
MEDIA CONTACT
Katy Johansson
360.725.5442
katy.johansson@psp.wa.gov
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
06-23-2008
Report: San Juan Island ecosystem protection efforts working
OLYMPIA – A new report points to the progress the residents of the San Juan Islands have made in ecosystem protection efforts – and how those efforts can be a model for the restoration of the entire Puget Sound ecosystem.
But it also shows that shoreline alterations are occurring in some of the most ecologically sensitive areas of the islands, putting critical habitat at risk. And it makes clear that land-use incentives aren’t well designed to help most property owners, and environmental protection programs at times are in conflict and create confusion for those trying to do the right thing.
The preliminary report, “An Assessment of Ecosystem Protection: What’s Working, What’s Not,” is a product of the San Juan Initiative, a public-private partnership to improve ecosystem protection in the San Juan Islands.
“The San Juan Islands boast the most intact ecosystem in all of Puget Sound,” San Juan County Councilman Kevin Ranker said. “Property owners have done an excellent job of stewarding the land. But that doesn’t make the islands immune to the pressures of growth.
“The San Juan Initiative aims to ensure that as we grow, we have secured the things that are functioning – now and into the future. This report sheds light on what we are doing, and what we need to change, to achieve that.”
The report looks at four representative case studies: a nine-mile stretch of shoreline on each of the islands of San Juan, Orcas, Stuart and Lopez.
Key findings include:
The goal of the San Juan Initiative is to improve ecosystem protection in San Juan County so it supports the prosperity of the San Juan community and builds local capacity for ecosystem protection. It is a project of the San Juan County Council, the Surfrider Foundation and the Puget Sound Partnership.
“We know that protecting intact resources is an important factor in ensuring the recovery of the entire Puget Sound ecosystem,” said David Dicks, executive director of the Puget Sound Partnership. “What we are learning from this initiative will help inform broader Puget Sound protection efforts.”
During the past year and a half, the San Juan Initiative, governed by a Policy Group of local citizens and government officials, has been investigating the health of the marine shoreline in the San Juan Islands. A Technical Advisory Committee and a Science Advisory Committee assist the Policy Group.
The Policy Group will next meet from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. June 27, at Mullis Community Senior Center, 589 Nash St, Friday Harbor. Bill Ruckelshaus, chairman of the Puget Sound Partnership’s Leadership Council, and Doug Sutherland, commissioner of public lands, will be present.
The Policy Group will determine the direction of the Initiative’s next phase – development of solutions to the core issues raised in the report. From now until December, they will work with the community on specific proposals meant to strengthen the actions that are working well and fix the things that are not.
For more information about upcoming San Juan Initiative meetings, and to review the report, go to http://www.sanjuaninitiative.org/meetings.html
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