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The Beach The Jetty and The Cove Westport, Washington

The Beach The Jetty and The Cove Westport, Washington. a presentation by . Friends of Grays Harbor PO Box 1512 Westport, Washington 98595-1512 Http://www.fogharbor.org olearycrk@aol.com (360) 648-2254. Littoral Cell Extends Over 100 miles across two states. Active Erosion Spots. Westport .

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The Beach The Jetty and The Cove Westport, Washington

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  1. The Beach The Jetty andThe CoveWestport, Washington a presentation by Friends of Grays HarborPO Box 1512 Westport, Washington 98595-1512 Http://www.fogharbor.orgolearycrk@aol.com(360) 648-2254

  2. Littoral Cell ExtendsOver 100miles acrosstwo states

  3. ActiveErosionSpots

  4. Westport Wet and Wild Naturally Photo January 13, 2002

  5. Jetty Construction & RehabilitationHistory 1898 Construction of the south jetty began. 1898 - 1904 Point Chehalis shoreline accreted and moved westerly a maximum of 3,000 ft just south of the jetty extending the land mass which later became Westhaven State Park. 1902 - Present. The Jetty has been lowered, raised, shortened and lengthened in an effort to stabilize the erosion and accretion effects at a taxpayer cost of 100’s of millions of dollars.

  6. Recent Erosion Events Westhaven State Park 1987 Loss of Restroom and Parking Lot 1993 Breach at Jetty and Repair 1999 Current Erosion

  7. 1987 Erosion at Westhaven Winter storms washed away the restroom, two picnic sites and 25% of the paved parking at Westhaven State Park.

  8. 1993 Breach Breach before $1.3 Million Taxpayer Repair Repair after

  9. CurrentErosion Since1996 Over $12 Million Taxpayer Dollars Spent & Climbing Photos January 2002

  10. 1997 and 2001 Erosion Lines Refraction Mound Red January 1997 Blue November 2001 Drawing of mound not to scale

  11. Problem Erosion is only a problem when humans alter the natural environment or build structures close to the beach/ dune system.

  12. Rockin’the beach Not what surfriders, surf smelt, or the public expects on a naturally sandy beach

  13. What’s at Risk? Who’s at Risk?

  14. What’s At Risk? Who’s At Risk? Marine Resources andBeach Experience Activities

  15. What’s At Risk? Who’s At Risk? Razor Clams Dig events provide $4.3 million

  16. What’s At Risk? Who’s At Risk? Shellfish Culture Shellfish Industry, including Oysters Provide $7.3 million and 125 - 150 family-wage jobs

  17. What’s At Risk? Who’s At Risk? Surfing Over 1,000 surfers per week hit the beach at Westport during the 12 month long “season” and support area businesses with millions of locally spent dollars.

  18. What’s At Risk? Who’s At Risk? Parks and the Open OceanExperience Westhaven State Park Westport Light State Park are Washington State’s most visited day-use parks with over 1.2 million visitors per year.

  19. What’s At Risk? Who’s At Risk? InterdunalWetlands These parks and the land that lies between them are part of an increasingly rare interdunal ecosystem of critical wetland habitat. Photos January 7, 2003

  20. Herring Spawn

  21. What’s At Risk? Who’s At Risk? Commercialand SportsFishing Salmon, bottom fishing, crabbing, and other marine related activities generate 10’s of millions in local dollars.

  22. What’s At Risk? Who’s At Risk? Watchable Wildlife $1.7 Billion spent annually Statewide, generating $427 million in job income and $57 million in state taxes.

  23. Solutions Step back from the dynamic zone Allow nature her space for the natural processes

  24. Keep our Coast Wet and Wild Naturally

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