Newsletter 2013_Spring_Final3_PrintFile
Transcription
Newsletter 2013_Spring_Final3_PrintFile
Newsletter of Stewardship Partners Spring 2013 Feast on the Farm a Great Way to Support Stewardship Partners! Experience the farm to table phenomenon up close and personal at Feast on the Farm on July 25th! Together with Oxbow Farm, the Salmon-Safe eco-label, Secret Garden Foundation, and celebrity chef Brendan McGill of Hitchcock, we’re dishing up an extraordinary summer evening in Carnation of fabulous food and wine, farm tours, a mini auction and live music by a top secret local performer. See for yourself how local farmers are growing healthy food and embracing environmental stewardship. Just 125 guests will be able to buy tickets ($150 and $250) which go on sale in May. Proceeds will support our continuing restoration of the Snoqualmie watershed. Keep your eyes peeled for email updates! For information about sponsorship opportunities, please contact bf@stewardshippartners.org. Our sincere thanks to these generous sponsors: GiveBIG Campaign is May 15th The Seattle Foundation is hosting its annual one-day, online charitable giving event on May 15th. GiveBIG was created to inspire people to give generously to nonprofit organizations who make our area a stronger, more vibrant community. We hope you’ll take this opportunity to support Stewardship Partners with a contribution through Seattle Foundation’s website. Look for email updates in the coming weeks. Help Duke’s Help Us! Mark your calendars for May 22nd, Duke’s Sustainable Salmon Day, and make a date with your friends and family to meet at your local Duke’s Chowder House to support Stewardship Partners. Duke’s has generously agreed to donate the increase in sales that we generate at lunch and dinner that day to support our salmon restoration programs. Duke’s serves only 100% sustainable, traceable seafood, as well as a wonderful variety of grass-fed, hormone-free burgers and steaks, natural chicken, and salads made with local available ingredients. It couldn’t be easier to support us; just show up on May 22nd and dig in! Alki – 2516 Alki Ave SW Green Lake – 7850 Green Lake Dr N Kent Station – 240 W Kent Station St Lake Union – 901 Fairview Ave N Southcenter – 757 Southcenter Mall Tacoma - 3327 Ruston Way Stewardship Partners helps private landowners restore and preserve the natural landscapes of Washington State. Stewardship Partners Salmon-Safe Urban Initiative The Helping Landowners Preserve the Environment Spring 2013 promises to be an exciting time for the Salmon- Stewardship Messenger stretch of Cedar Mill Creek on campus. Nike’s site operations team will join Salmon-Safe in describing how this restoration was implemented and how they are considering watershed impacts for site expansion and operational management at their headquarters site. Nike leadership will also share how this certification adds value to their corporation’s triple bottom line. Safe Urban Initiative as we launch the Puget Sound Campaign. Our residential, urban and campus certification program has been growing steadily in recent years and is becoming a more and more important land planning tool and eco label for urban watershed land owners. With generous support we are creating momentum in Puget Sound through a rigorous urban initiative. Our goal between now and 2016 is to increase Salmon-Safe certified properties by another 30,000 acres in and around Puget Sound. This initiative would include adding 7 more corporate and education campuses; 300 units of housing; 3 (18) hole golf courses, 2 public parks systems, 3 resort or camp retreat centers, 30 additional farms and at least 5 large-scale construction firms. Our inclusion in the conference is an important step forward in elevating our work. Like the Living Building Challenge for which the unConference was formed, Salmon-Safe is focused on the importance of measuring performance at a site and gaging its role in the larger bio-region. More importantly, serving as a resource for long term site planning and land management differentiates us from other certifications based on point systems and building materials. This work is underway with new properties becoming certified in Seattle’s 2030 District and certification renewal of a number of Seattle area properties including the Department of Ecology Headquarters, Port of Seattle Parks, and the UW Bothell Campus. Through this process we are also revamping our approach to working with high performance buildings that aim at achieving dual certification with LEED. To learn more about the conference visit: http://living-future.org/unconference2013 Stay tuned for our fall event, Salmon-in-the-City, which will feature the newest