NISQUALLY RIVER MANAGEMENT PLAN
Approved by the Washington State Legislature
June 1987
The Nisqually River Management Plan was prepared by the:
Nisqually River Task Force
Karen Fraser, Chair, Oversight Committee
Robert Anderson, Chair, Technical Advisory Committee
For additional information, please contact:
Nisqually River Council
P O Box 47775
Olympia, WA 98504-7775
Recommended Bibliographic Citation
Nisqually River Task Force. 1987. Nisqually River Management Plan.
Shorelands and Coastal Zone Management Program
Washington Department of Ecology
Olympia, WA 98504
Publication # 93-69
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION
CHRONOLOGY OF PLAN DEVELOPMENT
PLAN ELEMENTS
Element 1 - Mineral Resources
Element 2 - Water Resources
Element 3 - Flood Damage Reduction
Element 4 - Fish Management
Element 5 - Wildlife Management
Element 6 - Special Species, Habitat and Features
Element 7 - Hydropower
Element 8 - Economic Enhancement
Element 9 - Local Land Use Planning
Element 10 - Agriculture and Forestry Land Base
Element 11 - Recreation
Element 12 - Education and Interpretation
Element 13 - Land Acquisition and Protection
Element 14 - Management Entity
Element 15 - Management Area Boundary
The Nisqually River Management Plan and Final EIS (environmental impact
statement)
represent over a year and a half of work by the Nisqually River Task Force and
project staff. The preparation of a Nisqually River Management Plan by the
Department of Ecology was mandated by the 1985 state legislature by SHB 323.
The preparation of a river management plan of this scope was a pioneering effort
in the state of Washington. The plan provides recommended policies and
implementation guidelines.
The plan is based on the work of the Nisqually River Task Force which was
composed of representatives of the timber, agriculture, and hydropower industries,
conservationist and environmentalist organizations, Nisqually River valley
landowners, resource management agencies, and the Nisqually Indian Tribe. In
developing the policy recommendations contained in the Plan, the Task Force
Oversight Committee considered the recommendations of six
technical advisory subcommittees, two citizen advisory committees, plus public
testimony provided to the Task Force at its meetings.
The legislature's instructions to Ecology requested the preparation of a
management plan for the Nisqually River system which provided for a balanced
stewardship of the area's economic resources, natural resources, and cultural
resources. This was a complex undertaking, and the Nisqually River Task Force
formed by Ecology performed admirably.
The key issues the Task Force had to address included public access to the river,
flood control and emergency warning systems, fish and wildlife protection and
enhancement, local public desires to maintain existing rural landscape and
economy, and the balancing of local private property owner rights with statewide
public interest rights in this river of statewide significance.
In March 1987, Ecology transmitted to the 1987 legislature a copy of the Task
Force's final recommendations for a Nisqually River Management Plan. The Plan
was subsequently approved by the legislature in June, 1987.
Introduction
The Nisqually River is unique in Washington State, if not the nation, in having as
its headwaters a glacier in a national park, and its estuary within a national
wildlife refuge. The intervening 78 miles of river flow through forested
mountainous terrain, rolling farmlands, past small towns, through the Fort Lewis
Military Reservation and the Nisqually Indian Reservation, and enters Puget
Sound near the site of the first European settlement in the region.
The 1985 Washington State Legislature approved Substitute House Bill 323 (SHB
323) directing the Department of Ecology to prepare "... an overall management
plan for the Nisqually River ...." The purpose of the planning process being to
emphasize "... the natural and economic values of this river of statewide
significance ..." for the "... enhancement of economic and recreational benefits ...."
It is important to note that SHB 323 specifically required that "the plan not be
implemented before adoption by the legislature."
Taken in its entirety, SHB 323 mandated the Department of Ecology to develop a
Nisqually River Management Plan for stewardship of the river. When
implemented, the plan will provide opportunities for the balanced enhancement of
economic, cultural, and natural resources. The plan is guidance for stewardship of
the river, not a rigid blueprint.
Nisqually River Task Force
In response to legislative direction to "establish advisory committees to provide
technical assistance and policy guidance" in the preparation of an "overall
management plan" for the Nisqually River, the Department of Ecology formed the
Nisqually River Task Force (NRTF) in August 1985. As mandated by SHB 323,
membership of the Task Force included individuals "representing the interests of
federal, state, and local government entities, agriculture, forestry, the Nisqually
Indian Tribe, other property owners, and environmentalists. "
The Phase 1 (1985) Task Force was made up of two advisory committees, a
policy advisory committee (the Steering Committee) and a Technical Advisory
Committee composed of six technical subcommittees. The Steering Committee
was retained for a two-phase planning process in order to develop complete and
comprehensive management policy recommendations in response to legislative
direction and public testimony.
Nisqually River Management Plan
The Nisqually River Management Plan is more a protection plan than an action
plan. This is of necessity: one of the key findings during Phase 1 of the planning
process is just how little is known about the resources of the basin. There is
simply not enough information on which to base an overall action plan at this
time.
Exceptions to this are well-studied areas such as fisheries, or issues with a clear
problem which can be solved such as lack of recreational access to the river.
Accordingly, the plan places heavy
emphasis on investigation research preliminary to development and
recommendation of action programs. Following are the key goals paraphrased
from the Plan; the full plan statements and
accompanying implementation guidelines may be found in the succeeding pages.
1) Mineral resources extraction within the management area should be
carried out consistent with other plan objectives.
