Leader of nation’s top conservation agency joins King County Executive to release juvenile kokanee, announce new urban refuge education project
“It is truly an honor to have Secretary Jewell participate in what has become a King County Earth Week tradition that reflects our shared commitment to protecting and restoring the environment,” said Executive Constantine. “The effort to save the kokanee salmon is an excellent example of what local governments can achieve when we partner together with communities and volunteers to achieve a common goal.”
Standing alongside a restored stretch of Ebright Creek, Secretary Jewell, Executive Constantine, representatives of the Kokanee Work Group, and school kids on an Earth Week science field trip helped release 100 inch-long kokanee fry into the wild.
At the event, Secretary Jewell announced that Lake Sammamish has been chosen as one of eight pilot partnerships nationwide under the Urban Wildlife Refuge Initiative. The partnership will help connect people in the Seattle metro-area to the great outdoors and, in particular, efforts to restore kokanee salmon runs in the Lake Sammamish Watershed. Read More >>