research from NOAA and other regional leaders. Part of our outreach strategy is to educate key decision makers and designers who influence development and construction. In May we will be making two presentations at the International Living Future Institute’s unConference and its associated preconference session, The Government Confluence, co-hosted by King County GreenTools and Cascadia Green Building Council. On May 15th, Salmon-Safe will be joined at the Government Confluence by representatives from the City of Portland’s Parks Department to discuss our decade-long collaboration implementing arduous habitat and stormwater strategies, which have resulted in operational and infrastructure changes in 250 parks and natural areas, as well as generating a cultural change within the organization as operations managers and staff integrate water savings, pest management, and restoration into their mission. The Portland Parks case study will describe how this transformation was sparked and the lasting impacts. More than 240 city parks and natural areas managed by Portland Parks & Recreation achieved Salmon-Safe re-certification in 2012, including Cathedral Park (pictured above) on the Willamette River. Portland Parks first earned system-wide Salmon-Safe certification in 2004. The 2013 Government Confluence is a one of a kind gathering of sustainability leaders from the public sector for an intensive day of inspiration and peer-to-peer learning. Government staff and elected officials will share success stories and address persistent challenges faced by local governments in advancing a sustainability agenda. Find Us Online! At the International Living Future Institute’s unConference, Salmon-Safe will present the case study for certification of Nike’s iconic World Headquarters Campus. Nike has transformed its management of the 175-acre site and embarked on an ambitious restoration strategy for extensive wetlands and a 2 Stewardship Partners Salmon Safe Rural The Stewardship Helping Landowners Preserve the Environment Messenger A Blossoming Industry Thanks to a USDA grant, Salmon-Safe and Stewardship Partners have begun working with the Seattle Wholesale Growers Market Collective (SWGMC), a group of local cut-flower growers who have banded together to better market their products. The cut flower industry currently imports 80% of its flowers, many of them from places with dubious environmental and social rights practices. These imported flowers dominate displays at grocery stores and farmers markets and are priced much lower than local cut-flower growers could sell for and still make a living. The SWGMC wanted to further differentiate themselves by adding a meaningful environmental certification to their local products. Diane Szukovathy, owner of Jello Mold Farm and the driving force behind the grant, was already a part of the SalmonSafe program. The rigorous, science-based label was a natural fit for the cut-flower program, especially with growers based in Washington, Oregon, and Alaska, prime salmon habitat. Blooming Hellebores at Jello Mold Farm Agnes P. Cwalina The Market Collective provides “the very best the Pacific Northwest has to offer in cut flowers, greens and ornamentals from sixteen local flower farms.” SWGMC recently hosted a workshop on sustainable cut-flower practices for all flower growers regardless of affiliation with the collective. We are excited to help with marketing, working with local grocery stores and organizations to integrate cut-flowers into the “buy local” conversation that consumers in the Northwest are so aware of. Be sure to keep an eye out for Salmon-Safe bouquets of gorgeous local cut-flowers this summer at your grocery store! Spring Brings Renewal We’ve seen lots of energy and excitement for preserving salmon habitat over the past six months as we certified or re-certified 20 farms as Salmon-Safe. We are working with Chateau Ste. Michelle to highlight their Cold Creek and Canoe Ridge Estate Salmon-Safe Vineyards. They plan to launch a national marketing campaign including their SalmonSafe certification in June, so keep an eye out for those wines! Contact information for Salmon-Safe farms can be found on our website under “Farms & Maps.” Salmon-Safe Wines Make a Splash As part of an ongoing effort to increase visibility for our partners, we co-hosted a Happy Hour event at Whole Foods Bellevue on March 6th. L’Ecole 41 came to pour two of their Salmon-Safe wines and Luminesce and Perigee poured from their Walla Walla vineyards. It was an excellent turn-out, with about half of the shoppers that passed by stopping to taste the wine and snacks, including wild-caught salmon. The event was part of Stewardship Partners and Salmon-Safe’s exciting ongoing partnership with Whole Foods, one we hope to expand on. Look for more Salmon-Safe wine tastings in the coming months. 