Pierce County Shoreline Master Program Update

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Pierce County Shoreline Master Program Update Key Peninsula-FrontalKey Peninsula-Frontal Case Inlet Case Inlet Key Peninsula-Frontal Carr Inlet PIERCE COUNTY Key Peninsula-Frontal Carr Inlet PIERCE COUNTY SHORELINE MASTER PROGRAM UPDATE Curley Creek-Frontal Colvos Passage SHOR LINE MA PR AM U DATE Curley Creek-Frontal Colvos Passage Burley Creek-Frontal Carr Inlet CUMULATIVERESTORATION IMPACTS PLAN ANALYSIS Burley Creek-Frontal Carr Inlet WRIAWRIA MillerMiller Creek-Frontal Creek-Frontal East PassageEast Passage WRIASWRIASWRIAS A ANDND B BASINS BASINSASINS 1515 - -Kitsap Kitsap City ofCity Tacoma-Frontal of Tacoma-Frontal Commencement Commencement Bay Bay White R FOX Whit FOX HylebosHylebos Creek-Frontal Creek-Frontal Commencement Commencement Bay Bay ISLANDISLAND eR iv i ver e Lake MC NEILMC NEIL r Lake TappsTapps ISLANDISLAND Chambers Creek - Leach Creek Chambers Creek - Leach Creek WhiteWhite River River D D N N SwanSwan Clear Clear Creeks Creeks U U O O S S PuyallupPuyallup Shaw Shaw Road Road Upper Upper AndersonAnderson Island Island ClarksClarks Creek Creek ANDERSONANDERSON e RRi hhi it t e ivveerr ISLANDISLAND WW CloverClover Creek Creek - Lower - LowerClover Creek - North Fork ?¨ Clover Creek - North Fork?Ã FennelFennel Creek-Puyallup Creek-Puyallup River River ?¨ T T ?Ã E E G rGer e e e G G WRIA ri rei eCCr n n WRIA r i eeeek U American a i k w w U American r a CC a a Spa S r l P P Lake Lake na pana P P l ee t t w w Twin Creek-White River e e a a o v e v e t h h aa Twin Creek-White River y C l l or r t r r r C y C Boise Creek-White River River r C C u u ww r C r e e o South Prairie Creek - Lower 12 - Chambers-Clover o South Prairie Creek - Lower a a 12 - Chambers-Clovere r e r W k W k Puyallup River - Potholes t t e Puyallup River - Potholes e S R Sequalitchew Creek-Frontal Cormorant Passage S R Sequalitchew Creek-Frontal Cormorant Passage e e i v i v e r e e r SpanawaySpanaway e r r h h k k i i R R t t LakeLake e e i i v v e R !"`$ LowerLower Carbon Carbon River River e R r !"`$ r i i v CloverClover Creek Creek - Upper - Upper v e South Prairie Creek - Upper e South Prairie Creek - Upper r r LowerLower Greenwater Greenwater River River Nisqually River-Frontal Puget Sound lower ClearwaterClearwater River River Nisqually River-Frontal Puget Sound lower WilkesonWilkeson Creek Creek NisquallyNisqually River-Frontal River-Frontal Puget SoundPuget Sound - upper - upper SpanawaySpanaway Creek Creek Legend WRIA LegendCounty Boundary Lower West Fork White River FiskeFiske Creek-Puyallup Creek-Puyallup River River LowerLower West West Fork Fork White White River River WRIACounty Boundary Boundary LowerLynch West Creek Fork White River ?z?z RoadsWRIA Boundary LynchMashel Creek River - Lower 10 - Puyallup-White Clear Creek 10 - Puyallup-White Clear Creek WaterbodiesRoads MashelMashel River River - Lower - Upper MuckMuck Creek Creek - Upper - Upper ?¨ Waterbodies Mashel River - Upper ?¨ UpperUpperGreenwaterRiver Greenwater River Streams Middle Carbon River UpperUpper Little LittleNaches Naches River River Sub-basinsLegendStreams - Name MiddleMiller CarbonCreek-Frontal River East Passage Muck CreekMuck Creek- Lower - Lower ?à SilverSilver Creek-White Creek-White River River Sub-basinsy BoundaryCounty Boundary - Name Lower WestLower Fork West WhiteMillerMowich Fork River Creek-Frontal White River River East Passage ?