SEPA
EPA-910-K-21-001
February 2021
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 10
www.epa.gov
EPA Geographic
Funding at Work on
Puget Sound Recovery
Prepared by:
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Region 10

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Contents
EPA Puget Sound Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery	1
Introduction	2
Purpose and Scope of this Document	3
EPA Puget Sound Funding	3
Highlights	5
Leveraging	5
Puget Sound Federal Task Force	7
Highlights	7
Shorelines Workgroup	7
Mud Mountain Dam Fish Passage	7
Native Olympia Oyster Seeds	7
Stormwater Research Collaborative - Reducing the Toxic Effects of Urban Stormwater	8
Fosteringthe Development of the Puget Sound Recovery "Science Enterprise"	10
U.S. - Canada Cooperation in the Salish Sea	11
Highlights	11
Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference	11
Health of Salish Sea Ecosystem Report	12
National Estuary Program - Puget Sound Partnership	13
Introduction	13
Highlights	13
Puget Sound Recovery Reporting Framework	13
Habitat Protection and Restoration	14
Tracking Implementation	15
Northwest Straits Commission	15
Tribal Partnerships and Trust Responsibilities	17
Highlights	18
Skokomish	18
Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe	19
Puyallup Tribe	20
Samish Indian Nation	20
Strategic Initiatives	21
Implementation Strategies	21

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Habitat Strategic Initiative	23
Highlights	24
Integrated Floodplain and Estuary Management	24
Shore Friendly	25
Prioritizing Coastal Streams and Embayments along Puget Sound Shores with the Railroad	26
Shellfish Strategic Initiative	27
Highlights	27
Net Increase in Commercial Shellfish Acreage	27
Pollution Identification and Correction: Supporting Local Government Efforts to Keep Pathogens out
of Shellfish Beds	28
Skagit County: Spotlight on Samish Bay	29
Whatcom County - Drayton Harbor	29
Kitsap County - Miller Bay	30
EPA Laboratory Support for Microbial Source Tracking	30
Stormwater Strategic Initiative	31
Highlights	31
Building Green Cities: Low Impact Development Guidance for Local Jurisdictions	31
Stormwater Chemical Characterization and Watershed Prioritization - University of Washington	32
Depave Puget Sound: Reimagining Overly Paved Spaces	33
Permeable Pavement Standards Based on Lessons Learned	34
Toxics in Fish and the Southern Resident Orca Task Force	34
Advancing Science for Puget Sound Ecosystem Recovery	35
Foundational Programmatic Science Support	35
Tribal Science Support	36
Science Teams, Work Groups, Science Initiatives, and Activities	36
Updating the Vital Signs for Puget Sound	37
Salish Sea Model (FY20)	38
Expandingthe Use of Structured Decision-Making	39
Looking Ahead	41
Contact Information	42

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EPA Puget Sound Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Executive Summary - February 2021
2021EPA/NEP Puget Sound Funding Model Structure (2021-2025)
UO Capacity Funding
4 Strain Commnvon funding
* PSP Base Grant
^ - '" ¦	victoria
The. Puget Sound NEP Atlas shares
INFORMATION ABOUT EPA INVESTMENTS
Puget Sound is an economic and cultural engine for the region's
more than 4.7 million people, including 19 federally recognized
tribes. Federal support of Puget Sound recovery comes from
many programs, most of which are administered by EPA, the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, U.S. Department of Interior, and the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
Since 2010, Congress has appropriated over $350 million in
Clean Water Act Section 320 funds for Puget Sound. Under
Section 320, EPA has provided National Estuary Program
(NEP) and Geographic Program funding and support to help
communities make on-the-ground improvements for clean
and safe water, protected and restored habitat, thriving species,
and a vibrant quality of life for all, while supporting local jobs.
EPA's work with the Puget Sound Partnership, state agencies,
tribes and other partners has supported important gains in
recovery. Results include, for example:
•	comprehensive regional plans to restore the Sound,
•	more than $1 billion leveraged for recovery,
•	partnerships with 19 federally recognized tribes,
•	transboundary collaboration with Canada,
•	scientific gains on toxic effects of urban stormwater, and,
•	since 2007, a net increase of harvestable shellfish beds
Looking ahead, EPA recognizes that more must be done to
achieve a healthy Puget Sound. To achieve positive trends, EPA
will continue to enhance Federal Task Force leadership,
including a new Action Plan for 2022-2026; cooperation with
Canada; fulfillment of National Estuary Program responsibilities,
includingthe approval of a new comprehensive management
plan for recovering Puget Sound (the Action Agenda); partnering
with tribes; funding and grants, including managing and
awarding up to $100 million in projects overthe next five years;
and scientific support.
The foundation is well-established, EPA is a vital partner, and,
ultimately, success will depend on the passion and perseverance
of the thousands of people who make up the collaborative effort
to protect and restore Puget Sound.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Introduction
A northwest icon, Puget Sound is an economic and cultural engine for the region's more than 4.7
million people, including 19 federally recognized tribes. Puget Sound - ancestral home to tribes
since time immemorial - has long been a hub of industry, a destination for tourists, a center for
academics, and home to generations of loggers, fishers, shippers, artists, and other trailblazers.
Whether you're on Double Bluff Beach on Whidbey Island, Olympia's Percival Landing, the
Deception Pass Bridge, or Seattle's Space Needle, you're presented with snow-capped, glaciated
mountains draped in evergreens.
That snow, those trees, countless creeks and wetlands, the perennial rains, and, yes, the
occasional sun shower continue to shape a remarkably diverse and productive ecosystem. This
stunning natural environment provides critical habitat for fish, birds, and marine species,
including many species of mammals such as harbor seals, porpoises, and the region's iconic
Orcas.
All of this beauty and richness helps make this region one of the fastest growing in the nation.
How do we protect and restore Puget Sound in the face of such rapid growth? A good start is
recognizing this region's collective sense of history, of culture, and of what we call "place." Many
people are passionate about Puget Sound and ready to help protect the remaining healthy places
and restore those where damage has occurred.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Congress recognize the unique natural, economic,
and cultural value of Puget Sound. The significant environmental progress that National Estuary
Program funds help deliver, in collaboration with our partners, is much-needed fuel for recovery
of Puget Sound.
Joint state and federal restoration attempts began in earnest in the 1980s. Since then, EPA
ecologists, engineers, biologists, and planners - in our offices in Seattle, Olympia, Washington,
D.C., and our labs in Manchester and Corvallis - have worked hand-in-hand with our partners
among federal agencies, tribes, state agencies, local governments, universities, businesses, and
non-profits to support research and restoration projects throughout the Puget Sound watershed.
The work is complex and demanding. Together we are making progress. This report tells the story
of EPA's recent work to seed and feed the protection and restoration of Puget Sound.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Purpose and Scope of this Document
This document presents an overview of EPA's work to protect and restore water quality and
ecological integrity in Puget Sound, it includes information on funding, program
accomplishments, and recent successes. By highlighting our work together, our aim is to provide
decision-makers and the public an overall view of our program and to reinforce the importance of
our collective efforts for recovery of one of the most important ecosystems in the country. Many
thanks to our Puget Sound restoration partners for the pictures, figures, tables, and other
information in this report. This report is not intended as a primary source or a formal financial
report.
EPA Puget Sound Funding
Federal support of Puget
Sound recovery comes from
many programs, most of which
are administered by EPA, the
National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration,
the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, U.S. Department
of Interior, and the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers.
Since 2010, Congress has
appropriated over $350 million
in Clean Water Act Section 320
funds for Puget Sound. Under
Section 320, EPA has used
National Estuary Program
(NEP) and Geographic Program funding to help communities make on-the-ground improvements
for stormwater, habitat, shellfish, flooding, water quality and quantity, and endangered species,
while supporting local jobs.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Puget Sound NEP/Geographic Program 2010-2020
Science Fun ding,
$43,921,902, 13%
Project and Prog ram
Implementation,
$208,152,328,59%
EPA Program Management and
Oversight, $13,779,800,4%
Strategic Planning/
Program
Development and
Management,
$85,077,492, 24%
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Puget Sound NEP and Geographic Program Budget (2015-2019)
2015	2016	2017	2018	2019
EPA NEP Base
$600,000
$600,000
$600,000
$600,000
$600,000
PSP Geographic
$5,592,800
$2,560,000
$2,941,000
$2,971,000
$3,054,229
PSP Implementation
Strategies


