Video: The Historic Forests and Fish Law Explained
Passed in 1999, the Forests and Fish Law brings science and sustainability to our state's working forests while protecting vital fish habitat.
Protection for Forested Streams
The Forests & Fish Law was developed in collaboration with federal, state,
tribal, and county governments and private forest landowners. Representatives of these
governments and organizations worked together for 18 months to make changes to the forest
practices rules to protect clean water and riparian habitat on non-federal forestland in
Washington State. Changes were made to improve
forest roads and culverts,
enlarge buffer zones along stream
banks, and locate unstable slopes
around the state. An adaptive
management monitoring program has also been
put into place to test the effectiveness of the new rules.
The Science Behind the Law
More than 140 individuals, including scientists, policy makers, and regulators worked
together to develop the scientifically based changes to forest practices rules found in the
Forests & Fish Law to meet four key goals established by the Forest Practices Board.
- Provide compliance with the Endangered Species Act for aquatic and riparian-dependent species.
- Restore and maintain riparian habitat to support a harvestable supply of fish.
- Meet the requirements of the Clean Water Act for water quality.
- Keep the timber industry economically viable in the state of Washington.
The rules of the law are monitored on the ground to ensure the objectives of restoring salmon habitat and protecting water quality are being met. If they are not, the rules will be changed through peer-reviewed scientific determination and adaptive management. This allows for rule changes if science shows it to be necessary.
Progress is Measured Through Resource Objectives
Forestry's contribution to salmon recovery is based on meeting the four key goals listed
above. Progress towards reaching these goals is measured through a set of resource objectives
established by scientists for key aquatic conditions and processes. These objectives are
designed to meet what salmon need to thrive during the various phases of their life cycle.
Scientific research will be conducted to test the effectiveness of forest practices at meeting the resource objectives to provide:
- Cool water by maintaining shade
- Large woody debris for in-stream habitat
- Clean water by protecting unstable slopes and improving roads to prevent excessive sediment from entering into streams
- For the natural hydrologic regime by disconnecting road drainage from streams
- Natural vegetation along streams and clean water by buffering streams to prevent forest herbicides from entering them
- Fish habitat for all life stages at any time of the year by correctly classifying streams and removing barriers to fish passage.
Strong Bipartisan Support from the Washington State Legislature
With strong bipartisan legislative support the Forests & Fish legislation (officially
ESHB 2091) was passed on May 19, 1999. Former Governor Gary Locke signed it into law on June
7, 1999. This act directed the state Forest Practices Board to adopt permanent rules
implementing Forests & Fish protection measures, effective July 1, 2001. On June 6, 2006, the State of
Washington received approval for the 50-year Forest Practices Habitat Conservation Plan, which was accepted by
Governor Gregoire on behalf of the State.