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Maria Mudd Ruth

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Calling All Murreleteers!

November 2, 2014 Maria Mudd Ruth

Public comments needed! On Tuesday, November 4, 2014, the Washington Department of Natural Resources (DNR) and U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service will be giving a presentation on the Long-term Conservation Strategy for the Marbled Murrelet.

The meeting is open to the public and is being held at the Natural Resource Building in Olympia at 9 a.m.

Please consider attending the meeting to urge the Board of Natural Resources to protect the buffers around marbled murrelet nesting habitat--these buffers are the next targets for logging. Sign up to speak, be a warm body, write to the BNR to express your concern. E-mail bnr@dnr.wa.gov

For more information on the meeting location, agenda, and to see the presentation Power Point, please go to the BNR website here. Scroll down past the 2011 calendar to the Board of Natural Resources Meeting Materials. Click on the link "Marbled Murrelet Long-Term Conservation Strategy Presentation" to download a pdf of the PowerPoint to be presented by the DNR.

Tags Marbled Murrelet, Long-term conservation strategy, Washington DNR, Marbled Murrelet conservation
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700 Turn Out for Oil Transport Hearing

October 31, 2014 Maria Mudd Ruth
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The message was loud and clear last night: the Washington State Department of Ecology's study on oil shipment through the state does not adequately address the enormous risks to our cities, towns, rural communities, tribal lands, rivers, wildlife, Puget Sound, or the people of Washington State. 

More than 700 people showed up, and 300 signed up to speak including many who arrived by bus from Seattle and Vancouver. With two minutes at the microphone--speakers shared their concerns about the study, the rapid growth in oil shipment through Washington, the Bakken Blast Zone, the woefully underfunded oil spill prevention and response measures, the inevitability of oil-tank explosions and spills....and the permanent damage to the natural and human environments.

Olympia's Nisqually, Quinault, and Makah tribal communities were well represented and well spoken as were Olympia's elected officials--Mayor Buxbaum, Councilmember Nathaniel Jones (particularly eloquent), Thurston County Commissioners Karen Valenzuela, Sandra Romero, and Cathy Wolfe as well as PUD Commissioner Chris Stearns. Elected officials from Bellingham, Hood River, Vancouver, and Grays Harbor and members of the "general public" spoke out--including several physicians and health-care workers, local business leaders, representative of religious communities, and one ten-year-old girl who stood on a chair to deliver her powerful comments on behalf of her generation.

In addition to the refrain, "We Can Do Better," some memorable lines from various speakers:

"The lifeblood of our community is water, not oil."

"More studies will not change the topography of our marine waters."

"Oil transport is great fro big business, but it stinks for local businesses."

"We take the risk, they [corporations] take the profits."

"This is a moral issue."

"Why is there no urgent political will to stand up to Big Oil?"

"The word 'ecology' is never used in the report to describe the environment, only the Department."

"You can fool politicians, but you can't fool physics."

"Oil spills cannot be mitigated."

The Department of Ecology website features most everything you might need to know about their study here, where you can also provide public comment before the December 1 deadline.

Read The Olympian story here.

 

Tags oil transportation, WA Department of Ecology, Oil transportation hearing
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We Are the 2 %

October 18, 2014 Maria Mudd Ruth
The LBA Woods in Olympia, Washington.  What could be saved by the 2% tax city residents voted to establish to help fun the acquisition of 500 acres of wildlife habitat and future parkland.

The LBA Woods in Olympia, Washington.  What could be saved by the 2% tax city residents voted to establish to help fun the acquisition of 500 acres of wildlife habitat and future parkland.

In the ten years since the 2% Voter Utility Tax ("the vut") was passed, the City of Olympia has added many promised sidewalks, but has acquired only 60 acres of the 500 acres of promised parkland. Now, the City has the now-or-never opportunity to acquire 150 forested acres behind LBA Park for wildlife habitat and parkland. But the city has been using the money elsewhere (park maintenance and debt retirement mostly) and is ignoring the terms of the agreement: 2% for 500 acres.

It's a breach of faith and city residents need to speak out. Read the shocking report on the VUT misuse here.

Please write to the Olympia City Council and let them know you voted for the tax and/or that you are paying an extra 2% tax on your phone, gas, and electricity to help fund the purchase of the remaining 460 acres by 2024. Let them know that the LBA Woods would meet nearly a third of their stated goal. They owe it to us!

E-mail Olympia City Council

Send a single email to the Council's central email box: citycouncil@ci.olympia.wa.us. Your email sent to this address will be forwarded to all members of the  City Council.

Send e-mails to individual members. Click on Council-member name below to go to their biography page (hotlink contact at bottom of each page) or copy and paste the e-mail address  provided below.

  •  Stephen H. Buxbaum - Mayor   Email: sbuxbaum@ci.olympia.wa.us
  •  Steve Langer                              E-mail: slanger@ci.olympia.wa.us
  • Nathaniel Jones                          E-mail: njones@ci.olympia.wa.us
  • Cheryl Selby                                E-mail: cselby@ci.olympia.wa.us
  •  Julie Hankins                              E-mail: jhankins@ci.olympia.wa.us
  •  Jeannine Roe                              E-mail: jroe@ci.olympia.wa.us
  •  Jim Cooper                                 E-mail: jcooper@ci.olympia.wa.us

You can also write a letter or postcard and mail it to the Olympia City Council, PO Box 1967, Olympia, WA 98507-1967.

Please forward this post to fellow Olympians who might be interested in taking a few minutes to help use the 2% tax for protecting our forests and open spaces. 