$1,250,021
$1,815,857
$1,900,000
WA Dept of Ecology
SIL

$5,200,000
$4,200,000
$4,200,000
$4,200,000
Ecology Watershed
LO
$5,490,000




Ecology
Toxics/Nutrients LO
$2,655,000




WA Dept of Health
SIL

$5,000,000
$4,200,000
$4,200,000
$4,200,000
Health Pathogens
LO
$2,675,000




WAFWD andDNRSIL

$5,200,000
$4,900,000
$4,900,000
$4,859,771
WA FW Marine
Nearshore LO
$2,681,000




NWIFC
$2,490,000
$4,000,000
$4,000,000
$4,000,000
$4,000,000
Tribal
Organizational
Capacity
$3,500,000
$3,700,000
$3,750,000
$3,697,963
$3,700,000
UW Puget Sound
Institute
$488,232
$625,000



Federal Interagency
Agreements
$1,242,268
$541,032
$1,610,765
$946,935
$995,000
EPA Programmatic
Contracts
$70,000
$0
$0
$91,764
$80,125
EPA
Staff/Operations
$976,700
$1,027,968
$1,002,214
$1,039,481
$873,875
Total
$28,461,000
$28,454,000
$28,454,000
$28,463,000
$28,463,000
Highlights
Leveraging1
EPA's National Estuary Program dollars seed other state, federal, local, and private sources to
fund the actions prioritized in the Puget Sound Action Agenda. We also work with the Puget
Sound Partnership and the Strategic Initiative Leads to turn our NEP funds into hundreds of
millions of dollars in additional support of Puget Sound recovery. For example, between 2014 and
2019, the Partnership played a primary role in leveraging an additional $412 million toward Action
1 Puget Sound National Estuary Program 2020 Evaluation
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Agenda implementation. During the same period, the Partnership worked with broader groups of
partners in securing a further $703 million for work supportive of the Action Agenda. This
included important infrastructure upgrades - committing a combined total of over $1.1 billion
toward Puget Sound recovery over that time.
Investing in natural resources and water infrastructure creates jobs. In fact, according to a 2010
study on employment impacts of forest and watershed restoration in Oregon,2 every $1 million
spent on watershed restoration results in an average of 16.7 new or sustained jobs, and $2.2-$2.5
million in total economic activity. That means, for the 2014-2019 period, Puget Sound funding
likely resulted in over 16,000 new or sustained jobs in the region.
These investments are a boon to local economies: 80 percent of funds invested in restoration
projects stay in the county where the projects are located, providing needed economic and
environmental benefits in more rural and financially distressed counties.
2 Nielsen-Pincus and Moseley, 2010. Economic and Employment Impacts of Forest and Watershed Restoration in
Oregon. University of Oregon: Ecosystem Workforce Program, Working Paper Number 24.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Puget Sound Federal Task Force
On September 30, 2016, nine federal agencies and cabinet departments signed a Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU) creating the Puget Sound Federal Task Force. This was an update and
renewal of an existing 2008 MOU. The signatories - with EPA's leadership as national co-chair with
the White House Council on Environmental Quality and regional co-chair with NOAA Fisheries
West Coast Region - developed a five-year Action Plan (FY2017-2021). This Action Plan provided a
shared federal vision of a healthy and sustainable Puget Sound ecosystem and a blueprint for
leveraging federal agencies and resources on a targeted suite of priorities.
Highlights
Shorelines Workgroup
The state/federal Shorelines Workgroup is exploring solutions for tackling barriers associated
with the federal permitting process for habitat restoration and beach stabilization projects that
include soft shore approaches. Out of this work, and as a directive under the Shoreline Armoring
Implementation Strategy, a Multi-Agency Review Team (MART) was established in 2018 under an
EPA Puget Sound grant. The MART seeks to pilot streamlined permitting approaches and
promotion of marine habitat restoration projects. This work will increase certainty, improve the
permitting process, and reduce costs for landowners while incentivizingfish friendly projects.
Mud Mountain Dam Fish Passage
The Army Corps of Engineers began the Mud Mountain Dam fish passage project in June of 2018.
The project is designed for 95 percent survival of salmon smolts traveling downstream past the
dam. Once completed, up to 60,000 fish, including ESA-listed species, will be moved upriver daily
- making it the largest trap-and-haul facility in the country.
Native Olympia Oyster Seeds
The Puget Sound Restoration Fund and NOAA's Ken Chew Center produced over 4.9 million native
Olympia oyster seeds. The seeds were spread at priority restoration sites, including Drayton
Harbor, a newly reclassified upgraded shellfish growing area in northern Puget Sound.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Storm water Research Collaborative - Reducing the Toxic Effects of Urban
Storm water
Urban stormwater runoff has become the foremost water
quality threat to aquatic habitats in Puget Sound. Human
population growth continues to drive development and
land conversion in coastal watersheds. Increased
development reduces opportunity for water to filter
through vegetation and soils, increasing the loading of
toxic chemicals in stormwater runoff and into Puget
Sound. This can have extensive negative impacts on the
health and survival of salmon, as well as the levels of
contaminants in both freshwater and marine food webs.
Over the last decade, EPA has supported a collaboration
among National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the
Washington State Stormwater Center. The Puget Sound
Stormwater Science Team (PSSST) consists of
researchers and students from NOAA's Northwest
Fisheries Science Center, USFWS, WFWO, WSU's Puyallup
Research & Extension Center, and UW-Tacoma's Center
for Urban Waters.
EPA-supported collaborative research on stormwater and
toxics reduction strategies have shown that:
Rain gardens at the Washington Stormwater
Center on WSU's Puyallup Campus
Members of the Puget Sound Stormwater
SCIENCETEAM TESTING AGREEN STORMWATER
technology: compost-amended bioswales.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
•	Motor vehicles are major sources of
toxic contaminants in roadway runoff
routinely discharged to streams, rivers,
lakes, and nearshore marine habitats;
•	There are thousands of distinct
chemicals in urban stormwater, and the
toxicological impacts of most remain
poorly understood;
•	Coho salmon are sensitive to untreated
stormwater, which consistently causes
mass mortality events that vary in
severity across a gradient of
urbanization in Puget Sound;
•	The urban mortality syndrome poses a
threat to other threatened salmonid
species, including Puget Sound
steelhead;
•	Toxic threats to aquatic habitats scale
in proportion to pavement and other
impervious surfaces within large
watersheds (e.g., the Snohomish River
Basin), a basis for prioritizing green
infrastructure mitigation efforts;
•	Common petroleum-derived
compounds in stormwater are also found in crude oil (e.g., the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill)
and cause nearly identical developmental defects in the embryos of herring and other
shore-spawning marine forage fish;
•	Conventional green infrastructure methods involving bio-infiltration effectively remove
pollutants and reduce or eliminate toxic impacts to salmon, forage fish, and invertebrates.
Overall, the ongoing stormwater science in Puget Sound is defining the nature and extent of toxic
threats to salmon and other priority species, identifying practical solutions for local communities,
engaging the public (including underrepresented populations), and informing adaptive responses
to the dynamic and shared conservation goals of the Federal Task Force. As an example of
outreach, the PSSST created a story map that describes research on stormwater and Puget Sound
salmon, with materials to support local citizen science and access to the team's most recent
publications.3
15
DaHinffuim.

