Kathy Fletcher, the executive director of People for Puget Sound, has responded to Daniel Jack Chasan's Crosscut article about setting priorities — performing triage, essentially — as we plan to reduce the impact from the several million people who live around the inland sea. Here's what she wrote:
To the editor,
Thursday morning's Crosscut carries an article by Dan Chasan that argues for "triage" as the only sensible strategy for saving Puget Sound. By triage, Mr. Chasan means focusing our protection and restoration dollars in rural areas, and pretty much writing off the health of the environment in more developed areas.
This is the kind of thinking that gets us museum pieces of protected natural areas, like "islands" of wilderness, while the ecosystem necessary to sustain life — eventually including the life in the "protected" area itself — goes down the tubes. This is the kind of thinking that gets us beautiful places to visit but unhealthy places to live. This is the kind of thinking that gets us places for salmon to spawn but nothing for the salmon to eat when they leave the rivers. This is the kind of thinking that gets us lovely areas to observe orca whales — as they die out because of contamination in our urban bays, and not enough salmon to eat.
This is the kind of thinking that encourages us to believe that it doesn't matter what poisons we pour on our lawn or how much pavement we spread around in our urban areas.
Have you looked at a satellite photo of the Puget Sound area lately? Have you driven up and down I-5? The sad truth is that if we write off our urban areas, we write off the lowlands, and ... yes, we write off a healthy Puget Sound. A healthy ecosystem is tied together by clean water, clean air, shorelines, wetlands, currents and plants and animals that move form place to place. Simplistic thinking about triage might sound practical, sensible, efficient, business-like and even effective — but it's not.
Maybe salmon will learn to fly from their spawning beds to the ocean, so that they no longer need the food, rest and brackish water and shoreline "buffet dinners" provided by Puget Sound's estuaries and beaches.
Maybe orcas will learn to survive on plastic.
Maybe our children will learn to live without clean air and water, and to find recreation, peace and serenity in front of their computer screens.
It's seductive to think that all we need to do is to set priorities, and we will save Puget Sound. Don't get me wrong — we do need to set priorities. We need to do the things that will most quickly and effectively restore the health of the Sound. Stopping sprawling development, cleaning up and preventing toxic pollution, restoring healthy habitat in our river mouth estuaries and shorelines, using rain gardens, green roofs and "pervious" pavement to absorb rainwater and curtail stormwater pollution — these are the priorities that will save the Sound.
But if we think that choosing whether to cut out the heart or the lungs is the same thing as setting priorities, Puget Sound is doomed. If we think that we can save the Sound by rejiggering how we are currently spending our restoration dollars, rather than scaling up to seriously address the size of the problem, Puget Sound is indeed doomed.
Kathy Fletcher, Executive Director
People for Puget Sound
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Comments:
Posted Fri, Aug 8, 3:28 p.m. Inappropriate
PPS - a bogus org with a pathetic mouthpiece !: How about using your own two eyes to look around the ENTIRE sound
coast line ? ( this implies that you can look, comprehend and then formulate ) !
Consider the outlines of every island as well as the entire body outline.
The overwhelming percentage of the entire coast line is populated with homes - single family dwellings ! A high percentage of them have been in place now for decades. As such, their underdesigned septic systems have already failed.
Dare I ask you to even guess where all their waist water and detergent residue is winding up ?
Why do you try to cover up the single biggest reason as to how the mess the sound is now in, failed septic systems, with emotional silly rhetoric ? Is it because the FEW members your little NFP org have are shoreline homeowners who simply want to pass the buck ?
Posted Fri, Aug 8, 4:09 p.m. Inappropriate
It's not either/or: I don't think there's as much of a gap between what Chasan and Fletcher believe as Fletcher seems to think. Of course Puget Sound restoration requires that urban areas clean up pollution hotspots, reduce current sources of pollution, and improve development patterns. But spending millions to restore urban creeks with inherently limited salmon recovery potential shouldn't be what the Puget Sound Partnership spends its money on -- they should focus on protection and restoration of the areas that have the most impact on the Sound and its ecology, some of which are in urban areas, but many of which are a relatively long ways from where most urban enviros live.
Posted Sun, Aug 10, 5:51 p.m. Inappropriate
RE: PPS - a bogus org with a pathetic mouthpiece !: Wow, I hope for your sake that someone takes your keys away and calls you a cab.
Posted Sun, Aug 10, 6:08 p.m. Inappropriate
RE: It's not either/or: Chasen's point was not to waste money on feel good projects but focus on those that matter. I don't think anyone would disagree with that. The debate here is really in defining which projects matter.
Chasen holds up urban creek restoration as an example of an expensive project that has little impact. Fine, I'll take his word for it. However, from that one example he arrives at the sweeping conclusion that we should focus entirely on rural areas.
Thankfully, Fletcher shoots this terrible idea in the head before it has a chance to hurt somebody.
Posted Sun, Aug 10, 8:28 p.m. Inappropriate
RE: Sean = feeble: tough time dealing with the vigors of reality ?