2) Water quality and stream flow should be maintained throughout the
Nisqually basin; the existing state Dairy Waste Management Program should
receive adequate funding to
insure its effectiveness.
3) Future flood damage should be minimized by limiting development
within the 100-year flood plain, and by enhancing the existing emergency warning
system.
4) Anadromous fish habitat should be rehabilitated and enhanced;
resident fish, about which little is known, should be studied, and a management
plan developed.
5) Wildlife populations and habitat. about which little is known, should
be studied, and a management plan developed.
6) Wetlands and estuarine areas should receive special protective
measures. Other special habitats and features should be evaluated for protective
needs.
7) Existing hydropower facilities should continue to operate as at
present; no new hydropower facilities should be developed within the
management area.
8) Economic development of the management area should emphasize
natural resource based economic sectors, and the supporting land uses protected
by local government
planning.
9) Local land use planning for the management area should protect and
promote natural resources and agriculture and forestry; new industrial land uses
should be located outside the management area near existing population centers;
the three counties in the basin should
coordinate land use planning and growth management.
10) The combined forestry and agriculture land base of the management
area should be maintained, with market forces determining the mix between the
two.
11) Public recreational access to the river should be acquired at or near
the existing de facto access sites; loop trails should be developed in selected
portions of the management
area.
12) Interpretive programs addressing economic, cultural, and natural
resources of the basin should be developed for school systems and the general
public; interpretive facilities should be developed at selected sites along and near
the river.
13) Acquisition of lands or development rights for implementation of the
Nisqually River Management Plan should not be through the power of eminent
domain.
14) Implementation of the Nisqually River Management Plan should be
through a Nisqually River Council which takes the form of a Council of
Governments and includes representation of nongovernmental river interests; the
council should be a coordination organization with no independent authority of its
own. A separate Nisqually River Citizens
Advisory Committee should be formed, with three of the Committee members
sitting on the Council. A nonprofit land trust should be formed as an auxiliary
organization to facilitate land acquisition.
15) The Nisqually River management area should consist of a Core
Management Zone and a Stewardship Management Zone. The Core Management
Zone is essentially the Shoreline Management Zone (SMZ) of the Nisqually River
and the lower 3 miles of the Mashel River. The SMZ, under the state Shoreline
Management Act (SMA) consists of a corridor 200 feet wide along shorelines of
the state (200 feet each side of rivers). Additionally, lands acquired by purchase or
donation, and steep slopes adjacent to the SMZ are included in the Core
Management Zone. The Stewardship Management Zone is a viewshed corridor
along the Nisqually River a minimum of 1/4 mile and a maximum of 3/4 mile
each side of the river, plus the SMZ of all tributaries with a mean annual flow of
20 cfs or greater.
In addition, the NRMP encourages studies to be carried out throughout the
Nisqually River basin.
Chronology of Plan Development
The following is a chronology of the principal actions leading up to adoption of a
plan by the Nisqually River Task Force and approval of the plan by the state
Legislature.
1985
April
49th Legislature passes SHB 323 directing the Department of Ecology to prepare
"... an overall management plan for the Nisqually River ..."
September
Ecology convenes the Nisqually River Task Force - policy and technical advisory
committees composed of citizens and government agency staff.
October
Technical advisory committees deliver their final recommendations to the policy
advisory committee for management plan elements.
December
Task Force completes its preliminary recommendations to Ecology for a
Nisqually River Management Plan.
1986
January
Ecology forwards the Nisqually River Management Plan: Phase 1 Interim Report
to the state legislature.
March
Task Force reconvenes to reconsider and finalize recommendations for the
Nisqually River Management Plan.
July
Task Force completes its recommendations to Ecology for a Draft Nisqually River
management Plan.
October
Ecology issues a Draft Plan/Draft Environmental Impact Statement for public
review.
November
Ecology conducts public hearings on the Draft Plan and Draft EIS.
December
Task Force reconvenes to consider public comment on the Draft Plan and Draft
EIS.
1987
January
Task Force completes its revisions to the plan and forwards its final
recommendations to
Ecology. Ecology submits the Task Force report to the state legislature as the
Nisqually River Management Plan.
April
Ecology issues a Final EIS on the Nisqually River Management Plan.
June
Legislature approves the plan and authorizes Ecology to " implement the
Nisqually River Task Force recommendations ..."
November
Ecology convenes the Nisqually River Council.
PLAN ELEMENTS
Plan Element 1
MINERAL RESOURCES
1.0 Discourage mineral extraction within the Core and Stewardship
Management Zones unless it is carried out consistent with plan objectives.
Investigate the effect of in stream commercial extractive activities such as sand
and gravel removal or the like on fish, wildlife, and water quality.
Plan Element 2
WATER RESOURCES
2.0 Maintain and protect water quality and stream flow quantity for
all streams and lakes, as applicable, throughout the basin.
2.1 Conduct a needs evaluation of the Nisqually River basin
streams to determine where monitoring for minimum flows and water quality is
necessary or desirable.
2.1.1 A water quality inventory of the Core and Stewardship
Management Zones should be undertaken to determine the nature and extent of
nonpoint sources of pollution,
including the need for increased long-term monitoring.
2.1.2 Establish the additional water quantity and quality monitoring
stations identified in Plan Elements 2.1 and 2.2.
2.2 Agricultural practices should be carried out so as to minimize
the threat to fish, wildlife, and human health, insofar as is technically and
financially feasible.
2.2.1 Adequate funding should be provided by which to carry out
the state Dairy Waste Management Program implemented by the state Department
of Ecology under Section 208, Federal Clean Water Act, in conjunction with local
Soil Conservation Districts and local government as necessary.