e
Predicted
mortality
< 10%
10-40%
>40%
T*C«VT>£


Predicted levels of Pre-Spawn Coho Salmon
Mortality across Puget Sound Watersheds
d https://fws.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=5cid4a36a2a514Sa28376a0b81726a9a4
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Fostering the Development of the Puget Sound Recovery "Science Enterprise"
Through participation and leadership roles in the Puget Sound Federal Task Force Science and
Monitoring Work Group, the Puget Sound Partnership Science Panel, and the Puget Sound
Ecosystem Monitoring Program, the EPA Puget Sound Team is supporting needed prioritization,
coordination and leveraging among many organizations and programs that provide science and
monitoring support for Puget Sound ecosystem recovery. The benefits include a more robust
conceptual basis for Puget Sound recovery, better prioritization of needed science and
monitoring, improved leveraging of programs and resources across partners, increased and more
effective collaborations, and leaps in innovative approaches.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
U.S. - Canada Cooperation in the Salish Sea
The U.S. and Canadian federal governments have a
unique responsibility to address transboundary
environmental challenges of our shared Salish Sea
ecosystem (including Puget Sound).
In 2000, EPA and Environment and Climate Change
Canada signed a Joint Statement of Cooperation
that commits us to work collaboratively to achieve
our common goals. This agreement calls for our
two agencies to develop and periodically update
action plans to achieve the goals outlined in the
Statement of Cooperation. The Action Plans are
developed and implemented through a Working
Group that includes representation from federal,
state, and indigenous partners in the Salish Sea
region.
The 2017-20 Action Plan focuses on:
Promoting information exchange and
coordination, including the Health of the
Salish Sea Ecosystem Report and the Salish
Sea Ecosystem Conference.
Supporting coordination and information sharing at the tribal/First Nation,
state/provincial, and federal levels.
Support information sharing activities relating to major federal initiatives and
environmental assessments.
Highlights
Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference4
Recognizing the importance of scientific exchange and dialogue with resource managers and
public officials, thirteen organizations co-sponsored the first Puget Sound Research Conference
in April 1988. Fifteen years later the event grew - with support from the EPA and Environment and
Climate Change Canada - into an international conference occurring every other year and
alternating between venues in Seattle and Vancouver.
4 https://cpb-us-el.wprnucdn.eom/wp.wwu.edu/dist/l/2658/files/2019/05/2020-SSEC-One-Pager.pdf
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Now known as the Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference, the event brings together about fifteen
hundred scientists, First Nations and tribal government representatives, resource managers,
community and business leaders, knowledge holders, and policy makers. The conference has
become the premier scientific research and policy gathering in the Pacific Northwest.
Health of Salish Sea Ecosystem Report
The Health of the Salish Sea Ecosystem Report is one of the significant accomplishments
stemming from the Statement of Cooperation and Working Group meetings. This report is a key
part of tracking progress in Salish Sea ecosystem management, identifying priorities, and
facilitating opportunities for cross-border collaboration.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
National Estuary Program - Puget Sound
Partnership
Introduction^
Under Section 320 of the 1987 Clean Water Act (CWA) Amendments, Congress recognizes Puget
Sound as an estuary of national significance and the Puget Sound Partnership as the state lead
for the Puget Sound National Estuary Program. Section 320 of the CWA calls for each National
Estuary Program (NEP) to develop and implement a Comprehensive Conservation and
Management Plan (CCMP) to protect and restore water quality and ecological integrity, with
support from the Environmental Protection Agency. The Puget Sound NEP's approved CCMP is
the Action Agenda for Puget Sound.
To develop and implement the Action Agenda, the Partnership uses a 'collective impact'
approach. Collective impact is an approach to large-scale change in which groups of people
contribute and commit to a common agenda to solve a specific problem.
The Partnership's role in achieving collective impact is to serve as the backbone organization for
the recovery community. As the backbone organization, the Partnership supports a wide range of
groups to work together by:
•	Charting a course for science-informed recovery.
•	Maintaining the shared measurement and monitoring infrastructure that enables
learning and continuous improvement.
•	Mobilizing funding for recovery actions, helping to remove barriers to implementation,
and educating key decision makers.
•	Improving coordination between Local Integrating Organizations and Lead Entities.
•	Incorporating the Salmon Common Indicators into the Vital Signs and Progress Measures
Framework.
•	Developing shared workplans among the Boards including the Ecosystem Coordination
Boards and Salmon Recovery Council.
Highlights
Puget Sound Reco very Reporting Frame work6
Since 2018, the Partnership has been leading an effort to develop a comprehensive framework for
tracking and reporting on Puget Sound health and progress toward ecosystem recovery.
5	Puget Sound National Estuary Program 2020 Evaluation
6	Puget Sound National Estuary Program 2020 Evaluation
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
PUGET SOUND RECOVERY REPORTING FRAMEWORK
IMPLEMENTATION RESOURCES
& IMMEDIATE RESULTS
INTERMEDIATE RESULTS &
OTHER DRIVERS
RECOVERY &
HUMAN WELL-BEING GOALS
%
Effectiveness Assessments
(evaluation of recovery activities
(activities & programs) to
understand relative effectiveness
of suites of activities)
Activity Progress Measures
Activity-scale Reporting
(funding (activities & programs) & progress (status & effects)
to understand resourcesused to achieve NTA-specific Progress
Measures)
implementation
Intermediate Progress Measures
Social and natural process program reporting
(monitoringto understand changes in processes
& pressure sources and stressors)
IS'
Ultimate Outcome
Measures
Vital Signs Reporting
ecosystem health monitoring
understand status and trend
Intense Research
Monitoring
(targeted project and
program monitoringthat
informs reporting)
Effecti venes
Status & Trend
D irect Control &
Immediate Response
ATTRIBUTION & RESPONSE TIME
Indirect Control &
Delayed Response
The Puget Sound Recovery Reporting Framework defines three specific types of measures:
•	Activity Progress Measures that inspire and demonstrate activity contributions towards
Vital Sign targets;
•	Intermediate Progress Measures that establish a common understanding of drivers
causing changes to Vital Signs; and
•	Ultimate Outcome Progress Measures (aka Vital Signs and indicators) that reflect the
health of the Puget Sound ecosystem and human well-being.
Combined with results from intensive research and monitoring, the Partnership will use
information from these three types of measures to assess the effectiveness of activities, track
progress toward reducing critical barriers and pressures, and make decisions about how to invest
in management actions.7
Habitat Protection and Restoration
The Puget Sound NEP reports the number of habitat acres they have protected and/or restored
with their partners annually to EPA. These reports describe the projects, specify the habitat types,
indicate the protection activity/restoration technique/approaches, and identify the lead
implementers along with supporting data.
7 Puget Sound National Estuary Program 2020 Evaluation
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Since 2006, the Puget Sound NEP has reported the restoration or permanent protection of over
56,000 acres - over 87 square miles - of aquatic and contributing shoreline habitats.8
2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018
2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 2019
Tracking Implementation
Starting in 2019, the Partnership began tracking CCMP implementation through the newly
developed Action Agenda Tracker. The Tracker allows implementers, funders, decision makers,
and the public to track Puget Sound recovery actions, and helps tell stories about the work,
investments, and accomplishments of the broad community of organizations and individuals
dedicated to Puget Sound recovery. Prior to the 2018 Action Agenda, the Partnership tracked
implementation using Report Cards (see the archives for 2012.2014 and 2016).9
Northwest Straits Commission
The Northwest Straits Commission leverages EPA Puget Sound funds to catalyze and empower
local communities to participate in marine conservation and restoration. By design, the
Commission brings diverse interests together to protect and restore marine waters, habitats, and
species in Puget Sound to achieve ecosystem health and sustainable resource use. This work is
8	To view these annual habitat acre totals by habitat types, see NEP map at: https://gispub2.epa.gov/NEPmap/
9	Puget Sound National Estuary Program 2020 Evaluation
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
done by active Marine Resources Committees. Established through the congressionally
authorized Northwest Straits Marine Conservation Initiative, Marine Resources Committees are
county-based committees of volunteers appointed by their local elected officials who address
local threats to the marine environment, complementing the efforts of existing authorities.10
Marine Resources Committees commit over 12,000 hours of conservation action in Puget Sound
each year. Marine Resources Committees have added nearly three million Olympia oyster seeds
to recover Puget Sound's only native oyster, monitored over 30 forage fish spawning sites to help
understand the complex life-cycle of these key prey species, and served in non-partisan advisory
roles to their local governments on marine issues ranging from non-native finfish aquaculture to
marine spatial planning. Marine Resources Committees bolster the region's stewardship ethic by
organizing community education events on topics most pressing to Puget Sound, such as sea
level rise and actions individuals can take to help our endangered Southern Resident Killer Whale.
