Conservation Northwest

ConservationNW-Newsletter-May2013

Conservation Northwest protects and connects old-growth forests and other wild areas from the Washington Coast to the British Columbia Rockies, vital to a healthy future for us, our children, and wildlife. Since 1989, Conservation Northwest has worke

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Conservation Northwest updates Dave Heflick Conservation associate, dheflick@conservationnw.org Collaborative Forest restoration Fierce competition ends well The Northeast Washington Forestry Coalition and Colville National Forest last year successfully landed nearly a million dollars to begin restoration work under the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program. Competition for the program was fierce, with only a handful of national forests across the country getting the nod. Gaining the million dollar funding is a testament to the effectiveness of Northeast Washington Forestry Coalition and its proven track record of moving projects forward on the Colville National Forest. The forest has now received funding for a second year of restoration work under this national restoration program. Working together, the Forest Service and the Coalition have completed a draft program of work for 2013 that includes culvert replacements, habitat restoration, road decommissioning, and fuels-reduction work. Forester Derek Churchill, former Conservation Northwest staff member, is under contract with us to work with the coalition and the Forest Service to implement a landscape evaluation for the first project in northeast Washington to be completely planned, analyzed, and carried out under the collaborative restoration program guidelines. Preliminary work on the evaluation is underway right now. The pace will pick up dramatically as spring ushers in the 2013 summer-fall field season. Looking back, virtually all the restoration in the 2012 work plan has been successfully completed. The projects benefit fish and wildlife habitat, reflecting four miles of road decommissioning, four miles of fish habitat added to the upper reaches of Pierre Creek through replacement of a fishblocking culvert, 100 miles of trail restoration, and 182 miles of road work to reduce harm to watershed health. The new culvert replaces a long-standing fish-blocking culvert, restoring habitat connectivity between Pierre Lake—a popular fishing spot in northeast Washington State containing trout, kokanee, and large-mouth bass—and more than five miles of stream north of the lake. Conservation Northwest, Northeast Washington Forestry Coalition, and the Colville National Forest are honored to be nationally recognized for the quality of their collaborative work and record of successful implementation on the ground. In these budget-crunching times, this national restoration funding helps defuse cutbacks affecting national forests across the country that have their collaborative act together. Keeping the Northwest wild Colville National Forest © Eric Zamora Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack highlighted the collaborative work on the Colville National Forest as a "model for the nation." Last year, a million dollars for restoration in the Columbia Highlands puts those kudos into practice on the ground. Kokanee (land-locked sockeye) benefit from reconnected habitat. © Graham Owen Spring-Summer 2013 15

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