à CC Alder Reservoir-Nisqually River aa VoightVoight Creek Creek rr BoundaryWRIA Boundary Lynch CreekLynch Creek SouthSouth Creek Creek - Upper - Upper bb Alder Reservoir-Nisqually River Mowich River o Anderson Island Muck Creek - Lower o nn s Roads Mashel RiverMashel - LowerMuck River - Creek Lower - Lower BeaverAnderson Creek Island Muck Creek - Upper bodiesWaterbodies Mashel RiverMashel - Upper River - Upper Beaver Creek Muck Creek - Upper Berg Creek Muddy Fork Cowlitz River RR ms Streams Middle CarbonMiddle River Carbon River iivv ee rr Berg Creek Muddy Fork Cowlitz River CrowCrow Creek Creek Boise Creek-White River Murray Creek-Nisqually River P P Sub-basinsns - Name - Name Miller Creek-FrontalMiller Creek-Frontal East Passage East Passage u u HuckleberryHuckleberry Creek Creek S S Boise Creek-White River Murray Creek-Nisqually River y y MiddleMiddle Carbon Carbon River River i i Reservoir-NisquallyBurleyAlder Reservoir-Nisqually Creek-Frontal River Carr River Inlet Mowich RiverMowich RiverNisqually River-Frontal Puget Sound - upper a a l l KaposwinKaposwin l l l v v Lacamas Creek l u u e e son IslandBurleyAnderson Creek-Frontal Island Carr Inlet Muck CreekMuck - Lower CreekNisqually - Lower River-Frontal Puget Sound - upper Lacamas Creek p p Busy Wild Creek Nisqually River-Frontal Puget Sound lower SouthSouth Creek Creek - Lower - Lower LakeLake r r Beaver Creek Muck CreekNisqually - Upper River-Frontal Puget Sound lower er CreekBusy Wild Creek Muck Creek - Upper R Chambers Creek - Leach Creek Ohanapecosh River R i i C C Creek Berg Creek Muddy ForkMuddy Cowlitz Fork River Cowlitz River v v r r Chambers Creek - Leach Creek Ohanapecosh River MurrayMurray Creek-Nisqually Creek-Nisqually River River KapowsinKapowsin Creek Creek e e e City of Tacoma-Frontal Commencement Bay Ohop Creek r r e Creek-WhiteBoise Creek-White River River Murray Creek-NisquallyMurray Creek-Nisqually River River e e City of Tacoma-Frontal Commencement Bay Ohop Creek LakeLake UpperUpper West West Fork Fork White White River River k k y Creek-FrontalClarksBurley Creek-Frontal Creek Carr Inlet Carr Inlet Nisqually River-FrontalNisquallyPowell River-Frontal Puget Creek-Nisqually Sound Puget - upper Sound -River upper Tanwax UpperUpper Carbon Carbon River River Clarks Creek Powell Creek-Nisqually River TanwaxTanwax Creek Creek - upper - upper Tanwax Wild CreekClearBusy Wild Creek Creek Nisqually River-FrontalNisquallyPuyallup River-Frontal Puget Sound River Puget lower- Potholes Sound lower Clear Creek Puyallup River - Potholes KingsKings Creek-Puyallup Creek-Puyallup River River Mowitch bers CreekChambers - Leach Creek Creek - Leach Creek OhanapecoshOhanapecosh River River C r Ce er ek e k Clearwater River Puyallup Shaw Road Upper LakeLake Clearwater River Ohop CreekPuyallup Shaw Road Upper x x ClearClear f Tacoma-FrontalCity of Tacoma-Frontal Commencement Commencement Bay BayOhop Creek WRIAa a TwentyfiveTwentyfive Mile Mile Creek Creek Clover Creek - Lower Reese Creek-Nisqually River WRIA w w LakeLake s CreekCloverCreek-LowerClarks Creek Powell Creek-NisquallyPowell Creek-NisquallyReese River Creek-Nisqually River River Horn Creek-Nisqually River n n Clover Creek - North Fork Sequalitchew Creek-Frontal Cormorant Passage Horn Creek-Nisqually River a a ivveerr CreekCloverCreek-NorthForkClear Creek Puyallup RiverPuyallup - PotholesSequalitchew River - Potholes Creek-Frontal Cormorant Passage T T RRi Clover Creek - Upper Silver Creek-White River hh water RiverCloverClearwater Creek River - Upper Puyallup ShawPuyallup RoadSilver Shaw Upper Creek-White Road Upper River 11 - Nisqually iittcc 11 - Nisqually w w CopperClover Creek Creek-Nisqually - Lower River Reese Creek-NisquallySouth Creek River - Lower RapJohnRapJohn o rCreek-LowerCopper Creek-Nisqually River Reese Creek-NisquallySouth River Creek - Lower o LakeLake M rCreek-NorthForkCrowClover Creek Creek - North Fork SequalitchewSequalitchew Creek-FrontalSouth Creek-Frontal Creek Cormorant - Upper Cormorant Passage Passage M Crow Creek South Creek - Upper Harts Tanwax Creek - lower OhopOhop Harts Tanwax Creek - lower Mowich River Headwaters White River r CreekClover - Upper Creek - Upper Silver