Through the Northwest Straits Commission, partnerships are prioritized to achieve collaborative
conservation. For example, thanks to the support of EPA and the Puget Sound Partnership, the
Northwest Straits Commission is coordinating with Washington Sea Grant, WDFW, and local
communities to trap and remove the invasive European Green Crab in north Puget Sound. This
work is a testament to the Commission's ability to mobilize quickly in the face of emerging issues.
10 https://nwstraitsfoyndation.org/project/marine-resoyrceS"
committees/#:~:text=Established%20through%20the%20congressionally%20authorized.complementing%20th
e%20efforts%20of%20existing
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Tribal Partnerships and Trust Responsibilities
EPA's partnership with Puget Sound tribes
includes active engagement with individual tribes
and tribal consortia, as well as two funding
streams for federally recognized tribes: Tribal
Capacity Funding and the Tribal Implementation
Award. Tribal Capacity Funding supports tribal
participation in regional coordination boards and
management conferences, as well as recovery
activities consistent with the Action Agenda. The
Tribal Implementation Lead Award, led by the
Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission, facilitates
projects of high tribal priority that are consistent
with the Action Agenda. In 2019, as in all other
years of the Puget Sound Tribal Capacity Program,
tribes have used EPA funding to support nearly 20
full-time technical positions dedicated to
protecting and restoring Puget Sound habitats and
resources critically important to tribes.
EPA recognizes the right of tribes as sovereign
governments to self-determination and
acknowledges the Federal government's trust responsibility to tribes.11 EPA also recognizes the
importance of respecting tribal treaty rights and its obligation to do so.12
Since time immemorial, the tribes of Puget Sound have managed their ancestral homelands and
abundant natural resources in accordance with their tribal values and teachings. Because their
livelihoods and cultural identities are at stake, tribes are on the front lines of Puget Sound
recovery and are committed to protecting culturally important resources such as salmon and
protecting and restoring the ecological integrity of Puget Sound to sustain these resources.
Federally Recognized Tribes of the
greater Puget Sound Basin sefa
11	See EPA Policy for the Administration of Environmental Programs on Indian Reservations, signed in 1984,
which remains the cornerstone for EPA's tribal program
12	See EPA Policy on Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribes: Guidance for DiscussingTribal Treaty
Rights
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Tribes are leaders in Puget Sound recovery and
indispensable partners who have made substantial
investments in recovery efforts. Tribes contribute
traditional knowledge of natural resources gained
over thousands of years. They also offer significant
contributions to the body of science that can shape
recovery efforts, employing experts who conduct
research, monitoring, and evaluation. Tribes
develop and implement strategic programs that
connect science with policy and action, which have
contributed to hundreds of successful recovery
projects.
Highlights
Skokomish
"I DON'T BELIEVE IN MAGIC. I BELIEVE IN THE
SUN AND THE STARS, THE WATER, THE TIDES,
THE FLOODS, THE OWLS, THE HAWKS FLYING,
THE RIVER RUNNING, THE WIND TALKING.
They're measurements. They tell us how
HEALTHY THINGS ARE. HOW HEALTHY WE ARE.
Because we and they are the same.
That's what I believe in." - Billy Frank,
Jr.
EPA funds have also supported the tribe in leading
research efforts to characterize the ecosystem response
to the collaborative work to restore the Skokomish River
estuary. They have used EPA funds to, for example, gather
10 years' worth of post estuary restoration monitoring
data, including data on fish response.
For the past decade, the tribe has used EPA funding to
support planning and implementing school focused
education outreach events, and planning, designing, and
implementing on-the-ground restoration projects.13
13 For example, completing the Weaver and Purdy Creeks channel reconnection project, the Upper South Fork
channel/floodplain assessment and large woody debris design, the Bourgault Farm overflow channel
assessment and design, the Skokomish Valley Road relocation design, and the South Fork canyon fish
passage/barrier assessment
Over the past decade, the Skokomish Tribe has used EPA Puget Sound funding to support its local
and regional leadership roles, and local implementation of Puget Sound recovery projects. In
terms of leadership roles, for example, in 2007 the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission
member tribes recommended Dave Herrera, the Skokomish Natural Resources Policy Advisor, as
one of three tribal representatives to the Puget Sound Management Conference's Ecosystem
Coordination Board. The ECB is a 27-rnernber board
appointed by the Governor which advises the Leadership
Council and Puget Sound Partnership.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
The Skokomish Tribe Natural Resources Department envisions the Skokomish tribal community
having a thriving and healthy natural environment with abundant populations offish, wildlife,
and other resources; this is to sustain the cultural and spiritual identity of the community, in
addition to providing economic stability for present and future generations. The Department
works to protect Skokomish treaty rights through effective management that will preserve and
enhance the natural and cultural resources of the Tribe and will perpetuate the tribal fisheries
resources for this and future generations. In fulfilling its mission, the Department has formed
strong relationships and roles within the local and regional communities over many years and
collaborates with many partners.
The tribe's leadership and collaborations within
these forums have contributed to the development of
the Skokomish River Ecosystem Restoration
Project14. In September 2019, that project met a
major milestone when the Project Partnership
Agreement was signed by representatives from the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Skokomish Indian
Tribe, Mason County, and the Washington
Department of Natural Resources. This agreement
signifies the transition into the construction phase of
this approximately $22.1 million cost-share project.
The project aims to restore a total of 277 acres in the
Skokomish River Basin, including habitat critical for
Endangered Species Act (ESA)-iisted Chinook and
chum salmon, key food sources for southern
resident orca whales.
Limited channel capacity in the Skokomish
River leads to frequent flooding, causing
FISH STRANDING AND MORTALITY
Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe
Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe's project has two
components: acquisition and restoration of high priority
Durigeness River floodplain, and protection of
subsistence and commercial shellfish fisheries through
monitoring. EPA Puget Sound funding has contributed to
the tribe's effort, in 2019, to partner with multiple
agencies and entities fighting the European green crab
invasion. The source populations of European green
crabs that appear to have spread to Puget Sound need to
be eradicated. Many areas have not yet been surveyed for
the presence of green crabs. An invasion of European
14 https://www.nws.usace.army.mil/Missions/Civil-Works/Programs-and-Projects/Projects/Skokomish-River-
Basin/
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Green crabs could threaten the existence our native crabs that generate billions of dollars in
revenue around the Salish Sea.
Puyallup Tribe
With the help of EPA Puget Sound funds, the Puyallup Tribe is evaluating existing geomorphologic
and habitat conditions within Chambers Creek. The work includes creating a conceptual design
to restore habitat function along an approximately 3.4-mile-long creek corridor. The tribe is
also coordinating with the technical work group which is overseeing the feasibility study for the
Chambers Dam removal near the mouth of Chambers Creek.
Samish Indian Nation
In the past six years, the Samish Indian Nation Department of Natural Resources - in partnership
with the Washington State Department of Natural Resources, Washington Conservation Corps,
Veterans Corps, and EarthCorps - have removed over 767,000 pounds of treated wood and other
marine debris from public and private shorelines of Skagit County, southern Whatcom County,
and the San Juan Islands. Materials collected include creosote-treated wood and other debris
that wash onto beaches and into lagoons and estuaries. Work also includes removing structures
that line the nearshore and no longer serve a purpose. The tribe continues to survey and clean up
islands in Samish traditional territory.15
15 For more information, see: https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/907423ba45d34395b769dbldbd061502
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Strategic Initiatives
The EPA/NEP Puget Sound Funding Model (2016-2020) targets areas of high priority in Puget
Sound around three Strategic initiatives within the Action Agenda.
The three Strategic Initiatives are led by state agencies which convene advisory groups of policy
and technical experts. The groups determine which projects from the Action Agenda are the best
fit for sub-awards that prioritize near-term recovery.
EPAstaff work with Strategic Initiative Leads, the Puget Sound Partnership, and other key Puget
Sound recovery partners to:
•	Propose regional recovery and protection priorities to the Puget Sound management
community
•	Coordinate with regional, tribal, and local partners to improve and adaptively manage
Puget Sound strategic planning processes
•	Collaborate to address issues that affect all three Strategic Initiatives (cross-cutting
issues)
•	Establish the key sequences of actions to lead from present conditions to long-term goals
(see Implementation Strategies)
•	Solicit, identify, review, and prioritize local and regional Near-Term Actions
•	Manage sub-awards to local, tribal, state, county, non-governmental organizations, and
academic institutions to carry out a wide variety of projects, assessments, and monitoring
Implementation Strategies
Implementation Strategies, which are developed with EPA funding and led by several state agencies
with cooperation from a multitude of partners, are plans for achieving specific ecosystem targets
for the Puget Sound.
21