2.2.2 Agricultural practices should be carried out through the
application of recognized best management practices (BMPs), first through
education and volunteer programs, second through incentives, and as a last resort,
through regulation.
2.3 Encourage the State Department of Ecology to conduct a study
of the relationship between groundwater, stream flow, and water quality in the
Nisqually River basin, including management alternatives for maintenance of
minimum flows and water quality standards. If phased, the study should first
emphasize the Yelm-McKenna-Roy area where population growth is most
anticipated.
Plan Element 3
FLOOD DAMAGE REDUCTION
3.0 Flood damage along the Nisqually River should be minimized
by regulating development in the 100-year floodplain, by maintaining vegetated
streambanks, by maintaining natural wetlands, and by continued use of Alder and
La Grande dams for flood control.
3.1 Further construction of human habitation within the 100-year
floodplain should be limited.
3.1.1 Encourage local governments to designate the entire 100 year
floodplain as the "floodway," with existing development grandfathered.
3.1.2 Encourage local governments to restrict further development
in the 100-year floodplain.
3.1.3 Encourage local governments to amend Shoreline Master
Programs where necessary to keep structural shoreline protection landward of
wetlands associated with streams,
except as necessary to protect existing development.
3.1.4 Encourage local governments to draft regulatory standards for
floodplain construction which address depth, velocity, and debris-carrying
capability of flood waters.
3.2 Flood damage in the Nisqually basin should be reduced by
encouraging local governments to require that vegetation be maintained on all
streambanks, and that vegetation removed in the course of a permitted activity be
replaced in a timely manner; refer also to Plan Element 3.4.
3.3 Flood damage from La Grande to the Delta should be reduced
through a cooperative and coordinated management and warning system.
Encourage cooperation among Tacoma City Light, Nisqually Indian Tribe, state
Department of Emergency Management, the
Nisqually River Coordinating Committee, local governments, and downstream
landowners to determine feasible flood control elements in dam operation and
improved notification procedures when larger than normal water releases are
necessary.
3.3.2 A study should be made of the Nisqually River, including that
portion affected by tidal activity, to determine those wildlife habitats most
sensitive to flow or flooding
to aid in development of a flow control plan that would best protect the wildlife
habitat utilizing available flow control facilities.
3.3.3 Establish a coordinated flood emergency warning and
response system for the Nisqually valley.
3.3.4 Review existing warning and response systems of Thurston,
Pierce, and Lewis counties, and Tacoma City Light, and, if necessary improve
existing warning and response systems.
3.3.5 Encourage the cooperative adoption of the coordinated
warning and response system by Thurston, Pierce, and Lewis counties and
Tacoma City Light.
3.4 Bank stabilization projects should be discouraged; however,
when bank stabilization is allowed, encourage bank stabilization projects which
use a combination of natural vegetation and structural systems' that is, the
biotechnical bank protection and slope stability procedures.
Plan Element 4
FISH MANAGEMENT
4.0 Landowners, government resource and development agencies,
Indian tribes, and river users should work together to maintain or enhance resident
and anadromous fish
populations and habitat within the Nisqually basin.
4.1 Maintain and protect natural channel character ~,tics, canopy
coverage (riparian habitat), and waterway fish access for all streams and lakes, as
applicable, throughout
the basin.
4.1.1 Assess the status of summer and winter fish spawning and
rearing habitat.
Determine what habitat has been lost and what portion of habitat can be
rehabilitated. Provide funding for removal of stream blockages, gravel cleaning,
and reclaiming of riverine areas on the
main stem river (i.e., side channels, or wall base streams for spawning and winter
habitat), if needed.
4.2 For purposes of establishing specific management principals for
the protection of anadromous fish habitat, the management zone of the main stem
of the Nisqually River and the Mashel River drainage should be the Shoreline
Management Zone (SMZ) as defined by the Shoreline Management Act (SMA).
4.2.1 Allow only selective commercial timber cutting, so that no
more than thirty percent (30%) of the merchantable trees may be harvested in a
ten (10) year period of time. Provided, that other timber harvesting methods may
be permitted in those limited instances where topography, soil conditions, or
silvicultural practices necessary for regeneration render selective logging
ecologically detrimental: Provided further, that clearcutting of timber which is
solely incidental to the preparation of land for other uses may be permitted; a
representative mix of native species should be maintained.
4.3 For purposes of protecting resident fish species within
Nisqually River basin, a riparian management zone should be created.
4.3.1 Conduct an inventory of the resident fish use within the basin
in both the lakes and streams; this should include species composition, relative
abundance, and habitat quality.
4.3.2 Stream typing under the Forest Practices Act should be
completed throughout the basin.
4.3.3 Define "riparian zone" for the purposes of the Nisqually River
Management Plan, and develop management guidelines.
4.3.4 Monitor and report to Nisqually River Council the
effectiveness of guidelines in protecting and enhancing resident fish populations.
4.4 Encourage a variety of artificial fish propagation methods
which utilize natural fish stocks to make up for inaccessible or lost habitat (i.e.,
hatcheries, gravel boxes, rearing
ponds, and other small-scale rearing operations).
4.5 Develop and promote incentives for private landowners to
protect and enhance fish habitats where controlled public access is allowed.
Plan Element 5
WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT
5.0 Landowners, government resource and development agencies,
Indian tribes, and river users should work together to maintain or enhance wildlife
populations and habitat
within the Nisqually basin.