Creek-WhiteSilver Creek-White River River Lake Mowich River Headwaters White River Curley Creek-Frontal Colvos Passage South Prairie Creek - Lower LakeLake Lake Berg Creek Curley Creek-Frontal Colvos Passage South Prairie Creek - Lower OhopOhop Creek Creek Berg Creek er Creek-NisquallyCopper Creek-Nisqually River River South CreekSouth - Lower Creek - Lower SilverSilver South Prairie Creek - Upper Tule Lake Lynch Creek Fennel Creek-Puyallup River River South Prairie Creek - Upper Tule Lake Lynch Creek CreekCrow Creek South CreekSouth - Upper Creek - Upper LakeLake Fiske Creek-Puyallup River Spanaway Creek y Creek-FrontalFiskeCurley Creek-Puyallup Creek-Frontal Colvos Passage Colvos River Passage South PrairieSouth Creek PrairieSpanaway - Lower Creek -Creek Lower Headwaters Nisqually River Swan Clear Creeks N el Creek-PuyallupHeadwatersFennel Creek-Puyallup River Nisqually River River South PrairieSouth Creek PrairieSwan - Upper Creek Clear - CreeksUpper N i i s s KregerKreger Lake Lake Fiske Creek-Puyallup River Spanaway Creek q q Mashel River - Lower Creek-PuyallupHeadwaters River Puyallup River River Spanaway Creek TahomaTahoma Creek Creek u u Mashel River - Lower a a l PowellPowell Creek-Nisqually Creek-Nisqually River River watersHeadwaters Nisqually River Nisqually River Swan ClearSwan Creeks Clear Creeks l l l y Headwaters White River River TanwaxTanwax Creek Creek - lower - lower y UpperUpper American American River River watersHeadwaters Puyallup River Puyallup River Tahoma CreekTahoma Creek R R i Horn Creek-Nisqually River River TanwaxTanwax Creek Creek - upper - upper i v e rv e r MashelMashel River River - Upper- Upper watersHeadwaters White River White River Tanwax CreekTanw - ax lower Cr eek - low er Huckleberry Creek TwentyfiveTwentyfive Mile Mile Creek Creek Creek-NisquallyHorn Creek-Nisqually River River Tanwax CreekTanwax - upper Creek - upper Hylebos Creek-Frontal Commencement Bay TwinTwin Creek-White Creek-White River River Headwaters Puyallup River eberryHylebosHuckleberry Creek Creek-Frontal Creek CommencementTwentyfive Bay
Recommended publications
  • Itinerary: Mt. Rainier Loop
    Itinerary: Mt. Rainier Loop Length: 78 miles Time to Allow: 4-5 hours Open Season: The route is usually snow-free by mid-June and remains open through late October. The road closes each year due to winter snowfall from November to early June. Driving Directions: From Packwood, travel northwest on Forest Road (FR) 52, also called Skate Creek Road, 23 miles to State Route (SR) 706. Turn right on SR 706 and travel east 41.9 miles into Mount Rainier National Park to SR 123. Turn right on SR 123 and travel south 5.4 miles to US Highway 12. Turn right on US Highway 12 and travel 7.3 miles west back to Packwood. Experience the grandeur of Mount Rainier, old-growth temperate rainforest, waterfalls, and impressive vistas! An excellent introduction to Mount Rainier National Park. Start: Begin this mountain adventure in the rural mountain community of Packwood located on Highway 12. Restaurants, car services, lodging, and campgrounds are available. Stop 1: Skate Creek Nestled deep in the forest, watch bubbling Skate Creek as you drive its namesake road. Along this winding, paved, but primitive road, see countless waterfalls cascade along the roadside. See blankets of drooping mosses and experience the beauty and serenity of this little gem. Memorable fall color displays have earned this road the honor of “Best Sunday Drive in Lewis County for Fall Color”. In the wintertime, this road is closed to vehicle traffic and the Skate Creek Sno-Park becomes a popular destination for the snowmobiling crowds. Stop 2: Nisqually Entrance Welcoming visitors to Mount Rainier National Park at the Nisqually Entrance stands a wooden entrance arch built in 1922 and reconstructed in 1973.
