State Management of Aquatic Lands. Aquatic lands are generally managed by the state and protected for the common good. The Legislature has designated the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) as the manager of the more than 2.6 million acres of state-owned aquatic lands. In managing these lands, DNR must support a balance of use demands and statutory goals such as public use, environmental protections, trade, transportation, and generating revenue consistent with those goals.
Types of Aquatic Land. Aquatic lands include the lands beneath navigable marine salt waters and fresh waters of the state. There are three categories of aquatic lands—tidelands, shorelands, and bedlands.
Tidelands are submerged lands and beaches exposed and submerged with the ebb and flow of the tides. Shorelands are the submerged lands lying along the edge of a river or lake, between the line of ordinary high water and the line of navigability. Tidelands and shorelands in front of or within two miles of a city are considered first-class tidelands and shorelands, and those lands more than two miles from a city are considered second-class tidelands and shorelands. Bedlands are those aquatic lands submerged at all times beneath navigable waters.
Kelp and Eelgrass. DNR has conducted annual aerial surveys of floating kelp canopy extent since 1989. Two species of canopy-forming kelp are monitored: bull kelp—Nereocystis luetkeana, and giant kelp—Macrocystic integrifolia. In January 2021, DNR started the Kelp Workgroup to facilitate collaboration and data sharing related to kelp research and monitoring in Puget Sound.
DNR monitors the abundance and distribution of eelgrass—Zostera marina—in greater Puget Sound as part of its stewardship work on state-owned aquatic lands. Based on 18 years of monitoring from 2000 to 2017, DNR estimates there are approximately 23,000 hectares of eelgrass in greater Puget Sound. The total amount of eelgrass in Puget Sound has remained relatively stable since the start of the monitoring program.
Community Engagement Plans. Pursuant to legislation enacted in 2021, DNR and certain other state agencies must create and adopt a community engagement plan that describes planned engagement with overburdened communities and vulnerable populations for purposes of implementing the agency's environmental justice responsibilities. This plan must include best practices for outreach and communication, the use of special screening tools, processes that facilitate the inclusion of community members affected by agency decision-making, and methods for outreach and communication.
Native Kelp Forest and Eelgrass Meadow Health and Conservation Plan. Subject to available funding, DNR must work with partners to establish a Native Kelp Forest and Eelgrass Meadow Health and Conservation Plan (plan) that endeavors to conserve and restore at least 10,000 acres of native kelp forests and eelgrass meadows by 2040. The plan must be finalized and submitted to the Office of Financial Management (OFM) and the appropriate committees of the Legislature by December 1, 2023. The plan should address the potential loss of native kelp forest and eelgrass meadow habitat throughout Puget Sound and along the Washington State coastline and potential current and future stressors related to the decline of native kelp forests and eelgrass meadows.
In collaboration with partners, DNR must develop the plan to assess and prioritize areas for coordinated conservation and restoration actions. The plan must consist of the following elements:
Together with partners, DNR must develop a framework to identify and prioritize native kelp forest and eelgrass meadow areas in greatest need of conservation or restoration. The framework must:
When developing coordinated actions and success measures, DNR must:
When developing the plan, DNR must:
Reporting. By December 1, 2022, DNR must submit a report to OFM and the appropriate committees of the Legislature that includes community engagement plans and a schedule for plan development.
DNR must map areas of native and nonnative kelp forests and eelgrass meadows, together with areas in which there are both native and nonnative kelp forests and eelgrass meadows throughout Puget Sound and along the coastline. DNR may utilize the map when establishing a native kelp forest and eelgrass meadow health and conservation plan. DNR must submit the map to the Office of Financial Management and the Legislature by December 1, 2023.
By December 1, 2023, DNR must submit the plan, including a map and justification of identified priority areas based on collaboratively developed criteria, and a list of potential tools and actions for conservation or restoration of these priority areas, together with a monitoring plan based on the identified success measures.
Subsequently, each biennium, DNR must continue to monitor the distributions and trends of native kelp forests and eelgrass meadows to inform adaptive management of the plan and coordinated partner actions. DNR must submit a report to the Legislature that describes the native kelp forest and eelgrass meadow conservation priority areas and monitoring approaches and findings, including success measures established in the plan.
Beginning December 1, 2024, and by December 1st of each even-numbered year thereafter, DNR must provide the appropriate committees of the Legislature and OFM with:
Senate | 49 | 0 | |
House | 96 | 1 | (House amended) |
Senate | 49 | 0 | (Senate concurred) |
June 9, 2022