20 certifications & renewals Interested in Tasting Salmon-Safe Wine? Stewardship Partners invites you to participate in a celebration of Salmon-Safe wine from 2-5pm on Sunday, June 23rd at Wine World in Wallingford. Join eight wineries, Bluebird Grain, and Sal the Salmon for a delicious tasting that supports the work of the Salmon-Safe program. More information can be found on our website at www.stewardshippartners.org/events/. Alpenfire Cider Baxter Barn Camelot Downs Chateau Ste. Michelle Choice Bulbs Dan’s Dahlias Everyday Flowers Fall City Farms Hedlin Farm Hollandia Dairy J4 Ranch Klesick Family Farm Martha Lane Lavender Ojeda Farm 3 Orchidaceae Sanford’s Farm Sunfield Farm Terry’s Berries Triple Wren Farms Wallace Acres Stewardship Partners The Road to 12,000 The Helping Landowners Preserve the Environment A lot has happened in the 12,000 Rain Gardens Campaign Stewardship Messenger and another cluster of residential rain gardens in Kirkland. Check out our events page for details as they become known, www.12000raingardens.org/rain-garden-workshops.html. since our last newsletter. Some of the highlights include a rain garden tour with high school students, another with Master Gardeners and government staff from Skagit County, helping homeowners take advantage of incentive programs to build their own rain gardens across Seattle, a new website currently in development, receipt of a major grant from Boeing, and several rain garden projects initiated by our WSU Extension partners all around Puget Sound. One of the great triumphs for the campaign so far has been to see local governments jump in more and more to the rain garden game. Both Puyallup and Seattle have made green street improvements along the very same blocks where we built some of our first clusters. Seattle, Puyallup, Eatonville, Kitsap County, King County, Lake Forest Park and Bellingham, have rolled out their own rain garden programs and the cities of Shoreline and Tacoma are poised to launch theirs soon. Our outreach efforts with school groups and educators has been a definite highlight of the last several months. On March 1st we led a group of 25 9th graders from Chief Sealth High School on a tour of their neighborhood through the eyes of a raindrop. We showed them a parking lot paved with porous asphalt, a neighborhood cluster of rain gardens that we built, and the Highpoint development that includes rain gardens and natural stormwater drainage throughout the site (see more about the tour at www.westseattleblog.com written by rain garden Champion, Karrie Kohlhaas). We also trained new troops of volunteer Master Gardeners as Rain Garden Mentors, most recently in Pierce, King, and Skagit counties, spoke with students at Garfield High School and looked for possible rain garden sites at their school, and led discussions with YMCA Earth Service Corps students from all around Puget Sound. Recently we have been sharing the rain garden love with free evening workshops in South Lake Union, Bellevue, Lake Forest Park, and South Seattle Community College. The next workshop will be at Kirkland City Hall on May 16th. You’ll also have an opportunity to get your hands dirty with us as we build a rain garden at McKnight Middle School in Renton Chief Sealth High School Students visit Delridge Rain Gardens Stewardship Partners is proud to launch our new website. We have made many changes that focus on usability, navigation, branding, traffic generation and visitor engagement. These changes will allow visitors to quickly understand Stewardship Partners’ vision and goals and help them understand, remember and have easy access to our major programs. We now are able to more easily update content and dovetail our social media sites for users to interact. Of course it is now easier than ever to support our work. Just look for the donate button at the top of each page! Visit Our New Website! 