5. l Inventory existing wildlife protection programs (regulatory and
non-regulatory), evaluate effectiveness, and assess need for modifications,
deletions, or additions.
5.2 Evaluate present wildlife habitat conditions and their ability to
support viable wildlife populations.
5.2.1 Conduct an inventory of wildlife habitats in the Nisqually
basin; monitor key habitats and/or indicator species.
5.2.2 Where regulations or programs evaluated under Plan Element
S. l cannot maintain or enhance wildlife or habitat, lands supporting these
populations should be acquired.
5.2.3 Report findings to the Nisqually River Council.
5.3 For purposes of protecting wildlife in the Nisqually basin, Plan
Element 4.3 should give equal consideration to wildlife in its development and
implementation.
5.4 Develop and promote incentives for private landowners to
protect and enhance wildlife habitats where controlled public access is allowed.
Plan Element 6
SPECIAL SPECIES, HABITATS AND FEATURES
6.0 Wetland and estuarine habitats should be protected and where
necessary enhanced within the Nisqually basin.
6.1 Existing wetlands should be maintained for multiple purposes
including absorbing floodwaters, recharging groundwater, cleansing water of
pollutants, and providing wildlife habitat.
6.1.1 Adopt a single wetlands classification system for the basin.
6.1.2 Evaluate existing regulations and programs and assess needs
for modifications, deletions, or additions.
6.1.3 Encourage Pierce, Thurston, and Lewis counties to adopt
sensitive area designations for wetlands in their comprehensive plans.
6.2 Encourage cooperative agreements between local public works
departments and state and federal agencies so that the design of new wetlands
created to mitigate permitted
fills will incorporate multiple benefits.
6.3 Define special species and habitats for the purposes of the
Nisqually River Management Plan.
Plan Element 7
HYDROPOWER
7.0 The Nisqually River Coordinating Committee should be
recognized in the Nisqually River Management Plan and its work continued
towards negotiated settlement of fish/power conflicts; the Nisqually River
Management Plan, however, shall not be limited to
balancing only fish/ hydropower conflicts, but shall consider all resources.
7.1 The Nisqually River Management Plan should not change
existing hydropower facilities mode of operation which include negotiated
agreements primarily for fish management
and power generation and secondarily for recreation.
7.2 The Nisqually River Management Plan should seek to maintain
the viability of existing hydroelectric dams, consistent with current and future
regulations, Nisqually River
Coordinating Committee agreements. and the Nisqually River Management Plan.
7.3 No new hydropower facilities should be developed within the
Core and Stewardship Management Zones.
Plan Element 8
ECONOMIC ENHANCEMENT
8.0 Within the Core and Stewardship Management Zones,
economic enhancement of the natural resource-based economic sectors should be
preferred to other economic activities,
and the supporting land uses should be protected.
8.1 Establish and protect within the Core and Stewardship
Management Zones, land uses which will result in long term economic growth in
the forestry, agriculture, recreation, and fisheries economic sectors.
8.2 Within the Nisqually River basin, and outside the Core and
Stewardship Management Zones, encourage local government, when it makes
land use decisions regarding business, commerce, industry, residential, utilities,
and other land uses, to consider the Nisqually
River Management Plan such that it would be compatible with maintaining the
natural resources of the management area.
Plan Element 9
LOCAL LAND USE PLANNING
9.0 Local land use planning and regulation within the Core and
Stewardship Management Zones should promote enhancement of the natural and
recreational resources, as well as enhancement of existing forestry and agricultural
uses.
9.1 The shorelines of the Nisqually River and its major tributaries
should be protected from uses adverse to wildlife, recreation, and watershed
protection.
9.1.1 Encourage county governments to increase compliance
monitoring of shoreline developments in the Core and Stewardship Management
Zones.
9.1.2 Encourage Lewis County to adopt a Natural Environment
element in its master program and to apply it to some or all of the upper reaches
the Nisqually River within its jurisdiction.
9.1.3 Encourage Pierce, Thurston, and Lewis counties to adopt
ordinances regulating clearing and grading activities within the Core and
Stewardship Management Zones.
9.2 Encourage local governmental jurisdictions to develop and
implement local plans that accomplish the goals of the Nisqually River
Management Plan.
9.3 New land uses in the Core and Stewardship Management Zones
should not degrade and should enhance the river environment; this does not
preclude land or recreational
development properly undertaken.
9.4 Encourage new industry to locate in and near population centers
but outside the Core and Stewardship Management Zones.
9.5 The jurisdictions having local planning and zoning authority
within the Nisqually basin should be requested to develop a mechanism to
coordinate comprehensive planning efforts for the protection of natural resources.
9.5.1 Urban growth should occur adjacent to existing urban areas,
and away from areas of significant fish and wildlife habitat.
9.5.2 Based on these coordinated efforts, growth management
agreements should be negotiated between the county governments and
incorporated centers lying within the Nisqually basin.
Plan Element 10
AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY LAND BASE
10.0 Maintain the combined agricultural and forestry land base
within the Core and Stewardship Management Zones, and let market forces
determine the mix between the two.
10.1 Maintain current agricultural and forestry land uses through
voluntary participation in:
10.1.1 the purchase and/or acquisition of development rights.
10.2 Encourage local government to exempt agricultural and
forestry lands from the following special assessment districts because they
provide no direct benefit to those lands:
sanitary sewerage, storm water sewerage, domestic water supply, and road
construction and/or improvement, until the lands are converted to other uses
benefiting from these activities.
