Tag Archive: Puget Sound Partnership


The Significance of Lily Point Comes Into Question

Everyone is starting to become concerned about the 103-unit home subdivision recently designated by Whatcom County’s Planning Department to have an environmental “Determination of Non-significance,” which supposedly means the project will not create significant negative impacts and that the site and its surrounding area is environmentally “insignificant.” However, many of us totally disagree with that determination.

The proposed project will take over the western portion of Lily Point and have a big impact on the health of the tidelands and riparian forest that are essential to the sustainability of the critical habitat. So instead of feeder bluffs providing nutrients to the spawning herring and juvenile salmon, the waters below this development will be fed a steady diet of toxic storm water runoff. In fact, the more people that live on the shoreline, the higher the level of mercury and PCBs we find in our local fish. The general recommended limit for humans to consume fish throughout the region? One meal per week. So what does this mean for the Orcas and eagles that eat fish everyday? It’s obvious questions like these that are not being addressed in the planning process that has everyone so concerned.

Where do all these contaminants come from? PCBs usually come from legacy industrial sources but other contaminants come from the streets and homes of our neighborhoods. They come from fertilizers we put on our grass; detergents we use to wash our dishes, cars, and clothes; pharmaceuticals we flush down the toilet; and oil and gas that leak from our cars. All this and more shows up in the wild fish that swim our waters, bite our lures, and end up on our dinner plates. So why are we even considering putting 103 homes in the middle of critical habitat? Oh yes, Whatcom County needs the money it has already spent, and doesn’t have for tomorrow.

A scientific report commissioned by the Puget Sound Partnership estimates that each day 150,000 pounds of toxins spill into Puget Sound through polluted runoff. It’s hard to get our minds around 150,000 pounds of toxins a day, particularly when we live in a rural county with a relatively small population. So it is equally as hard to get our minds around a planning department that wants to approve developments that have been identified as detrimental to the ecosystem, and then place them on our most sacred and environmentally sensitive land. Some have said that is why Whatcom County has gone through two Planning Directors in the last three years, after each Director became fed up and frustrated with being forced to make short sighted decisions. Without a Director or any support for current trends in correcting past bad development patterns, it seems things are only going to get worse for local residents and efforts to restore the Salish Sea to acceptable health levels.

Bald Eagles Indicators of Troubled Process

The developers are well aware of the significance of the rich tapestry of life that supports Lily Point, but when they filled out the SEPA questionnaire, they purposely failed to mention the presence of Bald Eagles on the property. In fact, they inaccurately identified squirrels and song birds as the only wildlife on the property. After the developers were required to answer the question for the third time, they decided to acknowledge the presence of eagles. Presumably someone at the County noticed that there was a Bald Eagle Management Plan prepared in 2007 by the Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife (WDFW), and that eagles have been observed nesting in several locations on the property since the mid 90’s.

It seems that nobody at the County has actually read the Bald Eagle Management  Plan, or they would have noticed that it clearly states that the eagle nest location was not located at the time the plan was written. This kind of begs the question — How do you devise a plan to protect the eagles and their nest when you don’t know where it is? The reason the nest location is not known is because the Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife (WDFW) agent visited the property in September, when all the Point Roberts eagles have long since flown north to catch the summer salmon runs. The agent actually states, “We didn’t see any nesting activity.” Well, anyone with a basic knowledge of eagles knows that nesting season is from February to July.

In the wild eagles are considered an indicator species for the health of the ecosystem. As a predator they are at the top of the food chain; consequently, anything harmful in that chain will make its way to the eagles’ diet. Apparently eagles are also now an indicator species for “overlooking environmental impacts” in planning major developments, as the Bald Eagle Management Plan with no nest location was followed with a traffic study that doesn’t mention the impact on border crossings, which is really the “only” traffic issue in Point Roberts. Additional failings are a geological report that doesn’t address the 40 acres proposed for development in Phase One, and a septic plan that sites a drainfield for 103 homes in a location that, according to the State of Washington Department of Health, is unsuitable for its stated purpose in two-thirds of the drainfield area. What about the handling of the storm water runoff, the big pollutant in the Sound? There is no mention of that in any of the developer’s reports of course, because then the developers would need to write a report to find out what the impact would be on the Lily Point Marine Reserve that taxpayers ponied up $4.2 million to protect in 2008.

