007-34s2 now goes to the
Department of Ecology for approval, denial, or request
for modification. If approved unchanged, it puts
temporary interim regulations in place until the county
completes a three-year, state-mandated review of its
shoreline master program.
Adamantly opposed by the
aquaculture industry and most private growers, this is
Pierce County’s first attempt at regulating aquaculture
practices. It requires a bond or financial guarantee of
$1 per plastic growing tube placed to “ensure that all
aquaculture equipment — tubes, netting, and net-securing
devices — will be completely removed.”
The language provides for
forfeiture of the bond or revocation of harvest approval
“if it becomes necessary for Pierce County to take
action to physically remove the tubes.” It sets limits
on hours and days of harvest operations, prohibits
permanent lighting, requires owner-identification of
tubes and nets, and adds guidelines regarding the
equipment and practices used by growers.
Stakes raised
Aquaculture methods and their
potential for either great benefit as a reliable food
source, or purveyors of permanent aquatic harm, have
drawn the attention of the World Wildlife Fund, a
worldwide conservancy organization. In mid-October, the
industry’s Pacific Coast Shellfish Growers’ Association
held its annual conference in Oregon. The afternoon
prior to that event, conference attendees were invited
to attend a half-day “Mollusc Dialogue” with WWF
representatives from Washington, D.C. According to Colin
Brannen, WWF aquaculture program officer, over 40 people
participated, representing industry, the scientific
community, Nature Conservancy, NOAA Fisheries, both
Washington and Oregon SeaGrant chapters. Invited but
absent were local environmental groups and Puget Sound
Partnership, the organization created by Gov. Christine
Gregoire.
In a telephone interview with the
KP News, Brannen said three common goals were
established at this first meeting: develop and implement
verifiable environmental and social performance levels
that minimize the potential negative effects of mollusc
aquaculture; recommend standards that achieve these
performance levels while permitting the shellfish
farming industry to remain economically viable; and
continue to promote the beneficial environmental and
social aspects of shellfish cultivation. WWF has divided
the globe into four aquaculture regions: United
States/Canada, New Zealand, Europe, and Asia. A second
dialogue is anticipated next fall in Vancouver, B.C.
Several WWF participants attended a
conference held in Seattle at the University of
Washington in September. There, aquaculture and marine
scientists from several coastal states and countries met
with local industry and growers, members of the
Shellfish Aquaculture Regulatory Committee (mandated by
passage of HB 2220), and other invited guests.
Recommendations from that conference are far-reaching
and coincide with calls from both 26th
Legislative District Rep. Pat Lantz and environmental
groups for science and caution. (To read the
document, go to
www.wsg.washington.edu/research/geoduck/shellfish_workshop.html
)
Locally, the recently formed Case
Inlet Shoreline Association has ramped up efforts to
block a proposed 21-acre intertidal geoduck operation in
Dutcher’s Cove by resident and owner Andrew Sewell. Over
the signature of attorney Richard Wooster, president of
CISA, 560 letters went out in
mid-October to shoreline property owners from Herron
Island and north to the Pierce/Mason county border. In
part, the letter reads, “Allowing expansion of
industrial aquaculture with no understanding of its
long-term effects poses a grave danger for Case Inlet
and all who enjoy (its) pristine waters and beaches…
Please join your neighbors in protecting our shoreline
by pledging your support... It’s imperative that we act
now…”
Denise McElney, who spent her
childhood at the family home on Dutcher’s Cove, where
her mother still resides, sent an email to the KP News
identifying herself as an environmental aquaculture
activist. “We believe these farms pose a threat to the
health of Puget Sound and there is a significant lack of
scientific evidence to support industry claims that
geoduck fisheries do not have long-term adverse
impacts,” she wrote. “We support the Pierce County
Interim Regulations, and the county (hearing) examiner’s
original determination to expire old permits.”
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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