10.3 Encourage local government to protect and enhance the
traditional agricultural and forestry land uses within the Core and Stewardship
Management Zones by:
10.3.1 Declarations in county land use plans that the Nisqually
River corridor should be protected for its open space, and agricultural uses, to
facilitate landowners obtaining tax deductions for donations of land or interests in
land within the corridor.
Plan Element 11
RECREATION
11.0 Recreation site boundaries should be primarily limited to sites
of opportunity
which should be acquired in fee to provide a base of publicly owned or controlled
land for intensive recreation use. The priority of acquisition should be:
A. Acquisition of publicly owned lands;
B. Exchange of public lands for privately owned lands; and
C. Acquisition of privately owned lands and development rights
(lands should be
acquired only from willing sellers).
Easements and other less than fee acquisitions should clearly relieve the
underlying private landowner of liability for public recreation use of the property,
except where specific owner actions result in negligent conditions. Additional
state legislation should be sought to clarify
landowner liability.
Lands not required to provide for high density public facilities (boat launches,
campgrounds, etc.) should remain in their existing ownership, except that: Public
management entities should be encouraged to use less than fee acquisition
procedures to preserve forest and farm and other open space corridors and vistas
within the Core Management Zone. These procedures may include such
techniques as purchase of timber cutting rights, purchase of scenic easements, or
purchase development rights. Purchase of development and tree cutting rights
within the Core Management Zone would allow the continuation of existing uses
and provide for landowner control of access, while at the same time conserving
the immediate river environment, scenery, and fish and wildlife habitat.
11.1 The priority of exchange/purchase should be:
11.1.1 A major destination area park/put in site at the confluence of
the Nisqually and Mashel river together with trails up the Mashel River.
11.1.2 A river float put in/take out site at a safe location upstream
from the Centralia hydropower diversion dam, and not to conflict with existing
agricultural land uses.
11.1.3 A river float put in/city/county park in or near the town of
McKenna (retirement home site or immediately downstream).
11.1.4 A river float put in/take out immediately below the Centralia
powerhouse.
11.1.5 A river float lunch/rest stop/overnight campsite should be
acquired about
midway between the recommended put in at the Mashel/Nisqually confluence and
the recommended Centralia diversion dam take out. Sites to be evaluated should
include the existing de facto access points at the Piessner (Powell Creek) bridge
and the Ohop/Nisqually confluence.
11.1.6 Trail access easements at two sites of opportunity between
the Centralia Diversion Dam and the Mashel-Nisqually confluence.
11.1.7 Trail access easements at two sites of opportunity between
the Old US 99 bridge and the Centralia Powerhouse. Trails are to be oriented to
special scenic resources and
designed to provide about two mile loop walks. Special care should be taken to
locate and design
the trail access so as to prevent trail use by motorized vehicles.
11.1.8 Development and tree cutting rights within the Core
Management Zone.
11.2 Other exchange/purchase goals should be:
11.2.1 Several potential trail opportunities at the recommended
Mashel-Nisqually confluence area destination park site should be further
investigated:
a. A trail extending downstream 1 1/2 miles to the Ohop Creek
confluence.
b. A trail now extends upstream 3/4 mile from the big-tree grove
past the famous "bird cave cliff" to a rock shelf providing impressive vistas of the
cliff-lined slot. This trail could
possibly be extended to the Tacoma City Light's Alder Lake powerhouse.
c. A trail extending 5-6 miles up the Mashel valley to make viewing
of the cliff lined slot available. Trails should also be extended to the historic
Nisqually massacre site.
11.2.2 Trails and other primitive facilities should be developed into
Little Mashel Falls so that the falls and its gorge, which in large part lie within
city of Eatonville lands, can be
available to the public.
11.2.3 Minor put in facilities should be acquired and developed in
the upper river zone at the Skate Creek Road (Kernahan Road) with take out
facilities provided at the Elbe
bridge or alternatively on Alder Lake at Tacoma City Light's park facilities.
11.3 The following design standards should be adhered to:
11.3.1 Public facilities should be carefully designed to limit
recreational use to the carrying capacity of the river and its environs. Special care
should be given to color, form,
texture, and materials in order to conserve the river in as natural a condition as
possible.
11.3.2 All public access and trail easements should be managed
under a policy of "pack it in pack it out." This policy would need to be supported
by a vigorous education and
signing program. Only the major high density public parks should require garbage
collection facilities. Special or unique cultural, biological, historical, geological,
or ecological localities and endangered, threatened, and sensitive plants and
animals (see RCW 79.70; WAC 332-60 010 to 160; RCW 77.12.020; WAC
232-12 and WAC 232-14) should be mapped for the entire river length. Where
necessary for resource conservation/preservation, public development should be
diverted to other locations.
11.3.4 All public access and trail easements should be developed
with suitable sanitary facilities.
11.3.5 Public facilities should be coordinated to provide
opportunities for all users regardless of age, income, race, sex, or physical
handicap.
11.3.6 No new public facilities constructed as a part of this plan
should be located in developed residential areas. This recommendation should not
preclude local government or community park facilities built to serve local or
subdivision property owners.
11.3.7 Loop trails in the upper river zone should be developed on
lands already in public ownership. Private land should be acquired only as a last
resort and only then to provide necessary linkages to loop trails on public lands.
11.4 The following actions should be implemented by the
appropriate agency(s):
11.4.1 Recreation land management agencies should provide signs
and brochures identifying river resource opportunities, hazards, and the user's
responsibilities at public sites.
This information should be coordinated in order to be comprehensive and
compatible from site to site.