    [Show full text]
  • An Inventory of Fish in Streams in Mount Rainier National Park 2001-2003
    National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Natural Resource Stewardship and Science An Inventory of Fish in Streams at Mount Rainier National Park 2001-2003 Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/NCCN/NRTR—2013/717.N ON THE COVER National Park staff conducting a snorkel fish survey in Kotsuck Creek, Mount Rainier National Park, 2002. Photograph courtesy of Mount Rainier National Park. An Inventory of Fish in Streams at Mount Rainier National Park 2001-2003 Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/NCCN/NRTR—2013/717.N Barbara A. Samora, Heather Moran, Rebecca Lofgren National Park Service North Coast and Cascades Network Inventory and Monitoring Program Mount Rainier National Park Tahoma Woods Star Rt. Ashford, WA. 98304 April 2013 U.S. Department of the Interior National Park Service Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Fort Collins, Colorado The National Park Service, Natural Resource Stewardship and Science office in Fort Collins, Colorado, publishes a range of reports that address natural resource topics. These reports are of interest and applicability to a broad audience in the National Park Service and others in natural resource management, including scientists, conservation and environmental constituencies, and the public. The Natural Resource Technical Report Series is used to disseminate results of scientific studies in the physical, biological, and social sciences for both the advancement of science and the achievement of the National Park Service mission. The series provides contributors with a forum for displaying comprehensive data that are often deleted from journals because of page limitations. All manuscripts in the series receive the appropriate level of peer review to ensure that the information is scientifically credible, technically accurate, appropriately written for the intended audience, and designed and published in a professional manner.
    [Show full text]
  • Anthropological Study of Yakama Tribe
    1 Anthropological Study of Yakama Tribe: Traditional Resource Harvest Sites West of the Crest of the Cascades Mountains in Washington State and below the Cascades of the Columbia River Eugene Hunn Department of Anthropology Box 353100 University of Washington Seattle, WA 98195-3100 [email protected] for State of Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife WDFW contract # 38030449 preliminary draft October 11, 2003 2 Table of Contents Acknowledgements 4 Executive Summary 5 Map 1 5f 1. Goals and scope of this report 6 2. Defining the relevant Indian groups 7 2.1. How Sahaptin names for Indian groups are formed 7 2.2. The Yakama Nation 8 Table 1: Yakama signatory tribes and bands 8 Table 2: Yakama headmen and chiefs 8-9 2.3. Who are the ―Klickitat‖? 10 2.4. Who are the ―Cascade Indians‖? 11 2.5. Who are the ―Cowlitz‖/Taitnapam? 11 2.6. The Plateau/Northwest Coast cultural divide: Treaty lines versus cultural 12 divides 2.6.1. The Handbook of North American Indians: Northwest Coast versus 13 Plateau 2.7. Conclusions 14 3. Historical questions 15 3.1. A brief summary of early Euroamerican influences in the region 15 3.2. How did Sahaptin-speakers end up west of the Cascade crest? 17 Map 2 18f 3.3. James Teit‘s hypothesis 18 3.4. Melville Jacobs‘s counter argument 19 4. The Taitnapam 21 4.1. Taitnapam sources 21 4.2. Taitnapam affiliations 22 4.3. Taitnapam territory 23 4.3.1. Jim Yoke and Lewy Costima on Taitnapam territory 24 4.4.
