Our mission is to protect the habitat of Puget Sound tidelands from the underregulated expansion of new and intensive shellfish aquaculture methods. These methods were never anticipated when the Shoreline Management Act was passed. They are transforming the natural tideland ecosystems in Puget Sound and are resulting in a fractured shoreline habitat. In South Puget Sound much of this has been done with few if any meaningful shoreline permits and with limited public input. It is exactly what the Shoreline Management Act was intended to prevent.

Get involved and contact your elected officials to let them you do not support aquaculture's industrial transformation of Puget Sound's tidelands.

Governor Inslee:

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

What is the Value of Fudge Point's Tidelands?

Ralph Scott, born in 1926, was raised on Harstine Island. As an adult he had a vision of Fudge Point's future. Seen in that vision were upland parcels of property coupled to the 3,295 linear feet of tidelands on Fudge Point, with the entire area between mean high and extreme low tides reserved as a pedestrian easement, accessed by a 50' wide road.  This vision became memorialized when he recorded a document with Mason County in 1991 (AF#524414 - see end for tideland reservations).

 Is this the pedestrian easement 
Ralph Scott saw on Fudge Point's tidelands?
(click to enlarge)
Note:  This picture has been altered
to show what the proposed
geoduck farm would look like.

The value of tidelands is seen in many ways.  Some find the highest value in the tidelands' natural state and record it as such with the assumption it will remain so in the future.  Ralph Scott knew this.  Those who helped create the Shoreline Management Act also knew this.  What neither knew was how aquaculture would transform into what it is now. 

Ralph Scott is gone. Will his vision of Fudge Point as he recorded it remain for future generations?


Ralph Scott's Vision for Fudge Point's Tidlands
(click to enlarge)




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