Aloha Ides of March Friday
      The Roman calendar, which dates back to 753 BCE, had three
      fixed points throughout the month: Nones, Ides, and Kalends. Ides
      took place around the midpoint of each month, occurring on the
      13th or 15th. In March it took place on the 15th. The Ides of
      March is most remembered as being the anniversary of the day that
      Julius Caesar was assassinated, in 44 BCE. It is believed that a
      seer had warned Caesar that harm would come to him on the Ides of
      March. In William Shakespeare's play, Julius Caesar, the
      seer has ascribed the phrase "Beware the Ides of March." Caesar
      was stabbed to death at a meeting of the Senate at the Theatre of
      Pompey. 
    
    
Removing
          WA salmon barriers surges to $1M a day, but results are murky
      Washington, rushing to meet a court deadline in a tribal fishing
      rights lawsuit, spends billions on construction, but some of it
      may be useless for salmon today. 
    
Sea
          otter's return opened path to restore West Coast salt marsh 
      The multi-decadal study, carried out in central California, could
      hold lessons for British Columbia, whose sea otter population was
      nearly exterminated through decades of poaching. 
    
Flurry
          of mini earthquakes off Vancouver Island hints at undersea
          expansion
      Swarms of mini earthquakes along tectonic plates five kilometres
      underwater on the Pacific Ocean floor off the coast of Vancouver
      Island have caught the attention of ocean scientists because they
      point to an “impending magmatic rupture” on the Juan de Fuca
      Ridge, 240 km from Vancouver Island. 
    
Companies
          to pay for Duwamish salmon, wildlife habitat restoration 
      Several industrial businesses have agreed to pay for the harm they
      caused to natural resources in the lower Duwamish River as part of
      two proposed settlements announced in recent days. 
    
As
          the Northwest spring arrives, so do anxieties over water for
          farming, and summer wildfires
      Across the Northwest, federal, state and regional officials are in
      general accord, there isn’t enough snow and with the start of
      spring just days away, the next couple of weeks will determine
      just how challenging it could get this summer for agricultural
      irrigators, fish and wildfires. 
A New Surge in Power Use Is Threatening U.S. Climate Goals 
Over the past year, electric utilities have nearly doubled their 
forecasts of how much additional power they’ll need by 2028 as they 
confront an unexpected explosion in the number of data centers, an 
abrupt resurgence in manufacturing driven by new federal laws, and 
millions of electric vehicles being plugged in. 
Province seeks input on plan to protect Clayoquot Sound 
The province is seeking public input on proposals to establish 77,000 
hectares of protected, old-growth forest around Clayoquot Sound — about 
70 per cent of which is more than 250 years old. 
The world’s largest ‘dark sky sanctuary’ is now in Oregon 
A section of southeastern Oregon is now home to the largest “dark sky 
sanctuary” in the world. The area spans 2.5 million acres of Lake 
County. It was certified this month by DarkSky International, a 
U.S.-based nonprofit that aims to reduce light pollution. 
Salish Sea News: Communicate, Educate, Advocate
Salish Sea Communications: Truth Well Told

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