    [Show full text]
  • Chambers Creek
    Section 3 - Physical and Environmental Inventory 3.1 Chambers Creek – Clover Creek Drainage Basin 3.2 Puyallup River Drainage Basin 3.3 Sewer Service Basins in the Puyallup and White River Drainage Basins 3.4 Nisqually River Drainage Basin 3.5 Kitsap Drainage Basin 3.6 City of Tacoma - North End WWTP 3.7 Joint Base Lewis Mcchord Sewer System – Tatsolo Point WWTP Pierce County Public Works and Utilities – Sewer Utility Unified Sewer Plan Update Section 3 Section 3 – Physical and Environmental Inventory Section 3 documents the land-use and environmental tenants of the four major basins in Pierce County and are organized around those basins. Chambers Creek – Clover Creek Drainage Basin - Section 3.1 Puyallup River Drainage Basin – Section 3.2 Nisqually River Drainage Basin – Section 3.4 Kitsap Drainage Basin – Section 3.5 3.1 Chambers Creek – Clover Creek Drainage Basin The Chambers Creek - Clover Creek Drainage Basin (Basin) is located in central Pierce County, between Puget Sound on the west and the ridge above the Puyallup River Valley on the east. Point Defiance and the southwest shore of Commencement Bay serve as the basin’s northern boundary, and the City of DuPont lies on the southern boundary. The basin encompasses approximately 104,258 acres (117 square miles) of land including the Cities of DuPont, including Northwest Landing, University Place, Lakewood, and Northwest Tacoma, Fircrest, the Towns of Ruston, and Steilacoom, as well as portions of Fort Lewis and McChord Military Reservations, and the unincorporated communities of South Hill, Frederickson, Mid County, Graham, Parkland, and Spanaway. 3.1.1 Topography Lowland topography is generally flat to gently rolling.
    [Show full text]
  • Sequalitchew Creek Restoration Plan
    RESTORATION PLAN Sequalitchew Creek Watershed Prepared for: Environmental Caucus and CalPortland Project No. 040001 March 8, 2018 RESTORATION PLAN Sequalitchew Creek Watershed Prepared for: Environmental Caucus and CalPortland Project No. 040001 March 8, 2018 Contents Introduction .........................................................................................................1 Goals and Objectives ..........................................................................................3 Restoration Plan Elements .................................................................................6 1. Regulatory Actions ......................................................................................... 8 2. Flow Restoration ............................................................................................ 8 3. Flow Maintenance and Enhancement ......................................................... 10 4. Habitat Restoration ...................................................................................... 11 Governance ........................................................................................................ 13 Committee ........................................................................................................ 13 Meetings ........................................................................................................... 13 Scope of Authority ........................................................................................... 13 Information Sharing ........................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Tahoma News Summer 2007
    November 2006 Flood Makes History The flood of November 6 and 7, 2006 was an previous records. Record amounts fell throughout up here, washing it away there changing course, historical, natural event unlike any other that has other regions of the park. seeking the easiest path through the debris. This been recorded in Mount Rainier National Park’s is why glacial riverbeds are wide and rocky, with 108 year history. The snow levels during the storm stayed above the river itself braided into constantly changing 10,000 feet in elevation, with the majority of the channels. Long before National Park status, debris flows precipitation falling as rain. Some existing snow traveled from Mount Rainier to the Puget Sound. above 7,000 feet melted, adding to the runoff in the Recent research at Mount Rainier National Park Areas near Tacoma and Seattle are formed of rivers. has measured aggradation in most park rivers prehistoric debris from the mountain. to occur at a rate of 6 to 14 inches per decade. As the rain flowed down mountain-sides and In comparison, during the November flood, the In more recent park history (1946-47), a series roads to the main watersheds, it caused extreme riverbed where Tahoma Creek flows under the of heavy snowstorms caused extreme damage to soil erosion and slides. It uprooted large areas of Nisqually Road rose more than four feet. facilities. For two weeks, the main entrance to the trees that eventually caused log jams that redirected park was closed to the public due to the danger of water.