11.4.2 The City of Tacoma should continue implementing its
development plan for recreation facilities at Alder Lake. Additional trails and
scenic drives to make use of scenic vista
opportunities should be added to the city's plans for development on their lands.
11.4.3 Should demand increase beyond the capacity of existing
facilities, the Department of Natural Resources should examine the advisability
and feasibility of expanding and improving the Elbe Hills recreation facilities so
that future Off Road Vehicle (ORV) needs can continue to be met away from the
Nisqually River environment.
11.4.4 The Department of Wildlife's 6th Avenue fishing access site
needs additional facilities to provide a safe put in and take out. Additional parking
and sanitary
facilities are also needed.
11.4.5 The US Forest Service, US Fish and Wildlife Service, US
Army (Fort Lewis), National Park Service, and the Nisqually Indian Tribe should
be encouraged to plan and
develop facilities on their lands which are compatible with recommendations for
state and local government agencies found in this report.
11.4.6 Road and other rights-of-way should be evaluated for
modification and/or expansion so that the rights-of-way can also provide a base
for recreation and fishing access and
other appropriate uses.
11.4.7 The existing viewpoint opportunity overlooking the
Nisqually Delta located on Old Highway 99 should be given formal viewpoint
status. This site should be improved by
minor tree cutting, improved turn out construction, and signed to inform visitors
of the delta's refuge status.
11.5 Potential private business opportunities to meet public
recreation needs should have priority over governmental actions. Governmental
agencies should seek out private capital first and. only where necessary, develop
facilities at public expense.
11.6 Recreation water releases which are coordinated with fish and
wildlife needs should be sought from Nisqually River hydropower operators.
These releases are necessary to
make the upper and lower bypass zones boatable during a substantial part of the
recreation season. Releases should be scheduled to minimize the impact on
electricity generation.
11.6.1 Coordinate implementation of this policy with Plan Element
7.0.
11.7 Recreation and other plan recommendations should be
reviewed and updated at least every five years. Recommended action priorities
should be evaluated in light of current
conditions and new actions proposed where needed. System carrying capacity
should be monitored by appropriate resource agencies and facility developments
and future plans adjusted where necessary to assure conservation and preservation
of the river's natural systems.
Plan Element 12
EDUCATION AND INTERPRETATION
12.0 All interpretive and education programs involving the
Nisqually River basin
should:
emphasize the Nisqually River as a whole system with particular focus on the
natural resources, archaeological and cultural history and economic values; utilize
existing programs, facilities, resources, and materials to the extent that they
support the whole river system concept;
be coordinated by an interagency and private consortium, or board, of interested
and involved persons; and be supported by adequate funds enabling the
consortium to implement the program.
12.1 Develop an inventory of existing resources and agencies and
private individuals concerned with the basin.
12.1.1 Determine Elements of the Natural Resources: This may not
require field study but should be readily adaptable from existing records and
references. If, in the future,
experience shows the presence or absence of species, revisions will reflect that
fact.
12.1.2 Determine Elements of Economic Activities: All activities
that reflect financial exchange within the established corridor should be listed by
types of activity, owners,
addresses, locations, and scales of activity. It will be important to understand what
part such activities play in the overall economic benefits from the area.
12.1.3 Determine Past and Present Cultural Activities Within the
Basin: Most of this is also a matter of record but requires compilation and
organization. Here, the Nisqually
Tribe will be important in researching the indigenous culture from antiquity to the
present.
12.1.4 Determine Educational Facilities and Programs Currently
Contributing to Understanding the River Basin: There seem to be several facilities
that may be available for
educational presentation. It may not be necessary to provide specific and costly
structures to support the program although some interpretive construction will
probably be required. Less is known about programs that may exist and prove
useful.
12.1.5 Determine Agencies and Private Individuals Concerned with
the Basin:
Many federal, state, county, and other local agencies have jurisdiction for
planning, regulating, and enforcing various activities in the basin. Secondly, some
of these same agencies would have responsibility for monitoring or operating
some phase of the management plan. There will also be individuals who will wish
to be a part of the educational process. These should be compiled as a part of the
inventory.
12.2 Develop an education plan for school use of the basin.
12.2.1 Organize Educational Materials which Focus on the Natural,
Cultural, Environmental, and Economic Elements of the Basin. Most materials are
available under one program or another. Their methodology and arrangement can
be borrowed and adapted to the specific resources of the Nisqually River basin.
12.2.2 Establish Economic Support Enabling Schools to Travel to
These Key Sites for Study. One of the pressing problems for schools is an
adequate budget for travel to places
"where they can see it on the ground." A logistical system should be determined
by which every student within a specific distance should be able to participate
once before graduating from high school.
12.2.3 Assist Teachers in Using the Materials and Key Study Sites.
Teachers could
be instructed how to handle groups on tour and where to go to accomplish proper
instruction. Objectives 2 and 3 should not be seen as restricting any school group
in the state from scheduled participation if they can solve their own travel and
lodging problems.
12.3 Develop an interpretive plan for the general public which
promotes an understanding of the river basin.
12.3.1 Provide Readily Available Materials Which Interpret the
Natural Resources, Cultural Aspects, and Economic Factors Within the Basin.
This aspect of education for the visitor presents ideas for providing literature
programs and on-site displays.
12.3.2 Promote the Use of Existing Facilities and Locations as Key
Interpretive Sites. If a visitor does not have the time, ability, or inclination to
follow a trail to a specific
location, he may be able to short cut the process by following the trail by
interpretation and transportation. That is, by driving to various locations on
existing roads and seeing examples
along the route, a visitor would receive a limited but accurate understanding of the
river basin.