4 www.stewardshippartners.org Stewardship Partners Snoqualmie Stewardship The Helping Landowners Preserve the Environment Stewardship Messenger and missing programs, projects and other action items for the Valley, primarily the lower stretch below Snoqualmie Falls. With grant support from the Bullitt Foundation, we finalized the Strategy in the spring of 2012. The Mountains to Sound Greenway Trust conducted their own interviews, primarily above the falls, as part of their proposal to Congress to designate the entire greenway as a Heritage Area. Our combined efforts paint a comprehensive picture of the entire Valley today and the possible future which would be built on a strong local economy, a vibrant environment, and healthy, connected communities. The Bullitt Foundation encouraged us to take our work a step further and we submitted a grant application last fall. Our proposed project was a partnership with Mountains to Sound Greenway Trust to invite a coalition of Snoqualmie citizens to come together, take our findings, add to them, and make them into realities. We are happy to announce that our proposal was accepted in February and our partnership with the Greenway Trust is coming together nicely. We are eager to have this Photo © Barrie Kovish work enhance our restoration efforts by encouraging a land ethic that is already stirring below the surface. The future of the Valley looks bright! Snoqualmie Stewardship In addition to this large project, we will continue our on-theground restoration efforts to improve the riverbank and water quality of the Snoqualmie River. We will be installing the first of our Snoqualmie Restoration Initiative work described in last Fall’s newsletter. We have partnered with American Farmland Trust, Natural Resource Conservation Service, King County, King Conservation District and the Snoqualmie Tribe to restore over 3 miles of riverbank, remove fish passage barriers and support agricultural operations throughout the middle main-stem Snoqualmie. Volunteers from Duke’s Chowder House Restaurants, PCC Farmland Trust, Wilderness Awareness School, Keeney’s Office Supply and Boeing will be helping us with this work. Thank you to all who support the Snoqualmie Stewardship Program! Snoqualmie Valley The Snoqualmie Strategy Through community meetings and interviews with local constituents in 2009, Stewardship Partners created a comprehensive report on the existing programs, policies and movements taking place in the Snoqualmie Valley. The interview process included many Valley stakeholders including ecology (fish and forests), business, development, agriculture and recreation. The report that resulted from these interviews, which we called the “Snoqualmie Strategy,” detailed both existing To subscribe to our e-newsletter email info@stewardshippartners.org 5 Stewardship Partners Financial Report The Stewardship Helping Landowners Preserve the Environment Messenger Board of Directors Chair Chris Bayley Former King County Prosecuting Attorney Vice Chair Kenan Block Block Media & Communications Treasurer Will Hartmann IT Consultant Secretary J. Bowman Neely Attorney Hendricks & Lewis Bill Bryant Chairman Bryant Christie, Inc. Eugene Carlson Dow Jones & Co. (retired) Grant Jones Principal Jones & Jones Architects, Ltd. Steven Patneaude Director, 787 Systems The Boeing Company Dana Rasmussen Former Regional Administrator U.S. Environmental Protection Agency John Rose Leora Consulting Group Alice Shorett Founder Triangle Associates, Inc. Lucas St. Clair Community Volunteer Sasha Visconty Principal Axis Environmental Staff Alex Ko Salmon-Safe Rural Program Manager Aaron Clark, Ph.D. Rain Gardens Program Manager David Burger Executive Director Ellen Southard Salmon-Safe Urban Outreach Manager Sean Crouter Restoration Technician Deborah Oaks Snoqualmie Program Manager Barbara Flynn Development Director Geoff Bough Restoration Technician 6 Thank You to our 2012 Supporters! Sustaining Partners $5,000 and above Tom Alberg and Judi Beck Eliza Flug-Coburn Mike and Lynn Garvey Katharyn Alvord Gerlich Stone Gossard Nancy S. Nordhoff Maryanne Tagney-Jones and David Jones $2,500 - $4,999 Chris and Cynthia Bayley Larry Cohen Jane Hummer Pete Higgins and Leslie Magid William and Sally Neukom Bruce and Jeannie Nordstrom David and Valerie Robinson Jon and Judy Runstad $1,000 - $2,499 Thomas S. Bayley Alan and Sally Black Bruce and Ann Blume Richard Bressler Bill Bryant Eugene Carlson Josh and Brooke Dickson Richard and Lauren Donner Dale and Gail Foreman Jerry and Lyn Grinstein William C. Hartmann Ron and Liz Keeshan Glen and Alison Milliman J. Bowman Neely Mike McCready and Ashley O’Connor Peter Overton Guy and Nancy Pinkerton Dana Rasmussen Steve and Paula Reynolds John Rose William Ruckelshaus Alice Shorett Robert and Ethel Story Lucas St. Clair Bill VanSickle Sasha Visconty Doug and Maggie Walker Walter Weber, Jr. Supporting Partners $500- $999 James Allison and April Pride Allison William and Alison Bardeen Kenneth Bartels and Jane Condon Frank S. Bayley Nicholas Binkley Jed Gorden and Sara Manetti Hon. Slade Gorton Brian and Anna Leslie Todd and Mimi Menenberg Dale T. Miller Louise Miller Aaron and Hilary Richmond Richard and Bonnie Robbins Edward Skone and Rebecca Zerngast Skone Bill and Ruth True James Vesely H. S. Wright III and Kate Janeway William W. Wurts $499 and below Kristen Bakken Emery Bayley