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Methow Valley News May 2, 2001 Endangered Species Senate sends envoy for watershed planning talk Fishing: triploids, beaver and deer Senate sends envoy for watershed planning talk By Lee Hicks A state Senate committee staffer will be featured at a special meeting of the Methow basin watershed planning unit this week to discuss progress on local watershed planning. The session, scheduled for Wednesday from 6-8 p. m. at the Twisp Forest Services offices, comes as county officials and the planning unit assess respective roles in the watershed process. County commissioners recently reminded the planning unit it would need to complete a work plan in four years under the state-authorized watershed process. The unit has been operating for two years. Commissioners have expressed concerns that the Department of Ecology could step in to set instream flows for the basin if the planning unit cannot complete the work. An Ecology spokesperson said this week the agency has no intention of stepping in to take over the process, however, state law gives the agency the authority to set streamflows to protect fish. "Were already in the watershed planning process," said Joe Williams, a top Ecology official in Olympia. "Were at the table." The county has not been represented at recent planning unit meetings since the water resources department was folded into the county planning department. Further complicating the situation, the planning unit has been diverted by lengthy negotiations with state and federal agencies to reach a basin "memorandum of agreement" for water and fish issues. The agreement would allow efforts to determine water needed for fish and studies to proceed while fish passage, irrigation ditch screens and other improvements are made. Also a factor has been the countys notice to sue National Marine Fisheries Service and the Forest Service over biological opinions that limit water rights on ditches that divert from federal land. Some planning unit "citizen" members have supported the suit. But the unit has taken no official position because state and federal agency managers are also members. The Senate staffer on the Wednesday agenda is John Stuhlmiller, a specialist on legislation establishing state watershed planning and funding for salmon recovery, known as 2514 and 2496 processes after the enabling bill numbers. Although the commissioners had expressed concern over meeting the four-year deadline set by the 2514 legislation, Rep. Linda Parlette said Stuhlmillers initial opinion was that Okanogan County may be even or ahead of some other counties opting to pursue the process. Parlette, R-12, who represents the Methow basin and Sen. Bob Morton, R-7, whose district includes the Okanogan basin, are scheduled to participate in the Wednesday meeting via conference call from Olympia. Parlette said Monday (April 30) that she believes the county and planning unit can move ahead to complete the watershed plan while keeping the lawsuit issue "at arms length." Parlette also said she was assured by top state officials that, regardless of the countys notice to sue federal agencies, funding would continue if it made progress on watershed planning. Williams suggested this week that the planning unit will have to have working plans in place by the end of the fiscal year before it can receive $150,000 remaining from the half million dollars already appropriated to projects in the basin. Publisher's Comment ~ by Lee Hicks Fishing: triploids, beaver and deer Im a little suspicious of any fish with a name that sounds like it was engineered by Dr. Frankenstein. In an effort to offset restrictions from endangered species listings, the state Department of Fish and Wildlife is stocking many western Washington lakes and Spectacle Lake in Okanogan County with something called a "triploid." The triploid is a rainbow trout with three sets of chromosomes rather than the normal two. As a result the fish is sterile and uses its energy in bulking up instead of wasting all that effort in the demands of procreation. Somehow hooking one of these lunkers in a lake would be faint consolation for losing one of my favorite stretches of the Chewuch. Until restrictions hit last summer, I would wade and flycast the Chewuch several miles above Boulder Creek. These trips were more casting practice than a serious attempt to catch fish, although it was a productive area for small rainbows. Near dark one late July day, I had waded across a waist-deep pool and was casting to the opposite bank when I was jolted by a monstrous splash. I noticed a beaver moving toward me and back to the roots of a partially submerged tree. In a few more outings on the same stretch that summer two beaver would move upstream from their lodge to challenge me. One would slap the water, another would circle behind, then both would retreat while I fished. Live and let live. Another afternoon while casting in calf-deep water I sensed I was being watched. I turned slowly to look over my shoulder to see two fawns barely 10 feet away on the rocky shore. They had apparently come down to investigate this brown rubber-clad thing swinging a stick and line above its head. Maybe Ill get the fly rod, leave the flies at home and go up there and stand in the water. Just for the memories. Opinion | Sports |
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