12.4 The following sites are recommended for initial evaluation for
inclusion in a Nisqually Education and Interpretive system. Other sites may also
be evaluated.
12.4.1 McKenna: an interpretive kiosk which could also furnish
information on the nearby Centralia Power Plant.
12.4.2 Piessner (Powell Creek) Bridge Overlook: interpretive
panels, roofed only.
12.4.3 Harts Lake Loop Road - Tanwax Creek vicinity: good
viewing and interpretive site opportunity which shows dramatic differences in
vegetation. An ideal place to explain the movement of ice in the last glaciation.
12.4.4 Nisqually - Mashel Confluence: (1) a viewing point located
atop "bird's nest cliff" to be accessed from SR 7 opposite the Pack Forest
information building; (2) interpretive
trails leading from the confluence; (3) a group facility building with a capacity of
40 to 50 persons; (4) interpretive facilities similar to those of Federation Forest
addressing traditional occupancy of the confluence area by Nisqually bands,
including the massacre site. 12.4.5 SR 7
Overlooking Nisqually Gorge and La Grande Dam: placement of interpretive
panels. 12.4.6 SR 7
Overlooking Alder Dam: placement of interpretive panels. 12.4.7 Elbe Sewage
Treatment Plant Grounds: placement of an interpretive kiosk about Alder
Reservoir.
Plan Element 13
LAND ACQUISITION AND PROTECTION
13.0 It should be the policy of the state to encourage preservation of
the lands
within the Core and Stewardship Management Zones through innovative
approaches involving the public and private sectors, and the state should facilitate
voluntary contributions of land or
interests in land through tax incentive programs.
13.1 State and local agencies should employ the SEPA process to
identify the need
for mitigation of project impacts within the basin through land acquisition or
exchange.
13.1.1 Develop a program of education and guidance in the
application of in-kind habitat mitigation through land acquisition or land
exchange under SEPA.
13.1.2 Where preservation of natural and recreational resources is
deemed to be in the public interest, encourage fee purchase of those lands where
preservation is not compatible with the existing landowner's management
objectives.
13.2 Designate the entire length of the Nisqually River as a state
scenic river.
13.3 Implementation of the Nisqually River Management Plan shall
not use the power of eminent domain.
Plan Element 14
MANAGEMENT ENTITY
14.0 The Nisqually River Management Plan should be implemented
through a "Nisqually River Council" which includes representation of certain
non-governmental river interests; the Nisqually River Council should be a
coordination organization with no independent authority; a separate "Nisqually
River Citizens Advisory Committee" should also be crated to assure citizen
representation during implementation of the Nisqually River Management Plan;
as implementation of the Nisqually River Management Plan progresses, certain
plan elements may be addressed through acts of the participating agencies, the
advisory committee, or other entities such as an optional 501(c)(3) nonprofit
organization.
14.1 The Nisqually River Council should be organized as follows:
14.1.1 The Executive Committee of the Nisqually River Council
should be composed of one member selected by each of the following
organizations. Each member organization may designate an alternate. Lewis
County Board of Commissioners Pierce County
Council Thurston County Board of Commissioners Washington State Department
of Wildlife Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission Washington
State Department of Natural Resources Nisqually River Citizens Advisory
Committee Nisqually Tribal Council
14.1.2 The Nisqually River Council should be composed of the
members of the Executive Committee named above, plus one member selected by
the following organizations.
Each member organization may designate an alternate. Washington State
Department of Agriculture Washington State Department of Ecology Washington
State Department of Fisheries Washington State Secretary of State US
Department of Defense, Fort Lewis US Fish and Wildlife Service, Nisqually
Wildlife Refuge US Forest Service, Gifford Pinchot National Forest National Park
Service, Mount Rainier National Park City of Tacoma, Department of Public
Utilities, Light Division University of Washington, Pack
Experimental Forest Nisqually River Citizens Advisory Committee
(two additional members; one resident, one nonresident)
14.1.3 Additionally, there should be one representative on the
Nisqually River Council of all the incorporated cities and towns lying within the
basin to be selected by those
incorporated cities and towns.
14.2 The Nisqually River Citizens Advisory Committee should be
organized as follows:
14.2.1 The purpose of the Nisqually River Citizens Advisory
Committee should be to provide advice and information to the Nisqually River
Council on topics requested by the
Council.
14.2.2 Not less than two-thirds of the members of the Nisqually
River Citizens Advisory Committee should be residents and/or landowners from
the Nisqually River Management Area as it is most broadly defined.
14.2.3 Members of the Nisqually River Citizens Advisory
Committee should be self-nominated, and designated by the Nisqually River
Council.
14.2.4 The number of members of the Nisqually River Citizens
Advisory Committee should not exceed the number of members of the Nisqually
River Council.
14.2.5 The Nisqually River Citizens Advisory Committee should
elect its own officers and designate three Committee members to serve on the
Nisqually River Council, as follows:
a. One member designated to serve on the Nisqually River Council
shall also be designated by the Nisqually River Citizens Advisory Committee as
its representative to the Executive Committee of the Council.
b. At least one of the three Citizens Advisory Committee members
designated to serve on the Nisqually River Council should be a resident and/or
landowner of the Nisqually River Management Area.
c. At least one of the three Citizens Advisory Committee members
designated to serve on the Nisqually River Council should be a nonresident and
non-landowner of the Nisqually River Management Area.