    [Show full text]
  • Independent Populations of Chinook Salmon in Puget Sound
    NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-NWFSC-78 Independent Populations of Chinook Salmon in Puget Sound July 2006 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National Marine Fisheries Service NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS Series The Northwest Fisheries Science Center of the National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, uses the NOAA Techni- cal Memorandum NMFS series to issue informal scientific and technical publications when complete formal review and editorial processing are not appropriate or feasible due to time constraints. Documents published in this series may be referenced in the scientific and technical literature. The NMFS-NWFSC Technical Memorandum series of the Northwest Fisheries Science Center continues the NMFS- F/NWC series established in 1970 by the Northwest & Alaska Fisheries Science Center, which has since been split into the Northwest Fisheries Science Center and the Alaska Fisheries Science Center. The NMFS-AFSC Techni- cal Memorandum series is now being used by the Alaska Fisheries Science Center. Reference throughout this document to trade names does not imply endorsement by the National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA. This document should be cited as follows: Ruckelshaus, M.H., K.P. Currens, W.H. Graeber, R.R. Fuerstenberg, K. Rawson, N.J. Sands, and J.B. Scott. 2006. Independent populations of Chinook salmon in Puget Sound. U.S. Dept. Commer., NOAA Tech. Memo. NMFS-NWFSC-78, 125 p. NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-NWFSC-78 Independent Populations of Chinook Salmon in Puget Sound Mary H. Ruckelshaus,
    [Show full text]
  • Greenwater Access and Travel Management Project Environmental Assessment
    United States Department of Agriculture Greenwater Access and Travel Management Project Environmental Assessment Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie Snoqualmie November Forest Service National Forest Ranger District 2016 For More Information Contact: Snoqualmie Ranger District 902 SE North Bend Way North Bend, WA 98045 (425) 888-1421 In accordance with Federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) civil rights regulations and policies, the USDA, its Agencies, offices, and employees, and institutions participating in or administering USDA programs are prohibited from discriminating based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity (including gender expression), sexual orientation, disability, age, marital status, family/parental status, income derived from a public assistance program, political beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil rights activity, in any program or activity conducted or funded by USDA (not all bases apply to all programs). Remedies and complaint filing deadlines vary by program or incident. Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of communication for program information (e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, American Sign Language, etc.) should contact the responsible Agency or USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TTY) or contact USDA through the Federal Relay Service at (800) 877-8339. Additionally, program information may be made available in languages other than English. To file a program discrimination complaint, complete the USDA Program Discrimination Complaint Form, AD- 3027, found online at http://www.ascr.usda.gov/complaint_filing_cust.html and at any USDA office or write a letter addressed to USDA and provide in the letter all of the information requested in the form.
    [Show full text]
  • Pierce County Biodiversity Network Assessment August 2004
    Pierce County Biodiversity Network Assessment August 2004 Pierce County Biodiversity Network Assessment – August 2004 Acknowledgements Pierce County Planning and Land Services Department-Advance Planning Division Katherine Brooks, Senior Planner Karen Trueman, GIS Specialist Chip Vincent, Principal Planner Pierce County Executive’s Office Debby Hyde, Special Projects Coordinator Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife John Jacobson, Senior GIS Analyst, Habitat Program Marc McCalmon, Landscape Conservation Analyst, Habitat Program Erik Neatherlin, Landscape Conservation Planner, Habitat Program Michelle Tirhi, Urban Biologist-South Puget Sound Region University of Washington, Cooperative Fish & Wildlife Unit Karen Dvornich, Public Education and Outreach Coordinator, NatureMapping Program and Washington GAP Analysis Project Assistant Chris Grue, Principal Investigator and Leader, WACFWRU Metro Parks Tacoma John Garner, Education Coordinator Tahoma Audubon Society Bryan Flint, Conservation Coordinator Puyallup River Watershed Council Dave Seabrook TerraLogic GIS Chris Hansen, Principal Levon Yengoyan, Principal Authors Katherine Brooks, Pierce County Planning and Land Services Karen Dvornich, University of Washington Michelle Tirhi, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Erik Neatherlin, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Marc McCalmon, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife John Jacobson, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Reference Citation Brooks, K., K.M. Dvornich, M. Tirhi, E. Neatherlin, M. McCalmon, and
    [Show full text]
  • Nisqually State Park Interpretive Plan
    NISQUALLY STATE PARK INTERPRETIVE PLAN OCTOBER 2020 Prepared for the Nisqually Indian Tribe by Historical Research Associates, Inc. We acknowledge that Nisqually State Park is part of the homelands of the Squalli-absch (sqʷaliʔabš) people. We offer respect for their history and culture, and for the path they show in caring for this place. “All natural things are our brothers and sisters, they have things to teach us, if we are aware and listen.” —Willie Frank, Sr. Nisqually State Park forest. Credit: HRA TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION . 5 PART 1: FOUNDATION. .11 Purpose and Guiding Principles . .12 Interpretive Goals . 12 Desired Outcomes . .13 Themes. 14 Setting and Connections to Regional Interpretive Sites . 16 Issues and Influences Affecting Interpretation . .18 PART 2: RECOMMENDATIONS . .21 Introduction . 22 Recommended Approach . .22 Recommended Actions and Benchmarks . 26 Interpretive Media Recommendations . 31 Fixed Media Interpretation . .31 Digital Interpretation . 31 Personal Services . 32 Summary . 33 PLANNING RESOURCES . 34 HRA Project Team . 35 Interpretive Planning Advisory Group and Planning Meeting Participants . .35 Acknowledgements . 35 Definitions . 35 Select Interpretation Resources. 36 Select Management Documents . 36 Select Topical Resources. 36 APPENDICES Appendix A: Interpretive Theme Matrix Appendix B: Recommended Implementation Plan Appendix C: Visitor Experience Mapping INTRODUCTION Nisqually State Park welcome sign includes Nisqually design elements and Lushootseed language translation. Credit: HRA Nisqually State Park | Interpretive Plan | October 2020 5 The Nisqually River is a defining feature of Nisqually State Park. According to the late Nisqually historian Cecelia Svinth Carpenter, “The Nisqually River became the thread woven through the heart and fabric of the Nisqually Indian people.” —Carpenter, The Nisqually People, My People.
