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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Down To Earth

Opportunity to take action

It's time again to exercise your rights and to take action in support of two local causes:

The City of Spokane Planning Services recently accepted a shoreline conditional use permit application for the proposed Spokane Whitewater Park, and the comment period is open to discuss the application and any environmental issues related.  You have until June 26th to submit a comment. 

Sandifur Bridge looking downriver

We have been excited about the Whitewater Park for some time as we see it as a great opportunity for raising awareness about the Spokane River as a resource, and the need to protect that resource.  If you'd like to read more about our thoughts on the park, read past the jump where we have dug WAYYYYYY back into the archives to one of our early DTE posts (we couldn't link to it due to trouble with recovering our archives off the old site).  We digress. 

After the comment period closes, City staff will issue an initial determination and a public hearing before the City's hearing examiner will eventually follow. But only those who have submitted written comments by June 26, 2009, will be permitted to testify. Follow the link for more information on the process, the project, and how you can submit comments. www.spokaneplanning.org.

Grizzly bear population in the Selkirk Mountains of eastern Washington through the Idaho Panhandle and into the Cabinet Mountains and Yaak River watershed in northwest Montana are severely threatened from habitat fragmentation, extensive road networks, motorized vehicles and development.  The Forest Service is developing new forest plan standards and is working on adopting Forest Plan Amendments in the threatened areas, and your help is needed to advocate for these protections.  The Lands Council has put together a full alert, and has instructions on how to send a letter to the Forest Service in support of their efforts.  Find all of that information HERE. 

This first appeared on the Down To Earth site on November 7, 2007 > http://dte.spokesmanreview.com/?p=303more-303

 

"I was enchanted – overwhelmed – with the beauty and grandeur of everything I saw. It lay just as nature had made it, with nothing to mar its virgin glory… I determined that I would possess it."
-James Glover, "Founder" of the City of Spokane Falls, recalling his first visit to the river is 1873

Earlier this year, The Goracle fell under criticism for his seemingly high energy bills at his large Tennessee estate, notwithstanding his meticulous devotion to environmental awareness. All the while, people still had the intrepidity to condemn him as a hypocrite.

Right here in Spokane, the Al Gore of our river is The Friends of the Falls (FOF), a non-profit organization whose tireless support of the Spokane River, the main vein of Spokane's existence, has raised awareness exceedingly.

A proposed whitewater kayak park in the Spokane River is being questioned by local environmentalists, citizens, and businesses and civic representatives on claims that it will do more harm to a river that many feel runs on life support as it is.

The whitewater park is the diligent effort of the Friends of the Falls that outdates most people's awareness of the situation. Theoretically it outdates the FOF itself.

In 1908, John Charles and Frederick Law Jr. Olmstead, heirs to the famous Frederick Law's Landscape Architecture practice, were so captivated by the Spokane River Falls area that they proposed and eventually implemented the Great Gorge Park which set out to preserve and protect the river and it's boundaries for beneficial use and development.

The Gorge Park area is better known today as the upper falls to downtown, through Peaceful Valley to the Sandifur Bridge and the confluence of the Spokane River and Hangman Creek. The original conceptualizing of The Gorge Park can be seen through fruition of the Worlds Fair of 1974 and Riverfront Park. And what the FOF hope will be the next project to fall under the Gorge Park Plan, a whitewater kayak park.

Sandifur Bridge looking downriver

"The whitewater park will be a vehicle to transport people to The Great Spokane River Gorge," explained FOF board member and local kayaker Travis Nichols. "We will provide a connection between the people and the river, the river is the reason the city is here. Once people feel connected to the river they will appreciate it and want to care for it and protect it."

The proposed area where the park will go is near the Sandifur Bridge on the west side of Peaceful Valley, near the confluence of the Spokane River and Hangman Creek. The park will span the length of the river and feature two U-Drop structures that will create wakes and water features. In addition, large boulders will be placed in the river for similar effect. The boulders are native, natural rocks that have been excavated from the new wastewater treatment facility downriver. They will need to be secured to protect against erosion and other unplanned damage caused by floods or otherwise. This security will come in the form of grouting with concrete between the boulders.

"We have four main goals with the park," said Nichols, "to keep it natural, to keep it playful (water in, water out), to keep it stable, and to make it work with what's there." And what is there currently is not working. Old bridge abutments rise from the water creating massive concrete hazards. Additionally, rusted old railroad tracks extend through the water creating more danger; all things that will need to be removed before construction.

Currently the park plan is traversing the many "eddies" that a multifaceted proposal must endure, contrary to rumors and overstated claims by the FOF. In June the FOF announced a funding milestone was met leading to overly optimistic thoughts that secured finances meant immediate construction. "We (FOF) have such a solid vision of this thing, there is funding in place but it takes time, it's a process," Nichols explained.

Through talking with Nichols, it's obvious that the current phase of the park, albeit not ideal in terms of completing the project, is a phase that the FOF is quite alright with. It provides them and everyone involved, whether in understanding of the park or not, a chance to learn more about the area and what is going to happen to it, both helpful and potentially harmful.

In early October, James Hagengruber reported that local Trout Unlimited representation was concerned about a certain species of fish in the area. A native species of redband trout are prominent in the area and fears are that the park will interrupt one of their best remaining spawning areas. "We feel that the potential impacts to the river and to our beleaguered native redband trout have not been given adequate attention," said Sam Mace of Spokane Trout Unlimited. "We can support a whitewater park that is built to minimize impacts to native trout." Little is known of these trout and even littler is known of what will happen when their habitat is altered.

"There is a major fishery concern," said Nichols. "We (FOF) want everything positive for the fish." This will include removing the existing structures, the bridge abutments and railroad tracks, from the river. There is that and expectation that awareness of the area will spurn independent fishery studies by agencies such as the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and other permitting agencies. "This is a great chance to learn about the fish in the area, not much is known of these redband trout," said Nichols. "This will be a benefit to the fishery population, an aesthetic improvement for ecological benefit."

"Our (Trout Unlimited) hope is to work with Friends of the Falls to create a park that we can all support," said Mace. "We do plan to be strong advocates that the redband trout are given due consideration. It is pretty incredible that we still have native trout left in the Spokane River."

Nichols is optimistic that the whitewater park will become a catalyst for civic awareness about the Spokane River, a project that, "will get everything else rolling and people interested in the river."

It is clear that this subject is a matter of perspective. From the outside looking in, it would appear that there are two sides to this whitewater park issue, realistically there is one, one side striving for one end, that being what's best for the river. How this is reached will depend on education and cooperation. What the result will be is a beautiful whitewater kayak attraction enjoyed by both boaters and on-lookers; an attraction both ecologically and economically beneficial, and most importantly, another fulfillment of the great Spokane River Gorge Park plan.

For more information on the whitewater park you can refer to the "Conceptual Design Report Spokane Whitewater Park"
And also a study on the Spokane River Gorge Park titled "Spokane's Falls and River Gorge: Evolving Ties between a community and it's Wellspring"

Also, we are currently working on a multimedia project that will compliment this feature. It will include a photo slideshow of the proposed site with voice over narrative. We will keep you informed on this.



Down To Earth

The DTE blog is committed to reporting and sharing environmental news and sustainability information from across the Inland Northwest.