The LBA Woods property is within the city limits, but would be used by many well-outside the city. We have more than 5,200 supporters within and outside the city. Everyone can write the city council to urge them to protect the LBA Woods as parkland--even if are not paying taxes in Olympia. Use the contact information above.

For more information on the efforts to Save the LBA Woods, click here.

Thank you!




In Conservation Tags LBA Woods
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The Forest Needs a Voice--Yours

October 12, 2014 Maria Mudd Ruth
The future of 150 acres of woods is at stake Tuesday night. Please be a voice or warm body to show your support for saving this forest at the City Council Meeting Tuesday, October 14, 7 p.m. City Council Chambers, 4th and Cherry St. downtown Olympia

The future of 150 acres of woods is at stake Tuesday night. Please be a voice or warm body to show your support for saving this forest at the City Council Meeting Tuesday, October 14, 7 p.m. City Council Chambers, 4th and Cherry St. downtown Olympia


The 150 acres surrounding LBA Park in Olympia is the last large forested area within Olympia and its Urban Growth Area not already a park.  The owners of the two parcels have expressed their willingness to sell, but unless the City of Olympia acts quickly to secure the woods, the developments planned for those parcels will proceed.    

The LBA Woods Park Coalition has gathered over 5,200 signatures of area residents asking the Olympia City Council to purchase the woods for a park before these woods are lost to housing developments.  The City’s Parks, Recreation, and Arts Advisory Committee voted to move forward to study the feasibility of purchasing the parcel as a city park.

LBA Woods are a true gem--an old-fashioned Commons of sorts in that the property is privately owned, though it is neither gated nor posted with no-trespassing signs or welcome signs. I believe many who visit the woods believe it is part of LBA Park. The community takes care of the woods and allows for multiple uses.

The woods have more than 4 miles of wooded trails through varied terrains, including mature conifer forest (a dozen or so trees over 36 inches diameter) and alder groves. Hundreds of people walk and run there.  It is especially popular for walking dogs, and the gentle slope trails are accessible to seniors.   Black Hills Audubon birders have identified fifty-eight bird species in the woods, including twenty-one species recently identified by the National Audubon Society as at-risk from climate change. The woods provide critical habitat--a refugia--for birds and wildlife that residents enjoy seeing in their yards and streets.

A significant body of new scientific research has shown that walking in larger forest parcels provides a number of surprising health benefits. Those benefits include: immune system boost, lower blood pressure, reduced stress, improved mood; increased ability to focus (even in children with ADHD), accelerated recovery from surgery or illness, increased energy level, improved sleep. 

The demand for open space forest trails will nearly double in the next 20 years.  Over that period, Olympia’s population is projected to increase 20,000 and Thurston County’s by 120,000.  This begs the question, if Olympia does not act now to secure the woods, where will the children play?  How will we address the nature-deficit disorder that will increasingly undermine our physical and mental health.

Funds exist to purchase the parcels.   In 2004, City residents approved the “voted utility tax” to raise about $2 million a year for parks until 2024. The voters’ pamphlet and the City mailer stated that the tax-generated park funds would be prioritized for park acquisition before the remaining lands are lost, and estimated the funds would acquire about 500 acres, mostly open space.  To date, the City has acquired only 51 acres. 

The City can use the park acquisition funds from the voted utility tax to finance purchase one of the 75-acre parcels ("Bentridge"), which is currently on the market for $6.5 million.   As Jane Kirkemo, the City Finance Director, has explained, the City could issue a bond anticipation note now to pay for the parcel, and pay off that note in 2016 when it sells a new round of general obligation bonds that would in turn be paid off using the voted utility tax revenues.

If the City supplements its bond funds supported by the utility tax with funds from other sources such as County conservation futures and state grant programs, the City would likely be able to purchase Trillium also by 2016.

The Save the LBA Woods effort is not about neighbors protecting 150 acres of woodland for their own private nature sanctuary. The LBA Woods Park Coalition has suggested creating a multi-use City Park, with the flat areas (now "old-growth" Scotsbroom) developed as much-needed soccer fields, an off-leash dog park, to complement the existing network of walking trails and dense woods.

Supporters of LBA Woods successfully lobbied the City Council to fund a suitability study of the property for use as a park. The 90-day study of teh LBA Woods and three other parcels . Shortly after the study is released in November, it is expected that the City Council will make a decision whether to proceed to buy either of the two LBA parcels.

If you want to help save the LBA woods and create LBA Woods Park, please write the City Council at citycouncil@ci.olympia.wa.us .

For more information or to sign the LBA Woods Park petition or to donate, please go to LBAWoodsPark.org .

This article has been provided by the LBA Woods Coalition, which I support, and tweaked by me.

Tags Forest Conservation
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Flying from Mountaineers Books this Spring—the story of the Pigeon Guillemot—the world’s most charismatic alcid. This non-fiction natural history will be on bookshelves and available from online retailers on April 7, 2026. Click a link below to pre-order a copy now from these purveyors:

Mountaineers Books (non-profit, indie publisher based in Seattle)

Browsers Books (Olympia’s indie bookstore)

Bookshop.org (support your local bookstore)

Barnes & Noble (in the book biz since 1971)

Amazon

Other Natural History Titles by Maria Mudd Ruth…

A Sideways Look at Clouds

 

“Compelling…engaging.” The Library Journal

“Rare insights into the trials and joys of scientific discovery.” Publishers Weekly

Read more reviews and details here: Rare Bird: Pursuing the Mystery of the Marbled Murrelet

Enjoy this song by Peter Horne, "Little Bird, Little Boat, Big Ocean.” Written about the Marbled Murrelet, but the lyrics work well for the Pigeon Guillemot, too.


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