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Implementation Strategies describe the sequence of steps, activities, and results needed to move
closer to a recovery goal; help Puget Sound recovery partners decide what to prioritize in the
Action Agenda; and help the Strategic Initiative Advisory Teams evaluate and recommend which
projects to support with EPA Geographic Funds. Aligning work and ongoing programs with the
strategies helps the entire Puget Sound community make the greatest progress toward recovery
goals.
The EPA has funded collaborative processes to develop the following Implementation Strategies:
Shellfish Beds, Land Development and Land Cover, Floodplains, Shoreline Armoring, Chinook,
Freshwater Quality, Toxics in Fish, and Eelgrass (recovery strategy).
2.2.

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Habitat Strategic Initiative
From 2016-2020, the Habitat
Strategic Initiative has
allocated over $20 million in
EPA funds towards NearTerm
Actions that accelerate habitat
protection and restoration.
EPA funding and the Habitat
Strategic Initiative have
contributed to thousands of
acres of restored or
permanently protected aquatic
and shoreline habitats.
Land
Development
and Cover
Ch'nook
Human
Activities
Pressures
Primary Focus
Approximate investment allocations by Vital Sign and pressures to
habitats (2016-2020)
F lo odp tains and Shoreline
Estuaries Armoring
Protecting and restoring
habitat is fundamental
because, within the last two
centuries, approximately 70
percent of important nearshore
habitats are estimated to have
been damaged or lost. Over 60 percent of the floodplain areas in the 17 major rivers of Puget
Sound have impaired or lost floodplain function related to constrained river flow and non-natural
land cover. Puget Sound lost at least two-thirds of its remaining old growth forest, more than 90
percent of its native prairies, and 80 percent of its marshes.16 Finally, 29 percent of shorelines
have been armored, disrupting the natural process of erosion which maintains our beaches and
creates habitat for many other species.
The Habitat Strategic Initiative invests in projects that
advance four key areas: estuaries, floodplains, land
development and cover, and shoreline armoring.
The Habitat Strategic Initiative is co-led by the Washington
State Department of Fish & Wildlife (WDFW)
and Washington State Department of Natural Resources
(DNR). Support is provided by the Washington State
Department of Commerce.
' https://vitalsigns.pugetsoundinfo.wa.gov/VitalSign/Detail/15
23

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Highlights
Integrated Flood plain and Estuary Management
In 2012, the National Estuary Program invested
$800,000 to improve floodplain management in
the region by supporting The Nature
Conservancy's creation of the regional
Floodplains by Design initiative. In 2016, the
Habitat Strategic Initiative further invested
$500,000 in the Nature Conservancy to support
the acceleration of integrated floodplain
management including developing a five-year
vision, supporting network expansion, and
developing the capacity of floodplain leaders to
communicate about integrated floodplain
management. Floodplains by Design is now
funded by the state at a $20 million per biennium
level.
One of the goals of the EPA National Estuary
Program is to use funds to pilot or stimulate
innovative and collaborative work across
geographic scales, and to transition those
projects to alternative funding sources once
proven successful. The Floodplains by Design
network is an example of this.
Overall, these continuing efforts to build and coordinate regional and local integrated floodplain
management programs have resulted in the re-connection of thousands of acres of floodplain
and the restoration of hundreds of miles of riverine processes.
24

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Shore Friendly
Bulkheads arid rock seawalls are intended to
protect waterfront properties from natural
erosion processes at beaches and intertidal
areas - some of the most ecologically
important habitats in Puget Sound. About 29
percent of Puget Sound shorelines have been
armored in this way, resulting in a significant
impact on beach and intertidal biodiversity
and ecological balance.
Before (2017) and during construction
(2018)
The Shore Friendly program was developed in
2014 with support from EPA Puget Sound
funds. The program encourages landowners to
forgo or remove shoreline armoring to help
protect and restore important shoreline
habitats, and in the last few years some
remarkable projects have made significant
improvements.
After the initial investment in five local pilot-
programs, 2016 EPA Puget Sound funds
provided additional support to two of the pilot
programs. The Shoreline Armoring
Implementation Strategy prioritized the
creation of a sustainable funding pathway for
local Shore Friendly programs. The Habitat
Strategic Initiative collaborated with the Puget
Sound Partnership and Kitsap County to lead a
workshop for the Management Conference. As
a result, the Ecosystem Coordination Board
requested that WDFW ask the legislature for
ongoing state funds to support the
continuation of these types programs through
the Estuary and Salmon Restoration Program
(ESRP). ESRP officially adopted the Shore
Friendly program.
After (2020)
Shore Friendly Kitsap Testimonial:
"My dream was that my beach would be
restored to a natural habitat for wildlife and
PEOPLE TO ENJOY. The project totally met what
I HAD DREAMED OF HAPPENING." -LEE DERROR
Since 2014 over 1,300 landowners have participated in Shore Friendly workshops or
presentations, nearly 500 have received on-site assistance, and 3,204 linear feet of shoreline
armor have been removed. Local Shore Friendly programs are now active in each Puget Sound
county.
25

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Prioritizing Coastal Streams and Embayments along Puget Sound Shores with
the Railroad
With 2017 EPA Puget Sound funds and in-kind services
from the Tulalip Tribe, this effort identified and
assessed stream crossings and embayments associated
with the BNSF right-of-way along the shore of the Salish
Sea.
The goal of this project was to develop a prioritization
framework that evaluates the relative benefit to
juvenile Chinook salmon of restoring stream access
from coastal waters impacted by the presence of the
railroad.
The project team, led by Confluence Environmental
Company, in association with Environmental Science
Associates, Coastal Geologic Services, and the Tulalip Tribes, combined field data with available
remotely-collected data sets. They assembled a geodatabase covering nearly 200 stream mouths
that cross the railroad within 200 feet of the marine shoreline as well as 13 embayments.
The team then developed an evaluation framework to characterize the following:
•	The likelihood of use by juvenile Chinook salmon, and
•	The quality of habitat to support non-natal rearing by juvenile Chinook salmon.
The process generated a prioritization list that can help inform restoration of sites along the
railroad right-of-way. The project was guided by an advisory team which included state, county,
and non-profit organization staff, as well as active participation from BNSF.
26