Taxpayers and Experts Tell a Different Story

So as the County planners try to give the developers a free pass to go ahead and destroy the “insignificant” trees, feeder bluffs, marine habitat, and eagles, I thought I would bring in my own expert to talk about the significance of Lily Point. It seems kind of surreal that anyone would have to do this, because when the eastern portion of Lily Point was being considered for State acquisition funding in 2007, 24 scientists came to Lily Point and identified it as one of the most significant shoreline ecosystems in all of Puget Sound. Furthermore, in a salmon restoration fund application, Lily Point was ranked second in priority out of 73 applicants covering 2,500 miles of shoreline in Puget Sound. For all the money spent by the State in the last two years on restoration and preservation, the $4.2 million paid to acquire and preserve Lily Point represents 27% of all the money paid to over 50 projects. Suddenly even the word ’significant’ seems inadequate and lacking in trying to explain just how important Lily Point is. Maybe that was in the report that State planners sent out, but was missed by County staff members who were out that day for a seminar on smart growth.

So I will try and humor the County and pretend that we don’t already know about all the environmental report’s inaccuracies and the true importance and significance of Lily Point. I now feel the need to add an interview with David Hancock to the blog, and let the voice of an expert explain why Lily Point is one of the most significant eagle habitats in the North Pacific. Many of us already understand this, as we have monitored 10 active eagle nests in the five square miles of Point Roberts and have counted between 30 to 70 eagles feeding daily in the tidelands of Lily Point. We have observed that on the property slated for 103 homes that there is an eagle night roost and two eagle nests from the pair that has lived there for the last 15 years. (Yes, we actually know where they are!) So the official state Bald Eagle Management Plan for eagles on the property continues to be unaccountable for the three eagle nests and their locations.

Please watch and listen to David Hancock and let me know if the word “insignificant” comes to mind. David has been studying eagles for 50 years — he’s a biologist, writer, lecturer, and runs the Hancock House publishing business. He’s on the Board of the American Bald Eagle Foundation and is considered one of the top eagle experts in North America. I’m sure if the County asked, he would correct the Bald Eagle Management Plan, and then they would know what a real management plan looks like — and it would include the three eagle nests that the developers, their consultants, and the WDFW can’t seem to find.

Part 1

LPC Science Series Hancock Part 1 from Alexander Stratford on Vimeo.

David Hancock discusses eagle’s and the habitat around Lily Point, and why it is one of the most significant eagle territories in North America.

One of the reasons that many people are trying to persevere this land and protect it.

Part 2

LPC Science Series Hancock Part 2 from Alexander Stratford on Vimeo.

About six weeks ago I needed to pick a date to launch the Lily Point Calling Campaign. I knew I would be on the road until after the 4th, so I just picked the 14th of July with no more thought then it being enough time to get ready after my return. A few days before I left to return home, a friend of mine said, “that’s Bastille day”…. Oh!!! I said, not really having French history very fresh in my mind, so with a quick Wiki stop, I realized that all the symbolism of Bastille Day dove-tailed right into today’s challenges of getting people to care, and to start to actually do something about our interests that are being ignored today, just as they were in 1790 France…

Not enough people realize just what is at stake, and many of the organizations like People For Puget Sound, and Puget Sound Partnership constantly talk about the fact that the problems and issues are a tough sell, when people look out across the waters of the Salish Sea and it still looks beautiful. There are many people taking action and doing great things to restore the health of our environment… but it’s not enough; we need more people involved and we need to raise awareness to the voice of the wild that is being suffocated by the corporate influence on our government and our media.

I kept asking myself, where are the top artists on this?, why don’t we have songs like in the 60’s and 70’s? There seemed to be no voice speaking out for the Salish Sea on the radio waves…. but with radio station ownership now dominated by Clear Channel Corporate type program directors and the shift towards internet downloads radio has been sanitized to the point of obscuring the rock and roll roots that inspired artists to speak out.

