SENATE BILL REPORT
SSB 6011
This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in
their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a
statement of legislative intent.
As Passed Senate, March 6, 2007
Title: An act relating to protecting Puget Sound water quality by creating an aquatic reserve near Maury Island.
Brief Description: Creating the Maury Island aquatic reserve.
Sponsors: Senate Committee on Water, Energy & Telecommunications (originally sponsored by Senators Poulsen, Eide, Brown, Rockefeller, Spanel, Fraser, Weinstein, Murray, Pridemore and Keiser).
Brief History:
Committee Activity: Water, Energy & Telecommunications: 2/16/07, 2/20/07 [DPS, DNP].
Passed Senate: 3/06/07, 26-22.
SENATE COMMITTEE ON WATER, ENERGY & TELECOMMUNICATIONS
Majority Report: That Substitute Senate Bill No. 6011 be substituted therefor, and the substitute bill do pass.Signed by Senators Poulsen, Chair; Rockefeller, Vice Chair; Delvin, Fraser, Marr, Oemig, Pridemore and Regala.
Minority Report: Do not pass.Signed by Senators Honeyford, Ranking Minority Member; Holmquist and Morton.
Staff: Jan Odano (786-7486)
Background: The Department of Natural Resources (DNR) administratively created the Aquatic
Reserve Program to promote preservation, restoration, and enhancement of state-owned aquatic
lands that provide direct and indirect benefits to the health of native aquatic habitat and species
and other resources in the state of Washington.
The program enables DNR to establish aquatic reserves on selected state-owned aquatic lands
throughout the state to protect important native aquatic ecosystems. These aquatic lands are of
special educational or scientific interests, or lands of special environmental importance and are
threatened by degradation.
DNR officially established the Aquatic Reserve Program in September 2002. The Maury Island
site was designated an official reserve on November 8, 2004.
Summary of Substitute Bill: The Maury Island Aquatic Reserve is statutorily created. The
reserve is comprised of state-owned aquatic lands surrounding Maury Island and including
Quartermaster Harbor in King County.
DNR must manage Maury Island Aquatic Reserve primarily to conserve native habitats; protect
and restore nearshore ecosystems; promote stewardship of riparian and aquatic habitats; and
provide for low-impact public uses that do not adversely affect resource values or detract from
long-term ecological processes.
DNR must develop a management plan for the reserve, which may include a previously adopted
management plan and policies that are consistent with this chapter. The plan must identify the
significant resources to be conserved and identify the areas with potential for low-impact public
uses. In addition, the plan must specify the types of management activities and public uses
permitted. Prior to approval by the commissioner, the public, state, tribal, and local agencies
must have the opportunity to comment on the plan.
DNR may not authorize any part of the aquatic reserve for industrial uses or activities, or the
transportation of materials from surface mines and mining operations. DNR may not authorize
the construction of docks or other improvements associated with industrial or mining activities.
DNR must ensure that any existing leases, easements, licenses, permits and rights of way, and any
other agreement or renewals allowing the use of state-owned aquatic lands designated as an
aquatic reserve, conform to the use restrictions provided within this chapter.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Committee/Commission/Task Force Created: No.
Effective Date: The bill contains an emergency clause and takes effect immediately.
Staff Summary of Public Testimony on Recommended Substitute: PRO: This bill preserves
and promotes the recovery of endangered species. It provides significant benefit to the southern
resident Orcas, which are listed as endangered. It takes away the uncertainty about protecting
Maury Island and settles the priorities as conservation and preservation. Industrial uses in the
reserve are in direct contradiction to the reserve and protection of orcas. Nearshore and other
areas can not be over-valued for the protection of the Orca and the recovery of other species such
as the salmon and eel grass. We know a lot more about the health of Puget Sound since the dock
was originally permitted. A barge loading facility is incompatible with a reserve designation.
The dock hasn't been used in years and is in disrepair.
CON: The bill would kill the mining project on Maury Island. Without a dock the mine would
not be able to continue. The project does not harm the habitat, it creates a 400 ft. buffer between
nearshore and the barge. The use has been affirmed by the court of appeals. The project would
be less harmful environmentally by using approximately one barge per day rather than 50,000
trucks per year to transport the same amount of material. The Environmental Impact Statement
(EIS) shows no environmental impact. Nearshore and ground water impact studies confirm EIS–
no impact. The Maury Island Reserve already exists. It disregards the public processes and
notification that were used over the past nine years. This is grossly unfair. It violates the rights
of Glacier Northwest and their consent agreement.
OTHER: The bill is inconsistent and redundant to the plan that already exists. DNR went
through an extensive stakeholder process and public hearings. This would put only one reserve
into statute, leaving the others out.
Persons Testifying: PRO: Michael Racine, Washington SCUBA Alliance; Rick Myers, Bandito
Charters; JW Turner, Preserve Our Island; Amy Carey, South Sound Orca Advocates; Robert
Furstenberg, Kathy Fletcher, People for Puget Sound; Kathy George, Washington Environmental
Council, Preserve Our Islands; Dow Constantine, King County Council.
CON: Steve Gano, Pete Stoltz, Glacier Northwest; Stephen Roos, Ryan Durkan, Glacier
Northwest, Hillis, Clark, Martin & Peterson.
OTHER: Fran McNair, DNR.