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Shellfish Strategic Initiative
The EPA-furided Shellfish Strategic Initiative aims to protect
and restore shellfish beds by reducing fecal bacteria and
pathogens in waterways that flow to shellfish growing areas.
Project funding supports planning and research, as well as
components of pollution identification and correction (PIC)
programs. PIC programs include water quality monitoring,
education and outreach, technical assistance, financial
incentives, agriculture best management practice
implementation, and regulatory compliance.
Fecal bacteria from human and animal waste can pollute
water and lead to shellfish harvest closures. Preventable
bacteria pollution sources include improperly managed farm
animal manure, unmanaged pet waste, failing septic
systems, sewer cross connections, and human waste from Samish Bay Geoduck bed
boaters and other recreationalists.
The Shellfish Strategic Initiative Lead is the Washington State Department of Health in
partnership with the Washington State Department of Ecology and Washington State Department
of Agriculture.
Highlights
Net Increase in Commercial Shellfish Acreage
EPA funds have supported local water quality staff throughout Puget Sound and helped protect
159,288 acres of shellfish beds so they can be safe to harvest. EPA funds helped restore 13,529
ares of shellfish beds, resulting in a net increase in 6,418 acres of harvestable Puget Sound
shellfish beds since 2007. A net increase of harvestable shellfish beds is particularly notable given
increasing population and development across the region.
Protecting and restoring shellfish areas is important to Puget Sound's rural economy. Each acre
of commercial Pacific oyster beds produces between $10,000 and $20,000 per year. Shellfish
harvest contributes roughly $180 million to Washington State's economy per year, and 3,200
direct and indirect jobs.17 And, shellfish are an essential food source and treaty-protected
resource for Puget Sound tribes.
Shellfish beds are protected and restored through the creation of shellfish protection districts,
development and implementation of closure response plans, effective PIC programs, on-site
17 According to the Washington Shellfish initiative
27

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
sewage system management plans, agricultural best management practices, and control of
boaters' waste.
I Upgrades	Downgrades	Cumulative Net Change
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2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Year
EPA's Puget Sound National Estuary Program
Shellfish Strategic Initiative has been instrumental in
supporting PIC programs in all 12 Puget Sound
counties.
PIC programs survey watersheds and offer education,
technical, and financial assistance to help community
members manage septic systems, farm animal
manure, pet waste, urban wildlife, and
boater/recreationalist waste to prevent pollution to
waterways.
PIC programs are an important tool for local partners
to protect and restore shellfish beds and protect
people from water-borne pathogens.
Whatcom Conservation District in
support of the Whatcom Clean Water
Program(PIC)
Pollution Identification and Correction: Supporting Local Government Efforts
to Keep Pathogens out of Shellfish Beds
28

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Skagit County: Spotlight on Samish Bay
EPA supports the Skagit PIC program arid the Clean
Samish Initiative - a coalition of local, state, tribal,
federal, and shellfish industry partners - to improve
water quality in Samish Bay. Samish Bay is a 4,000-
acre commercial shellfish growing area. Along with
other Puget Sound counties, the Skagit PIC program
uses innovative methods - including a sewage sniffing
dog - to find and fix sources of fecal pollution. EPA's
Manchester Laboratory is partnering with the county
to perform microbial source tracking analysis to help
narrow down sources contributing to fecal bacteria
contamination trouble spots. All this work is making a
difference: bacteria levels in the Samish River
watershed have been reduced by 60 percent since
2011.
Whatcom County - Drayton Harbor
Skagit County Public Works
WORKING WITH A SEWAGE SNIFFING
DOG TO LOCATE LEAKING ONSITE
SEWAGE SYSTEMS.
With the support of EPA Puget Sound funds, Drayton Habor landowners have fenced farm animals
out of waterways; created protected heavy use and manure storage areas to better manage
pastures, manure, and mud; fixed leaky onsite sewage systems; and picked up pet waste.
Those efforts are paying off. On October 22,
2019, the Washington State Department of
Health removed harvest restrictions on 765
acres in Drayton Harbor for commercial
shellfish harvest. The 765 acres is in addition to
a classification upgrade of 810 acres of shellfish
growing area in Drayton Harbor in December
2016.
These recent upgrades followed 21 years of Drayton Harbor (Rick Beauregard)
work by partners throughout the watershed,
including the City of Blaine, Whatcom County, Whatcom Conservation District, the Puget Sound
Restoration Fund, and the Washington Departments of Agriculture, Ecology, and Health to reduce
fecal bacteria pollution from freshwater creeks and other human-influenced sources surrounding
the harbor.
29

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Kitsap County - Miller Bay
EPA Puget Sound funds have
contributed to Kitsap
County's efforts to find and fix
sources of fecal bacteria
pollution that have impacted
shellfish beds, including Miller
Bay, a historically important
shellfish harvest area for the
Suquamish Tribe.
C3 Flay
Miller Bay Growiog Ares . ,	C3 Miter Say
Current ClatottnlkM*	r r-*~nu
Milter Bay Growing Area
Kitsap County's PIC
program staff conduct
records reviews, field
inspections, and
sampling/dye testing to verify
septic system issues and help
correct confirmed septic system failures. Over the last few years, they've spoken to almost every
home and agricultural property owner about best management practices to make sure fecal
bacteria don't enter the water. EPA also funds the Kitsap Conservation District, which provides
technical assistance and funding to help agricultural landowners employ best management
practices.
Because of measurable water quality improvements, the Department of Health has determined it
is safe to upgrade the harvesting status of 236 acres of Miller Bay from "prohibited" to
"approved."
EPA Laboratory Support for Microbial Source Tracking
EPA Region 10's Manchester Environmental Laboratory
provides important scientific support through microbial
source tracking for counties' Pollution Identification and
Correction programs. For example, the lab recently completed
a microbial source tracking analysis of all the fecal bacteria-
impaired streams in Kitsap County to shed light on sources of
pathogens in hotspots.
Water quality teams sample streams and ditches and use DNA
analysis methods to help evaluate whether the fecal bacteria
are more likely from dogs, humans, cattle, or other animals.
This information sheds light on trouble spots, and helps the
counties hone their management actions (e.g., whether to
focus on onsite sewage systems or pet waste).
Microcentrifuge tubes at the EPA
LAB CONTAINING THE EXTRACTED,
PURIFIED DNA FROM MST SAMPLES
(Stephanie Bailey)
30

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Stormwater Strategic Initiative
EPA's stormwater funding aims to prevent pollution from getting into stormwater by educating
planners and builders, and implementing a holistic watershed approach to stormwater
management. EPA's stormwater funding has led to scientific advances to characterize the
thousands of chemicals in stormwater, which products leach phthalates, and what chemicals are
emitted from our cars' tires and fluids. These scientific advances will enable more targeted policy
action.
The Stormwater Strategic Initiative is led by the Washington State Department of Ecology, in
partnership with the Washington Stormwater Center at Washington State University and
the Washington State Department of Commerce.
Highlights
Building Green Cities: Low Impact Development Guidance for Local
Jurisdictions
EPA Puget Sound funds enabled the Washington
State Department of Commerce and Puget Sound
Regional Council to create and provide guidance
and tools for local jurisdictions. This guidance
helps local jurisdictions incentivize developers to
incorporate more Low Impact Development in
their projects than is required by municipal
stormwater regulations.
The Building Green Cities guidebook is intended
for municipal staff, specifically those involved in
permitting, stormwater management, green
infrastructure, and incentive programs. The
guidance provides staff resources to facilitate
conversations with private developers, engineers,
and property owners about Low Impact
Development, and provides information on how
to determine, develop, and implement incentive
programs. The guidance is also valuable to
developers who are proactively seeking Low
Impact Development information, training, and
partnership opportunities.
31

