The Lands Council is a part of the Environmental Priorities Coalition or EPC. Each year, the executive directors of various environmental organizations all over the state support four pieces of legislation.
LeClerc Creek Restoration Project
Biochar
The Lands Council’s Reducing Forest Fuel Loads Through BioChar Conversion program is up and running. This program will convert post timber harvest residual woody debris to BioChar to be left onsite on the forest floor, promoting forest health through moisture retention and sequestering carbon as a climate change mitigation tool. The Oregon Kiln is our technological choice due to its portability.
It’s time to update WA’s Climate Pollution Limits!
The Lands Council Becomes Official "Snow School" Site
Announcing 2020 Environmental Priorities
Reforest Spokane Day Featured in Spokesman Review
Organizers for the Lands Council and Avista’s eighth annual Reforest Spokane Day set a lofty goal Saturday: plant about 3,000 small plants and 250 trees at two sites in three hours.
But that didn’t appear unrealistic once around 400 volunteers turned out to help.
“It’s a great thing to do,” said volunteer Cathy Walter, 52, who volunteers outside with her husband, Jeff, each month. “Last month we cleaned the river. This month we’re planting trees.”
The first planting site was on a slope at the southeast corner of First Avenue and Washington Street. Avista crews removed juniper bushes and installed a rock retaining wall. The slope is adjacent to where professional landscapers are installing two new street trees in sidewalk grates.
Once landscapers plotted spots for each plant, the volunteers dug holes and placed five ponderosa pines, several serviceberry trees and 3,000 mostly native small plants and grasses. Then they mulched and watered the new ground cover.
Lewis and Clark High School juniors Lauren Stone and Addy Somes volunteered to help plant through their environmental science course. They had to take pictures of the work they did and explain how it helped the environment.
The community engagement aspect of the course was a big incentive to take it, they said.
“A lot of other classes didn’t have that,” Somes said.
Volunteers plant a hillside at Washington Street and First Avenue as part of the Lands Council and Avista Reforest Spokane Day, Saturday, Oct. 12, 2019, in Spokane, Wash. (Dan Pelle / The Spokesman-Review)
Across town, the other half of the volunteers planted about 250 ponderosa pines along the Centennial Trail near the pedestrian Iron Bridge, just east of Gonzaga University.
Brenna Huang, 17, an LC student, said she’s been volunteering with the Lands Council for about four years and Reforest Spokane is one of her favorite events.
“Climate is really important,” she said. “I just want to do what I can to help, and I really enjoy working outdoors.”
In the past, the Lands Council has planted in areas on the outskirts of Spokane near rivers and streams, but the focus has turned toward the heart of the city this year as a part of a new urban forestry initiative.
City Council passed an ordinance in the spring to cover 30% of Spokane in tree canopy by 2030. With more than 89,000 trees within city limits, the current canopy estimate is 23%.
City Council member Lori Kinnear said the council could vote as soon as December to set up requirements for street trees during construction and incentives for planting them, like lower stormwater fees on water bills.
Studies have shown that planting trees can mitigate polluted stormwater reaching the river, make shade to reduce temperatures in the urban core and create animal habitat, said Chelsea Updegrove, Lands Council development director and urban canopy coordinator. Plus, trees can “change our landscape so we have a more beautiful downtown,” she said.
The idea started when Avista began tearing up sidewalks for routine maintenance and went to the city with a proposition to plant more street trees. Then the city approached the Lands Council about making it a community effort, Updegrove said.
Avista funded the event and, along with the city and Selkirk Developers, donated plant materials. Theongoing maintenance of the plants at Washington Street and First Avenue will be a volunteer effort.
“We’re here to celebrate our shared values,” Updegrove said.
Chair Grijalva, Senator Udall Introduce Bill to Protect Endangered Species, Reverse Trump’s Changes That Will Add to Extinction Crisis
Natural Resources Chair Raúl M. Grijalva (D-Ariz.) and Sen. Tom Udall (D-N.M.), lead Democrat on the Appropriations Subcommittee on Interior, Environment and Related Agencies, introduced legislation today to repeal all three Trump administration final rule changes to the Endangered Species Act, which taken together will fundamentally change the way we protect threatened and endangered species.
TLC on KIRO 97.3 FM
TLC Joins Environmental Groups Opposing Trump Admin Decision
The Trump administration finalized changes rolling back the Endangered Species Act on Monday. Regulators will now be allowed to factor in economic considerations when granting “endangered” status, species classified as “threatened” will see their protections weakened, and scientists will be limited in setting climate change-related protections