    [Show full text]
  • Dupont Heritage Plan
    1 DuPont Heritage Plan Presented to the City of DuPont By the DuPont Historical Society 2014 “In a nutshell, planning is the process of figuring out where you want to go, evaluating where you are now, and identifying how you can reach your destination……. Susan L. Henry Renaud, Preservation Planning, National Park Service 2 Introduction Historic places are important to every community. In an age of change, they help provide a sense of needed continuity. Indeed, they greatly contribute to a sense of place which can unite residents. Also historic places, when properly presented, can attract tourists to a town. This would naturally benefit the local economy. The City of DuPont is blessed with many significant historic places. They include both buildings and sites. Together these places tell the amazing story of the DuPont area. This story began with the Nisqually Indian occupation of the land. It continued with the Euro-American explorers of the late 18th and early 19th Centuries. Then the British owned Hudson’s Bay Company in the 19th Century established a sequential series of trading posts called Fort Nisqually that changed life forever in the Southern Puget Sound region. Encounters with Native Americans, Missionaries, and American Settlers brought cooperation and conflict. The Medicine Creek Treaty and Puget Sound Indian War shifted the power to the Americans and their homesteads. Change came again in the early 20th Century when the DuPont Company bought land and set up an explosives factory. The Company employees and their families were first housed in temporary tar paper shacks, but soon the historic village of DuPont took shape.
    [Show full text]
  • Carbon River Access Management Plan
    United States Department of the Interior FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE Washington Fish and Wildlife Office 510 Desmond Dr. SE, Suite 102 Lacey, Washington 98 503 APR 2 6 20ll In Reply Refer To: 13410-2010-F-0488 Memorandum To: Superintendent, Mount Rainier National Park Ashford, Washington From: Manager, Washington Fish and Wildlife Lacey, Washington Subject: Biological Opinion for the Carbon River Access Management Plan This document transmits the Fish and Wildlife Service's Biological Opinion based on our review of the proposed Carbon River Access Managernent Plan to be implemented in Mount Rainier National Park, Pierce County, Washington. We evaluated effects on the threatened northern spotted owl (Sfrlx occidentalis caurina),marbled murrelet (Brachyramphus marmoratus),bttll trout (Salvelinus confluentus), and designated bull trout critical habitat in accordance with section 7 of the Endangered Species Act (Act) of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.). Your July 29,2010 request for formal consultation was received on August 2,2010. This Biological Opinion is based on information provided in the June 28, 2010 Biological Assessment and on other information and correspondence shared between our respective staff. Copies of all correspondence regarding this consultation are on file at the Washington Fish and Wildlife Office in Lacey, Washington. If you have any questions about this mernorandum, the attached Biological Opinion, or your responsibilities under the Act, please contact Vince Harke at (360) 753-9529 or Carolyn Scafidi at (360) 753-4068. Endangered Species Act - Section 7 Consultation BIOLOGICAL OPINION U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Reference: 13410-2010-F-0488 Carbon River Access Management Plan Mount Rainier National Park Pierce County, Washington Agency: National Park Service Consultation Conducted By: U.S.
    [Show full text]