In the late 70’s The Clash emerged as the “socially conscious” and politically charged leader of the music world. With the line, “Phony Beatle mania has bitten the dust” the leader of the band Joe Strummer penned songs that struck a nerve all over the world… and he was keenly aware of the issues and who was behind them. Unfortunately Joe Strummer went on a 15 year hiatus, came back in 1999 and produced 3 CD’s with the Mescaleros and then died of heart failure in 2002.

Strummer sang about global warming, unemployment, discrimination, racial tension and drug use, and wrapped it all within the responsibility we have as adults to do something about it. I’ve been shocked at the language and cautionary rants that have been the same for the last 30 years on all these issues. When you dig into the facts, one quickly realizes that not only have environmental issues become worse, but the rate of environmental decline has steadily accelerated in the 80’s, 90’s and 21st century….

Einstein once said, “You cannot solve a problem in the same state of consciousness that created it.”, and that “insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.” So it seems we are stuck in just talking about the problems and not really doing enough to change things, and continually thinking that elected officials are going to solve our problems because of campaign promises. So there is a grass roots movement that now says… “If we wait for government to solve our problems, it will be too little… too late; if we try to do things on an individual basis… it will be too little; so only by private citizens working together with government can we solve our problems.”

But there are no simple slogans or dictates that are going to mobilize our fractured cultural masses towards reconciliation with our environmental excess. So Lily Point Calling is about getting reconnected to nature, to hearing the call of the wild, a call that comes from your heart. There are many paths to making this connection. For me it was the research I did on eagles that brought a new perspective and comprehension of our history and the collateral damage caused by the American empire, and each empire that rose and fell before it. When you learn about eagles, or Orcas or walk in forests, or see the cycle of life, one can then start to see the value of these things, and when you see that these values are not being respected, hopefully it will compel you to join us.

So today is the starting point. I wrote the lyrics to Lily Point Calling to update the issues that Joe Strummer and The Clash made popular with London Calling, and changed the focus form from London, the center of measured time around the world, old wealth and fallen monarchy, etc. to Lily Point — the jewel of the Salish Sea and the heart and soul of the natural world — that is surrounded by the land sharks who, continue their pursuit of profits at the expense of the natural world.

The State of Washington paid $4.2 million to protect the eastern portion of Lily Point in 2008, after 24 scientists explained how important the ecosystem of Lily Point was, and now the Point Roberts Conservation Society is fighting a legal battle to stop the western portion of Lily Point from being decimated by development. Lily Point Calling is about sending a message to everyone in the Salish Sea watershed to identify your sacred land and start working on a plan today to save it. We’ve posted the lyrics to the song Lily Point Calling, with hyperlinks that will take you to articles, videos and blogs that explain the meaning behind the words. This is a living document that will be updated and changed as new and important information comes in from around the Salish Sea. We will be connecting the dots of activity in each community and linking new communities into how they can get started and what types of actions are working in other communities.

Lily Point Calling is about erasing borders between us: American/Canadian; Native American/First Nations… and coming together as true brothers and sisters of our mother the earth.

So in the spirit of Bastille Day, please join us in a peaceful uprising for the rights of nature… I don’t believe that it is possible to be neutral, to continue to deny the direction consumerism is taking us. To be passive in today’s environment is to cooperate with whatever is going on. We need to intercede in what is going on, and we need to change it. As Thomas Jefferson said,

“All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to = remain silent.”

Lily Point Calling is nothing more then listening to a voice that is not taught in schools or reported on the nightly news.

Lily Point Calling is a voice coming from the natural world.

It is a voice that is getting very faint…. so we’re trying to give it a little help…. we need to pay attention to the cry from the birds and animals, and end the assault on our marine life.

Thanks to Ivy, Mel, Dave, and Victor for bringing the spirit of The Clash & Joe Strummer back into the fold… and I hope that Joe will forgive me for changing the words to his song, but I couldn’t resist, “phony credit mania has bitten the dust”

Viva la natural world!

For more information & the lyrics please go to: Lily Point Calling hosted by Lily Point Defenders.

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