Kirk Bailey and Shannon Beasley-Bailey Douglas P. Beighle Fraser and Dierdre Black William and Mary Black Kenan Block John Blume Scott Boggan and Lesley Baird-Boggan Elisabeth Bottler Anne C. Braddock Herb Bridge Nicole Brodeur Paul Brown and Margaret Watson Thomas Brucker David and Gina Burger Sarah Close B.J. Cummings Robert DeBennedetto and I-Ting Tsai Chris and Gina Drake Brian Dunham and Elizabeth Holland Patrick and Susan Dunn Nathanial and Sara Durkee Gene Duvernoy Claire Dyckman Jim and Ann Elias Harry and Laura Emil Jim Erckmann Buck Ferguson Charles and Rose Ann Finkel Peter Finkelman and Carly Kaufman Dennis Fleenor Fritz and Noreen Frink Eric Garcia Brandon Gillespie and Ashley Stansbury Jenny Gruss Mary Guiden Julie Hampton Jacquelyn Hanson Gregory Heller Grant R. Jones Mark Johnsen Dan and Tami Kent Hildy Ko John and Holland Korhumel Jeremy and Lisa Korst Charles Mansfield Edward Marshall John and Karen McKenna Hon. John Miller Greg and Mary Moga 7 Sharon Nelson Charles Nordhoff Richard and Ina Nordstrom Chris Olson and Kathy Minnis-Olson Joe Orford and Christine Elias Don Padelford Cameron and Amy Pelly Anne Phelps Matt Pietrek and Carrie Smith Thomas and Dixie Jo Porter Douglass and Katherine Raff Jeffrey Ranish Tim Rich John Rockwell and Linda Mevorach Roddy Scheer and Alex Tibbetts Masaaki and Janet Seki Hon. Mark Sidran Ellen and Patti Southard James Spady Matthew Spenny Marnie Briggs Stamper Edwin and Kathryn Sterner Liann Sundquist Scott and Ally Svenson Annie Thenell Randy Urmston and Eliza Davidson Michelle Vanhorn Mike and Camille Vaska Frederick Whitridge Scott and Jenny Wyatt Corporate & Grant Funding àMaurice American Farmland Trust Norman Archibald Foundation Aven Foundation The Boeing Company Bullitt Foundation Buty Winery Caffe Vita Deschutes Brewery Draper Valley Farms Dry Soda Company Full Circle Farm Halmie Fish Company Hedges Family Estate Horizons Foundation King Conservation District King County Klesick Family Farm, Inc. Charlotte Y. Martin Foundation National Fish and Wildlife Foundation Natural Resource Conservation Service Nisqually Indian Tribe The Norcliffe Foundation Novelty Hill Winery Organic Valley Family of Farms Raven Foundation Ridolfi Inc. The Russell Family Foundation Salish Cliffs Golf Club Ethan Stowell Restaurants Terra Blanca Winery Via Tribunali Washington State Department of Ecology Whole Foods In Memoriam Douglas P. Beighle Stewardship Partners Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID Seattle, WA Permit #627 Stewardship Messenger 1411 4th Avenue, Suite 1425 Seattle, Washington 98101 The Address Service Requested Phone: 206.292.9875 Fax: 206.292.9876 Email: info@stewardshippartners.org www.stewardshippartners.org Stewardship Partners Newsletter Message From the Chair If you take off from Lake Union and fly due east you will arrive over the town of Carnation at the 17 nautical mile mark, or roughly 12 minutes in DeHavilland Beaver time. You can now proceed up or down the meandering Snoqualmie River, a productive agricultural landscape closer to a major city than anything else its size in America. This is a healthy alluvial valley, both environmentally and economically. The river is home to one of the last large wild Chinook salmon runs in the Pacific Northwest, but this run is a fraction of what it was before cultivation and home building was started by our human species. It is from the sides of the valley, above the flood plain to the east and west that the greatest threat to these fish comes, in the form of polluted run-off. To date Stewardship Partners has restored over 10 miles of riverside habitat, working with 21 different “pioneer” landowners whose conservation ethic is now spreading among their neighbors. Our long term goal is to go beyond on-the-ground restoration work to become the catalyst for all stakeholders to permanently preserve the environmental quality of both the bottom land and slopes above. This means healthy farms producing local food for hungry Seattle, but also increased touring by bike, foot and car. It means that when development does occur it follows low impact guidelines to insure that run-off is infiltrated rather than pouring into the river. After sweeping the valley by air, from the falls all the way north to Monroe, you can then head back to Lake Union with a vivid impression of how close this amazing landscape is to where we urbanites live. Please tell your earthbound friends and urge them to become a part of the long term plan to preserve. Invite them to our annual Feast on the Farm where they will see on the ground that food and wine come from the dirt and can be consumed with great joy by friends gathered to help Stewardship Partners!