|
Interim geoduck ordinance
passes committee
By Chris Fitzgerald, KP News
At a packed Pierce County Council meeting
on interim aquaculture regulations in Tacoma on Sept.
10, participants heard three new amendments to the
ordinance, two of which were approved.

Photo courtesy Laura Hendricks
This photo, showing a crane used for geoduck
farming in
North Mason County, was presented to Pierce
County
Council members during the Sept. 10 hearing. |
One amendment removed the issue of dock
length and joint-use docks from the combined docks/geoduck
regulations, and passed unanimously.
A second proposal addressed bonding and
circumstances of revocation of geoduck permits in the
event of grower default.
Jim Gibbons, Seattle Shellfish owner,
began his opposition testimony by stating, “One aspect
of this I find amazing is that anyone can say anything
while offering nothing in support of what they are
claiming.” He accused the council of “choosing to
ignore” legislative action establishing a process “to
deal with the geoduck issue this last spring.”
Councilman Calvin Goings repeatedly asked
Gibbons if he was going to address the amendment, and
finally told him he would have to “speak to the
amendment whether you like it or not.”
Richard Wooster, president of the newly
formed Case Inlet Shoreline Association (Dutcher’s Cove)
on the KP, urged passage of interim regulations. He said
the organization’s mission is “ensuring the protection
and preservation of the pristine Case Inlet through
community stewardship, education, and scientific
research.” He spoke in favor of the bond/revocation
amendment so “bad actors can be effectively dealt with
and their permits revoked.”
Diane Cooper of Taylor Shellfish said,
“We do not approve of the amendments… Shellfish beds are
critical saltwater habitat, and whether they are
recreational or commercial, they should be protected. We
recommend that this process be put on hold until…” At
that point, Goings interrupted. “You are not speaking to
the amendment,” he said, “so I’m going to ask you to
take your seat please.” Councilman Dick Muri addressed
the audience, saying, “People from the shellfish
community are not doing themselves any favors by not
speaking to the amendment.”
The third amendment, proposed by Muri,
addressed expanded seeding and harvest of geoduck to
include weekends when accessed only from the water.
Gibbons came back to the podium and said,
“I think it’s a bad idea… I don’t see why somebody who
owns property can’t allow somebody to cross their
property and harvest shellfish on their property if they
want to.”
Wooster spoke against weekend operations
when waterfront owners are most likely to be enjoying
their properties with family and friends. “That proposal
should be rejected regardless if they (industry) are
coming by sea or by land; the danger of weekend
operations and the intrusion and impact upon the
community is much greater.” Wooster also called for
night seeding and harvesting to be “strictly limited.”
Laura Hendricks, president of Henderson
Bay Shoreline Association, testified last on the issue.
She distributed to the council a photo she said was
taken two weeks before and held up a copy for the
audience. “This is a great big crane on a boat that came
from the water that would be able to be done on the
weekends. It is tremendously disruptive. This is the
kind of thing that is going to come into our
neighborhoods and it’s outlandish.” She also distributed
a photo of a Taylor Shellfish truck and other multiple
vehicles on the beach, at water’s edge, or in the
shallows at a site on Oakland Bay. Hendricks asked
rhetorically why waterfront owners and beachgoers were
urged to “walk softly,” when the same environmental care
is not observed by the aquaculture industry.
After Hendricks left the podium, Muri
said, “I guess even the industry doesn’t want this then;
(this amendment) less restrictive to the shellfish
community probably shouldn’t be passed. They testified
against it, I guess we should all vote against my
amendment. I’ll be voting no.”
Terry Lee stated he represented 179 miles
of shoreline in his district, and it was “dangerous,
destructive, and obtrusive to the people who want to
exercise freedoms on the water to try and allow this
type of commercial activity to occur when you most
likely would be using that water frontage, and so I’ll
be voting against the amendment and would encourage my
colleagues to as well.” The amendment received a
unanimous “no” vote.
This hearing was dissimilar from others
on this topic; residents concerned about aquaculture
from east of the Narrows were present and spoke
passionately to the council about protection of
shorelines throughout the county beyond the peninsula.
This was also the first hearing in which two private
lessees of Taylor Shellfish spoke favorably about their
dealings with the company, followed by testimony to the
contrary by neighbors.
Peter Downey, of Pacific Shellfish
Institute, said, “The biggest threat to Puget Sound
today is not aquaculture, it is upland development. By
putting this regulation in place, what you are doing is
encouraging waterfront urbanization and discouraging
aquaculture that needs a clean and healthy environment.”
The amended ordinance was passed with the addition of
the two new amendments and will now go to the full
council with a “do pass” recommendation.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
|