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Project released for managing, protecting Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary

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Category: Climate
Type: News
Source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Date: Monday, October 31st, 2011

N.O.A.A. today released the final management project and environmental assessment for the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary in Washington state. The document provides a framework for the sanctuary to refine its research, education and outreach programs, create and enhance partnerships, and manage potential threats to the sanctuary's marine resources.

The project includes a new regulation prohibiting wastewater discharge from cruise ships within the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary. Updates to other regulatory language have been made to ensure clarity and consistency with the National Marine Sanctuaries Act.

"The management project is the result of a collaborative effort that involved input from the public, the Sanctuary Advisory Council, and the Intergovernmental Policy Council," said George Galasso, acting sanctuary superintendent. "It includes detailed guidance for plan priorities that we will use to manage this special undersea place for future generations to enjoy."

The Intergovernmental Policy Council consists of 4 coastal treaty tribes--the Hoh, Quileute and Makah tribes and Quinault Indian Nation--and Washington state. The management project emphasizes the nature and significance of the sanctuary's treaty trust responsibility to the tribes.

Based on several years of scientific assessment and public input, the project includes 20 directives, comprised of a series of non-regulatory actions, regulatory strategies, and activities. The projects address 5 priority goals:

  • manage the sanctuary in collaboration and coordination with the 4 coastal treaty tribes, the state, and stakeholders;
  • conduct collaborative research, assessments and monitoring to support ecosystem-based management;
  • enhance ocean literacy;
  • conserve natural resources; and
  • understand the sanctuary's cultural, historical and socioeconomic significance.

The final management plan, regulations, and final environmental assessment can be read at http://olympiccoast.noaa.gov.

Periodic management project review is required by Congress for each of NOAA's 13 national marine sanctuaries to ensure that they continue to conserve, protect, and enhance their nationally significant living and cultural resources, while allowing compatible commercial and recreational activities.

Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, designated in 1994, spans 3,310 square miles of marine waters off the rugged Olympic Peninsula coastline. The sanctuary protects a productive upwelling zone that is home to rich marine mammal and seabird faunas, diverse populations of kelp and intertidal algae and thriving invertebrate communities. The sanctuary is also rich in cultural resources, with in excess of 150 documented historical shipwrecks and the vibrant contemporary cultures of Makah, Quinault, Hoh and Quileute nations.

NOAA's mission is to understand and predict changes in the Earth's environment, from the depths of the ocean to the surface of the sun, and to conserve and manage our coastal and marine resources. Join us on Facebook, Twitter and our other social media channels.

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