A Southwest Washington salmon habitat restoration nonprofit broke ground Thursday on a large restoration project on and around the South Fork Toutle River. The two-year project aims to address the continuing effects of Mount St. Helens’ 1980 eruption.
Read more…
Source: The Columbian
South Fork Toutle salmon habitat restoration project breaks ground
More from Clark County NewsMore posts in Clark County News »
- ‘Doors remain open’ at Planned Parenthood in Vancouver amid nationwide closures
- Hazel Dell’s infamous Value Motel has gone from crime magnet to Safe Haven
- Top Stories: New warehouse spaces in Vancouver, sales tax on services, pedestrian killed on I-205
- Truck carrying 5,000 bees overturns in Fairgrounds neighborhood
- Bail set at $500K for man accused in July drive-by shooting in Vancouver
More from Latest NewsMore posts in Latest News »
- ‘Doors remain open’ at Planned Parenthood in Vancouver amid nationwide closures
- Hazel Dell’s infamous Value Motel has gone from crime magnet to Safe Haven
- Top Stories: New warehouse spaces in Vancouver, sales tax on services, pedestrian killed on I-205
- Truck carrying 5,000 bees overturns in Fairgrounds neighborhood
- Bail set at $500K for man accused in July drive-by shooting in Vancouver
More from Mount St. HelensMore posts in Mount St. Helens »
- ‘A unique and powerful story’: Despite cuts, Mount St. Helens Institute committed to providing educational resources to visitors
- Cascades Volcano Observatory in Vancouver observatory will rock you
- After mass firings, rehired Gifford Pinchot National Forest workers return to work
- 45 years after blast, Mount St. Helens’ sediment still causing costly problems
- Rescuers save Ridgefield hiker from potentially fatal conditions at Coldwater Lake
More from MurrowMore posts in Murrow »
- WA to continue collecting pollution data after Trump ends key national law
- Port of Kalama to pull pedestrian walkway
- $1B Kalama chemical company fined $2.7M for dramatically underreporting emissions
- Feds greenlight killing more sea lions to protect endangered salmon as controversy fades
- $1.5B Columbia River underwater power project turns down Trump admin expedited permitting
More from Murrow FellowshipMore posts in Murrow Fellowship »
- WA to continue collecting pollution data after Trump ends key national law
- Port of Kalama to pull pedestrian walkway
- Feds greenlight killing more sea lions to protect endangered salmon as controversy fades
- $1.5B Columbia River underwater power project turns down Trump admin expedited permitting
- National Guard uses Cowlitz and Columbia rivers to train for air assaults overseas
More from NewsletterMore posts in Newsletter »
- ‘Doors remain open’ at Planned Parenthood in Vancouver amid nationwide closures
- Hazel Dell’s infamous Value Motel has gone from crime magnet to Safe Haven
- Truck carrying 5,000 bees overturns in Fairgrounds neighborhood
- Bail set at $500K for man accused in July drive-by shooting in Vancouver
- Give More 24! raises $2.3 million for 180 nonprofit groups in Southwest Washington
More from Salmon & SteelheadMore posts in Salmon & Steelhead »
- Columbia River Gorge hatcheries suffer amid job losses, but volunteers stepping up
- Feds greenlight killing more sea lions to protect endangered salmon as controversy fades
- Columbia Basin’s salmon are in hot water, literally, says report from Save Our Wild Salmon
- Trump pulls out of $1 billion Biden-brokered Columbia River salmon restoration plan
- Leaked Trump vision for ‘a leaner NOAA’ scraps key Columbia River salmon restoration fund
Be First to Comment