Take Action Now to Support the Gold Creek Valley Restoration Project
Conservation Northwest / Apr 30, 2024 / Action Alert, I-90 Wildlife, Wildlife Crossings
For many years, Conservation Northwest has been a strong advocate and supporter of large-scale investments in the I-90 Snoqualmie Pass area for wildlife habitat connectivity and restoration.
The Gold Creek Valley is home to the 900-foot and 1000-foot wildlife underpasses, which have improved wildlife connectivity across I-90 at this high-elevation linkage in the central Cascades. The Gold Creek Valley Restoration Project is the next logical step in repairing past ecological harm caused by a legacy of old-growth logging, gravel pits that helped develop I-90, and human alteration of the ecosystem.
Join Conservation Northwest in supporting this project to abate the long-term unraveling of the aquatic functions in the Gold Creek Valley. This project will repair the aquatic processes and restore complex wetland and riparian habitats that would have existed historically. Wildlife and fish species, like bull trout, depend on these critical headwaters in the Cascades.
Please submit your comments here by May 2!
Here are Conservation Northwest’s talking points for the Gold Creek Valley Restoration Process:
- Over the years, this high-elevation area has invested heavily in wildlife and habitat connectivity. Restoring the habitat functions and processes in this valley makes meaningful efforts to repair and mitigate past management activities that negatively impact the ecosystem. Millions of tax dollars have been invested to create permeability for wildlife north and south under the I-90 freeway.
- Restoring large wood, with intact root wads if possible, to add complexity to the stream will help recover habitat for fish and wildlife and create climate-resilient refugia for bull trout.
- Partially filling the pond will restore the hydrologic and natural groundwater processes impacted over 50 years ago when the gravel pit was used to serve the I-90 freeway. Restoration is needed to address the creek’s dewatering and to restore wetland processes that fish and wildlife at Snoqualmie Pass depend upon.
- Maintaining access to the boat launch is important to the public, but driving illegally into the reservoir and damaging sensitive fish populations and stream habitats is not allowed and illegal activity needs to stop. The public can still access these areas for recreation, with a little extra effort to walk to these recreational opportunities on foot.
- While recreational opportunities at Gold Creek Pond will be limited during the restoration project, the same type of recreational access will be available after the environmental habitat restoration has been completed.
- Communicating to the public about other nearby outdoor opportunities would be beneficial. Areas such as Lake Easton State Park, Cle Elum Lake, and Lake Kachess could all possibly absorb additional recreation, as could the multiple access points to the Palouse to Cascades Trail. It would be beneficial to share these opportunities more broadly with the public as viable alternatives while this important project moves forward to address past damages to the environment.
- Furthermore, existing science and research demonstrate that outdoor recreation can decrease wildlife use of an area. In important wildlife corridors like Gold Creek, we must ensure that human recreation is carefully managed.
- We support this project moving forward and thank the USFS for the opportunity to provide public comment.