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151 page draft, just some light reading..... anyone have a paired down version?
Did you know they want to raise the sediment dam 21 feet it's going to wipe out 1000 s of acres of wildlife habitat.Also all the pilling WDFW PAID 1000 s of dal lord to put in.
Quote from: bbarnes on March 11, 2019, 04:39:25 PMDid you know they want to raise the sediment dam 21 feet it's going to wipe out 1000 s of acres of wildlife habitat.Also all the pilling WDFW PAID 1000 s of dal lord to put in.How else are you going to stop the sediment flowing downstream ?
Quote from: Magnum_Willys on March 11, 2019, 04:59:40 PMQuote from: bbarnes on March 11, 2019, 04:39:25 PMDid you know they want to raise the sediment dam 21 feet it's going to wipe out 1000 s of acres of wildlife habitat.Also all the pilling WDFW PAID 1000 s of dal lord to put in.How else are you going to stop the sediment flowing downstream ? I think they should knock 20 feet out of the sediment dam and let the river pick a course. You wouldn't have that meandering that causes all of the sediment issues and wipes out all of the ground that has started to grow trees and shrubs again. Once the river picks a spot to run, get aggressive with tree planting to help stabilize soils. Just look above the pond that the sediment dam creates and below it...
Quote from: Magnum_Willys on March 11, 2019, 04:59:40 PMQuote from: bbarnes on March 11, 2019, 04:39:25 PMDid you know they want to raise the sediment dam 21 feet it's going to wipe out 1000 s of acres of wildlife habitat.Also all the pilling WDFW PAID 1000 s of dal lord to put in.How else are you going to stop the sediment flowing downstream ? get aggressive with tree planting to help stabilize soils.
The Army Corps claims in their 2018 review that any new area flooded will remain within the original "footprint" they have a sediment storage easement on. WDFW and Weyco and many others are skeptical of this and think with each raise of the dam the river will push and wander farther upstream into the main wildlife area. Pullen Creek will back up beyond the area, too.Also, according to the Corps and the original agreement between the feds and the state, the STATE is responsible for all the mitigation projects caused by the dam (except the fish trap). The WDFW can't really put much effort into the lower reaches near the dam because of all the shifting and flooding. Most of their efforts are up stream of the old dam, where they are less likely affected by spillway raises.