Guest Blog by Pete Haase
The Puget Sound Partnership’s “2019 State of the Sound”
document is out. If you decide to give
it a look-see and you get past the beautiful pictures that pop up, it is dismal. Just about everything being measured is
getting worse, not better, and has been for about the past 25 tears – I mean years – damn fat fingers.
If you do start to read, be aware there are three sort of
rah-rah, well-meaning “call to action” pieces: one each from the Director, the
Leadership Council, and the Science Panel.
As is my habit with this stuff, I parsed them with a “Readability
Checker.” (There is one associated with the Word software I am using to create
this piece.) The first one takes a
mid-college education, the second a college education, and the third an
advanced college degree. I know that all
of you reading this qualify there, but I also know you really don’t get excited
by wading through it. You were recently convinced
to give up more money buying a bunch of Amazon stuff with some short and catchy
and well-aimed ads better than these words will be able to get across to you.
If you do burrow in, you will see that the current estimated
need for dollars to get the job done is now FIVE times what the estimated need was
about four years ago. When I worked, I
got to manage some projects and on one we would review it with the big boss
about every three months. There was a
period of time where our “estimate to complete” kept increasing by several
percent at each review. Finally, the
boss told us to just stop estimating. I
think the Puget Sound Partnership needs to stop estimating, too, since they
clearly have not figured out how to do it accurately.
Actually, FIVE times the need sounds pretty good,
relatively. I attended the annual
Northwest Straits Initiative Conference in Everett a few weeks ago and there were several
very good presentations-- and every single one of them said they needed TEN
times the funding to get their piece of the job done!
The State of the Sound Report is not exactly “fire-‘em-up” fodder
for the masses. Actually, the whole
Puget Sound Partnership effort for years has been soooo lacking in such fodder
for the masses. Hard to fire us up when
we see pretty pictures and happy success stories coupled with facts of
failure. There IS a brief section of
what the “masses, aka public” can do.
(Spoiler - don’t go be rummaging up your pitchforks and torches and
prepare to march on Olympia.) No. Plant a tree and help out with some community-sponsored
science. If you boat (all you public folk
who boat, raise your hand) keep it quiet around whales. Keep plastic out of the water and
recycle. Wash your car at a car wash and
don’t change your own auto oil. (All you
public folk who even THINK about changing your own auto oil raise your hand.) Oh – and drive less.
Since 2005, when the Puget Sound Partnership took over the
“Save Our Sound” duty from the previous effort, the population around the Sound
has grown by about 25% - almost 1 million people, perhaps more. For a system already under stress, the
continued decline since 2005 is pretty understandable.
I could go on, but won’t.
I hope my point – “until the masses are fired up and equipped to
persuade the ‘Powers that be’ to get serious about fixing rather than wrecking we
will just continue down the same old wrong-way road” – is clear here.
No government agency or collaboration can do that. It will need to be a mighty collaboration of
non-governmental and private/business entities.
It is so hard to imagine such a thing happening; there’s just not enough
guts to do it.
But all is not gloom and doom! With friends, I get to wade some local
streams this time of year to document salmon returning to spawn. Lots of us do this all around the Sound. Our particular streams host Kokanee (land-locked
salmon) that live in Lake Samish. This
year, about half way through the season, we have counted over 1,000 of these
guys – and this in about ½ mile of stream that we are able to wade. This is so great because last year and the
year before there were only around 100 or less for the entire season. So, there is magic! A great white unicorn is always there to
cheer us on.
Don’t quit. It’s
worth it. (Oh, and this article is about
8th grade reading level.)
(Pete Haase is a
member of the Skagit County Marine Resources Committee and represents the MRC on
the Northwest Straits Commission. He is a board member of the Padilla Bay
Foundation and an avid volunteer for outside conservation activities.)
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