Pete Haase |
Guest blog by Pete Haase
It has been a pretty rough spring and summer for most of us volunteer folks who spend some of our time working to help protect and restore the Salish Sea - one bad news report after another.
Whales failing. Salmon runs dwindling. Temperatures rising faster than previous forecasts. Ice melting and seas rising. Violent weather and fires. Forest fire smoke. Acid oceans. Red tides. Plastic-plastic-plastic.
Despite the periodic feel-good stories about this estuary expanded or that culvert fixed or more of those native oysters found, the overall picture seems worse and worse.
And the politics – aagghhhh. Nationally it is a horror story and locally a circus. Where I live, the update to the Shoreline Management Plan is in its 8th year of work and the “Clean Up the Samish” plan is in its 9th.
It takes a 45-person task force many months to study and deliberate about whales not having enough food. And it seems like almost every one of the 45 is being paid by their organization to be sure that whatever is proposed will not cause them pain and/or will promote their agenda. What is so hard about “Get them Food” … or quit worrying.
I studied the upcoming Puget Sound Partnership Action Agenda and found hundreds of proposed “Near Term” Action Items that would cost hundreds of millions of dollars, with plenty of other actions already ongoing and eating money. Not a single one was for more outreach to the public about the BIG problems and needed help and actions.
I processed the text of the Action Agenda with an “Ease of Reading” tool and it requires in excess of 4 years of college education – probably specializing in Marine issues.
Did I mention that one boot is leaking?
Oh dear, oh dear. Put my head under the pillow ….
But we can’t quit.
Some of us are needing to make up for bad deeds of our distant past and others are needing to better care for the future of their children and grandchildren.
We all understand “Think Global – Act Local.” Many feel helpless about the big ocean garbage patch but are inspired to regularly patrol a local beach and pick up trash. Tremendous amounts of all sorts of local environmental data are being accumulated through numerous “citizen science” activities, like trapping for invasive green crabs or counting herons foraging, with the hope that it will lead to enlightened change.
Our small actions continue.
I’m wondering how others feel and what they are doing to help turn the tide ….
Pete Haase is a Skagit County volunteer and citizen scientist who coordinates the Skagit Citizen Forage Fish Survey Team and serves on the Skagit County Marine Resources Committee and the Fidalgo Bay Aquatic Reserve Stewardship Committee.
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