14.3 The purpose and tasks of the Nisqually River Council should
be as follows:
14.3.1 To serve as a coordination and advocacy body for, and to
analyze policy issues relating to, implementation of the Nisqually River
Management Plan.
14.3.2 To act as a clearinghouse and coordinating unit for Nisqually
River interests.
14.3.3 To have limited powers with no independent regulatory or
land acquisition authority; action should be taken through the member
organizations (14.1) in accordance with the legislated authority.
14.3.4 To elect its own of ficers, and establish subcommittees as
necessary.
14.3.5 To provide to the legislature, in its fourth annual report,
recommendations
regarding the continuance or dissolution of the Council, and suggestions for
funding if the Council recommendation is for the Council to continue in existence.
14.3.6 To hold public meetings at least annually.
14.3.7 To consider a variety of separate, optional, implementation
organizations including an organization qualifying as a US Internal Revenue
Service Section 501(c)(3)
nonprofit organization; see Plan Element 14.6.
14.4 The purpose and tasks of the Executive Committee of the
Nisqually River Council should be as follows:
14.4.1 To provide guidance and direction to staff between the
regularly scheduled
meetings of the Nisqually River Council, identifying, prioritizing and scheduling
projects to be done by staff, subcommittees, and special task forces.
14.4.2 To establish the agenda of the Nisqually River Council.
14.4.3 To compose the first draft of annual reports to the
legislature.
14.5 The Nisqually River Council should be supported by staff as
follows:
14.5.1 Staff should be selected by the Council Chair with the advice
and consent
of the Council.
14.5.2 The Department of Ecology should provide all necessary
support for the Council's staff, including but not limited to of ice space, services
such as telephone, and fiscal
support such as payroll and purchasing; if possible the office should be in the
Nisqually area.
14.5.3 The Department of Ecology should prepare an annual report
to the Legislature on Nisqually River Management Plan implementation and the
work of the Nisqually River Council.
14.5.4 Staff's responsibilities will be as determined by the Council.
14.6 The function and organization of the optional implementation
nonprofit organization should be as follows:
14.6.1 To accept gifts, grants, bequests, etc., (of money or land).
14.6.2 To offer grants for exceptional performance within the
management area.
14.6.3 To enter into willing seller/willing buyer real property
acquisition.
14.6.4 To implement certain elements of the Nisqually River
Management Plan, as identified by the Nisqually River Council, such as education
and interpretation; recreation;
agricultural enhancement; and land acquisition and preservation.
14.6.5 To be organized as either a foundation with memberships
and dues, or as a nature conservancy corporation or association under the
provisions of RCW 84.34.250.
Plan Element 15
MANAGEMENT AREA BOUNDARY
15.0 The Nisqually River Management area should be composed of
a Core Management Zone and a Stewardship Management Zone.
15.1 The Core Management Zone boundary shall be established as:
15.1.1 Coincident with the line established by the Shoreline
Management Act (RCW 90.58.030 (2)(f), except where that line passes through a
slope with a gradient of 100 percent or greater, in which case the boundary shall
be at the top of the slope. Lands within this zone should not be developed except
for water dependent uses. Development rights for other than water dependent uses
should be acquired by transfer or purchase.
15.1.2 Once the property rights are acquired, all lands lying within
the 100 year flood plain, areas of critical habitat, and areas needed for public use
should be identified, mapped, and included within the Core Management Zone.
15.1.2.1 All lands lying within the 100 year floodplain should be
managed with allowable state open space or agriculture protection legislation
(RCW 84.34).
15.1.3 Once the property rights are acquired, all lands identified for
acquisition under the Nisqually River Management Plan should be included
within the Core Management Zone.
15.1.4 All lands lying along the Mashel River from State Highway
7 downstream to the confluence with the Nisqually River, as defined in 15.1.1,
should be included within the Core Management Zone.
15.1.5 All lands lying along Red Salmon (Mounts) Creek from the
Burlington Northern railway bridge downstream to Puget Sound, as defined in
15.1.1, should be included within the Core Management Zone.
15.1.6 All estuarine lands between Nisqually Head and the
intersection of the north and east boundaries of the Nisqually National Wildlife
Refuge should be included within the Core Management Zone.
15.1.7 All lands of the McAllister Creek drainage basin from the
Interstate Highway 5 bridge downstream to Puget Sound should be included
within the Core Management Zone.
15.2 The Stewardship Zone boundary shall be established as:
15.2.1 Beginning at the Core Management Zone boundary and
extending to the limits of the visual corridor, but not less than 1/4 mile and no
further than 3/4 mile as measured horizontally from the river's edge. The visual
corridor means that area which can be seen in a normal summer month by a
person of normal vision walking either bank of a river or stream included in the
management zone. The rights of private or public property owners within this
zone shall not be limited without fair monetary compensation.
15.2.2 Including the Shoreline Management Zone (RCW 90.58.030
(2) (f)) of all tributaries in the Nisgually River drainage basin that have a mean
annual flow of at least 20 cubic
feet per second.
15.2.3 Including the Shoreline Management Zone (200 feet each
side of streambanks) of McAllister Creek from the Interstate Highway 5 bridge
upstream to its source.
15.3 Within the Nisqually River basin, the study of fish, water
quality, wildlife, special habitats and plant and animal communities should be
carried out in accordance with
adopted Nisqually River Management Plan policies, and recommendations made
to the appropriate existing resource management agencies.
15.4 The Nisqually River Council should have the responsibility to
analyze issues and to review and comment on proposals outside the Management
Area which might have a significant impact upon the Management Area.