Gov. Chris Gregoire, declaring Puget Sound "sick," on Wednesday proposed
a $220-million effort over the next two years as a down payment on
restoring and preserving the state's inland marine waters.
Gregoire called the sound one of her most urgent priorities and said
state, federal, local and tribal governments must fix it.
Gregoire s announcement came as the Puget Sound Partnership she
appointed presented its final report on what needed to be done to
restore dwindling habitat and reduce pollution. The report estimates the
total cost to clean up and restore Puget Sound at nearly $9 billion
between now and 2020.
"The Puget Sound is slowly slipping away from us," said Billy Frank Jr.,
chairman of the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission and co-chair of
the task force with Gregoire and former Environmental Protection Agency
chief William D. Ruckelshaus. "We've got to work together because we can
t just let it die."
Gregoire said that to have the sound cleaned up, the state and its
citizens need to act now.
"The sound has not become sick overnight … so we're not going to turn it
around overnight," she said.
Neither Gregoire nor the partnership has identified where the billions
of dollars needed would come from.
However, the governor said that once people accept that the sound is in
an environmental crisis and realize they share responsibility for the
problems, they would be asked for more money.
"Some of my best childhood memories are of fishing and boating on the
sound, but beneath the blue water, the fish and wildlife are sick," she
said. "Many people are working hard to protect the Puget Sound, but they
need more support."
(
Los Angeles Times, 14/12/2006)