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
This guidance and efforts like it are important because Washington's Puget Sound region is one of
America's fastest growing areas. Local jurisdictions direct new development primarily into urban
growth areas due to geographic constraints and Growth Management Act policies. While this
growth brings many benefits to the region, it can also strain the environment's resilience and
protection functions by increasing the risk of polluted stormwater runoff that threatens local
waterways. To protect the health of our streams, rivers, lakes, and the Puget Sound, local
jurisdictions can build cities that more effectively manage stormwater runoff, while increasing
density and livability for our growing population.
Low Impact Development is a green infrastructure approach to stormwater management. It
integrates on-site natural features with distributed stormwater best management practices (e.g.,
rain gardens, cisterns, trees and plants, permeable pavement, and green roofs). These practices
can slow stormwater runoff at its source, infiltrate water into the soil, and mitigate toxics through
treatment by soil microorganisms.
Stormwater Chemical Characterization and Watershed Prioritization -
University of Washington
With support from EPA Puget Sound funds,
researchers at the University of Washington Tacoma
and the Center for Urban Waters collected more
than 140 water samples in 15 Puget Sound creeks
during storm events in fall 2017 through spring
2019. They used these samples to identify sources,
watersheds, and time periods responsible for high
levels of stormwater pollution that are killing
returning coho salmon before they can spawn.
Using state-of-the-art analytical equipment, these
award-winning researchers prioritized Puget
Sound watersheds most impacted by urban runoff
and characterized "polluto-graphs" to measure
pollutant flows in urban creeks. One major finding
from this work is that leachate from automobile
tires contribute to coho pre-spawn mortality. Coho
salmon are an important indicator species for
stormwater pollution since they are particularly
sensitive to stormwater's toxic effects.
Using EPA Stormwater Strategic Initiative funding,
the UW Center for Urban Waters continues to
expand their study and partner with local
jurisdictions to continue this high impact chemical
characterization work.
Using High-Resolution Mass
Spectrometry to Identify Organic
Contaminants Linked to Urban
Stormwater Mortality Syndrome in Coho
Salmon
This female coho died in Longfellow Creek
BEFORE SPAWNING
32

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Depave Puget Sound: Reimagining Overly Paved Spaces
With the help of EPA Puget Sound funds,
Pierce Conservation District created an
important replicable model: a program aimed
at healthy transformation of landscapes.
Taken together, Depave projects in our region
provide benefits for us all. Cleaner water,
cleaner air, and improved habitat for local
wildlife are just a few of the many outcomes of
the Depave movement.18	Depave Puget Sound/ Caravan Lab
Depave is a movement to improve the health
of cities and the environment in Puget Sound.
In Depave projects, communities come
together to re-think the landscape around
them, transforming areas that are
unnecessarily paved into places where nature
and people can thrive. For example, the
District used their EPA grant to transform the
Holy Rosary Bilingual Academy's asphalt play
area into a green space for kids.
Each Depave project brings local benefits and
improves quality of life in the communities
where they take place.
Volunteers get ready to haulaway piecesof
ASPHALT DURING A DEPAVING EVENT AT A SCHOOL IN
Tacoma. (Depave Puget Sound/ Caravan Lab)
18 For more information, see: http://depavepugetsound.org/
33

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Permeable Pa vement Standards Based on L essons L earned
Rain turns into stormwater runoff with all the
pollutants it contacts, such as yard chemicals,
oil, grease, pet waste, street dirt, and heavy
metals. As in most cities, Tacoma's
stormwater flows untreated to the Puget
Sound.
Permeable pavements have been proven as a
cost-effective solution to managing
stormwater. Permeable pavement allows
water to soak in while providing some level of
filtration. But, can permeable pavement	Porous Asphalt and Pervious Concrete
measurably improve Puget Sound water
quality? Is it strong enough to withstand weather and traffic?
Industry standards are imperative to the long-term success of permeable pavements. This
requires a solid set of specifications and reliable material testing. With the support of EPA Puget
Sound funds and other partners, the City of Tacoma is testing new material and studying exactly
how different permeable pavements filter contaminants out of stormwater runoff.
This work could be a game-changer in reducing stormwater pollution in Puget Sound!
Toxics in Fish and the Southern Resident Orca Task Force
It is difficult to imagine a Washington without orcas or
salmon. These species are part of the cultural identity,
fishing economy, and tourism industry of our region. But
both Washington's Southern Resident orcas and Chinook
salmon are facing an uncertain fate.
The state's Southern Resident Orca Task Force 2019 final
report and recommendations incorporated work from
the EPA funded Stormwater Strategic Initiative Lead's
draft Toxics in Fish Implementation Strategy. Those
recommendations, now incorporated into agency
budgets, have resulted in new commitments to
coordinate programs to carry out the Toxics in Fish
Implementation Strategy.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Advancing Science for Puget Sound Ecosystem
Recovery
Science is essential to a well-informed, adaptively managed Puget Sound recovery effort. EPA
supports a variety of tribal, state, and local partner scientific activities through funding
agreements. EPA's support bolsters: original research, monitoring, assessments, modeling, social
science, identification and prioritization of science needs, synthesis of existing information,
alternative scenarios development and use, structured decision-making, and communication of
scientific information to policy makers, decision-makers, stakeholders, and the public.
Highlights
Foundational Programmatic Science Support
EPA supports core elements of the Puget Sound National Estuary Science Program through two
cooperative agreements with the Puget Sound Partnership: National Estuary Program Base Grant
and Implementation Strategies-Science Award.
The Puget Sound Base Agreement supports the Puget Sound Partnership's Strategic Science
Program in the following ways.
•	Research: Foundational elements of a strategic science program, including developing
and implementing the technical program for the Salish Sea Ecosystem Conferences, and
helping to coordinate the multi-party science enterprise that supports ecosystem
recovery through an increased understanding of issues, new approaches, and priorities
for estuary resiliency.
•	Ecosystem Assessment and Monitoring: Ensures that Puget Sound Partnership programs
and activities are continually improved; decision-making is informed by credible scientific
information; approaches are applied to develop and monitor progress measures,
including Vital Sign indicators; tools used for monitoring are efficient and cost-effective;
and opportunities to improve the quality of data collection are provided.
•	Reporting: Facilitates the Puget Sound Partnership's programmatic reporting obligations
by encouraging the support of the infrastructure of tools utilized by Management
Conference partners so that recovery and protection are adaptively managed, and trends
and emerging issues are documented.
In addition to the specific science tasks in the Base Agreement, Local Integrating Organizations
(LIOs) are supported through coordination grants that enable LIO coordinators to participate in
science-related work groups, initiatives, and activities. These include the Vital Signs Revision
Effort, Implementation Strategies development, and the Structured Decision-Making workshops.
35

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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
The Implementation Strategies-Science Award supports a scientific collaborative among the PSP,
the University of Washington Puget Sound Institute, Oregon State University, and Northern
Economics. As the core support for leadership and stewardship of Puget Sound science, this work
plan supports three tasks:
•	Science support for partially completed and anticipated Implementation Strategies.
•	Science support for balanced and comprehensive ecosystem approaches.
•	Open, transparent, and productive evaluation, integration, and communication of
science, including rigorous science review, and evaluation.
Recommendations stemming from the Implementation Strategies-Science Award have directly
informed investments in recovery programs as well as staffing decisions at state regulatory
agencies.
Investments like these are helping partners to make science-informed decisions based on the
latest knowledge.
Tribal Science Support
EPA directly supports tribal science through the Puget Sound Tribal Capacity Program. Eligible
activities under this program include significant technical work in support of tribal priorities
related to Puget Sound recovery. The range of science work completed by grantees includes
collaborative science; water quality toxin/pathogen research; baseline water quality monitoring;
and habitat, training, wetlands, GIS, climate change, traditional knowledge, and food web
research. During the first nearly 10 years of the program, the PSTCP has supported between 17-20
technical tribal staff each year. Technical tribal staff lead on-the-ground restoration activities and
provide input and expertise to local and regional planning processes or forums. EPA also supports
tribal science through the Tribal Implementation Lead program, which is a subaward program
managed by the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission for all federally recognized Puget Sound
tribes and authorized consortia of eligible tribes.
Science Teams, WorkGroups, Science Initiatives, and Activities
EPA staff from the Puget Sound Program participate in and directly contribute to the following
Puget Sound recovery science teams and work groups, science initiatives and activities, and
science prioritization and funding processes.
•	Puget Sound Federal Task Force Science and Monitoring Workgroup
o Two EPA staff co-chair this group.
o An important function of this group is to produce a compilation of Federal science
and monitoring activities, programs, and staffing of teams that support Puget
Sound ecosystem recovery and connect the work at the federal level to the greater
Puget Sound recovery effort.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
•	Puget Sound Ecosystem Monitoring Program (PSEMP): An EPA staff member serves as
Chair of the PSEMP Steering Committee and helps advance monitoring efforts necessary
to understand what actions are effective in achieving Puget Sound Vial Sign and Indicator
targets and recovery.
•	PSP Management Conference Science Panel: Two EPA staff members serve on the Science
Panel, Another is the EPA programmatic liaison. The IS-Science Award supports the staff
capacity critical to keeping Science Panel work groups going, including focusing on
development of the Science Work Plan and the Alternative Futures Scenarios effort.
Updating the Vita! Signs for Puget Sound
The Puget Sound National Estuary
Program's Leadership Council
recently adopted a set of revisions to
the Puget Sound Vital Signs. The Vital
Signs tool include 36 biophysical
indicators, 17 potential future
indicators, and 13 Vital Signs, to
express the statutory recovery goals
for protecting and recovering the
water quality, water quantity,
habitats, and species and food webs
of the Puget Sound ecosystem. Vital
Signs help the Puget Sound recovery
community set the course for
recovery. The collaborative process
to develop the revised Vital Signs and
indicators was led by the Puget
Sound Partnership. The process
relied on insights from science,
management, and policy experts
from throughout the Puget Sound
recovery community, including EPA
staff.
The revisions affirm the Vital Signs and their indicators as ultimate outcome progress measures
for Puget Sound protection and recovery, as part of an overarching framework to identify and
measure short-term, mid-term, and ultimate outcomes to understand whether Puget Sound is on
a path towards recovery.
Retaining
human wellbeing goals
and Vital Signs
' PUGET SOUND x
VITAL SIGNS
UNDERSTANDING
ECOSYSTEM HEALTH
Sp£c/ESAND FOOD^
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Salish Sea Model (FY20)
EPA funds contributed to the
development of the Salish Sea Mode!
(SSM) by the Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory. SSM was developed to meet
the need for a comprehensive,
predictive model to address water
quality, and to serve as a restoration
planning tool. The model assesses
recurring hypoxia in Puget Sound, loss
of eelgrass meadows, loss of nearshore
habitat, and persistence of toxic
contaminants in sediments and tissue.
The model was used to design
restoration actions near the mouth of
the StiUaguamish River, and
comprehensive basin-wide models of
the Skagit River and Snohomish River
estuaries for restoration activities
around Whidbey Basin.
Salish Sea model grid with refinement near the
Hood Canal Bridge region to facilitate
INCORPORATION OF THE BRIDGE BLOCK IN THE
SIMULATION.
In FY20, SSM helped researchers from University of Washington and Washington State
Department of Fish and Wildlife track pharmaceuticals such as opioids and the chemotherapy
drug melphalan - along with a suite of 62 other contaminants. The SSM was used to compute a
Salish Sea-wide map of effluent concentration from 99 wastewater outfalls over a one-year
period.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Expanding the Use of Structured Decision-Making
EPA funds supported review arid analysis of the funding
decisions made by the Strategic Initiative Leads. This study
concluded that while all three Strategic Initiative Leads used
some form of Structured Decision-Making (SDM) - an approach
for careful and organized analysis of natural resource
management decisions - their processes could be improved.
Understand Context
To improve funding decision-making, EPA supported training for
tribal, state, and local staff to better understand and implement
SDM. Specifically, EPA supported training on the SDM tool,
DASEES (Decision Analysis for a Sustainable Environment,
Economy and Society). The DASEES tool leads decision makers
through SDM steps in a collaborative, accessible, and visual way
that highlights trade-offs between economic, social, and
ecological values.
In addition to training, researchers from Oregon State University
and EPA-ORD are working with four Local Integrating
Organizations (LIOs) on pilot uses of Structured Decision Making
and DASEES. The LIOs share enthusiasm about using methods
that allow for improved and structured incorporation of a variety
of variables, including human well-being, into traditional natural
science and policy discussions.
Define Objectives
I
3
Develop Options
1
Evaluate Options
Take Action
The FIVE STEPS OF THE
Structured Decision-Making
Framework.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Science Enterprise Collaboration with EPA's Office of Research and
Development
In 2013, the EPA Regional Administrator wrote to EPA Office of Research and Development
leadership requesting support on critical science needs for Puget Sound. The request included
identification of ORD's Pacific Ecological Systems Division (PESD) support tools applicable to
local and regional land use planning and decision making. Models of interest included those
capable of estimating (1) changes in ecosystem services in response to a variety of land use
scenarios, and (2) progress on a set of 25 ecosystem indicators adopted by the Puget Sound
Management Conference as terrestrial and marine Vital Signs. The Regional Administrator's letter
also called for state-of-science/technology syntheses to better protect treaty resources.
In response to this request, ORD-PESD has worked with Puget Sound NEP program staff on the
following collaborative efforts.
•	PESD's VELMAecohydrology model was identified as capable of quantifying land use
impacts on water quality and quantity, fish habitat, production of food and fiber, and
other ecosystem services.
•	Region 10 Puget Sound team members have monthly calls with PESD researchers to
support the Puget Sound NEP-ORD cooperative relationship to apply VELMA with several
stakeholders in the Puget Sound region. For example, Region 10-supported VELMA
research was initiated to help communities optimize green infrastructure installations for
reducing urban stormwater contaminant loads to Puget Sound.
•	PESD fisheries ecologists have supported tribal scientists on cold water refugia work.
•	ORD tools supportive of Puget Sound science needs are being introduced to the NEP
network through ORD-NEP collaborative webinars.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Looking Ahead
EPA's work - together with the Puget Sound
Federal Task Force, tribes, Canada, Puget Sound
Partnership, Strategic Initiative Leads for Habitat,
Shellfish and Stormwater, the scientific
community, and many others across the region -
has indeed supported important gains in recovery.
Looking ahead, EPA recognizes that despite
progress made, degradation continues to outpace
recovery. More must be done to achieve a healthy
Puget Sound - a Sound with clean and safe water,
protected and restored habitat, thriving species,
and a vibrant quality of life for all.
We look forward to providing future highlights of EPA's enhanced efforts on: Federal Task Force
leadership, including a new Action Plan for 2022-2026; cooperation with Canada; fulfillment of
National Estuary Program responsibilities, including the approval of a new comprehensive
management plan for recovering Puget Sound (the Action Agenda); partnering with tribes;
funding and grants, including managing and awarding up to $100 million in projects over the next
five years; and scientific support. EPA will continue to focus its work on turning the tide and
achieving positive trends for habitat, stormwater pollution prevention, and shellfish harvest.
The foundation is well-established, EPA is a vital partner, and, ultimately, success will depend on
the passion and perseverance of the thousands of people who make up the collaborative effort to
protect and restore Puget Sound.
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EPA Geographic Funding at Work on Puget Sound Recovery
Contact Information
For more information on EPA's efforts to protect and restore the Puget Sound ecosystem, visit:
https://www.epa.gov/puget-sound.
Or, contact:
Peter Murchie, Manager
Geographic Programs Section
Puget Sound and National Estuary Programs
U.S. EPA, Region 10
1200 Sixth Avenue
Seattle, Washington 98101-3140
(206)553-1148
murchie.peter@epa.gov
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SEPA
U.S. EPA
Region 10
1200 Sixth Avenue, Suite 155
Seattle, Washington 98101

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