Over $1 Million Granted to Restore Humboldt County’s Upper Salt River (Mendocino County Gets Grants, Too)

The newly reopened western end of the Salt River in Humboldt County, California. The cofferdam and levee were breached between the phase one excavation and the Eel River on October 9, 2013 and the River became tidal again in the lowest section of the restoration. The breech location is to the left (west) of this picture which looks south east toward the Wildcat Hills which are the headwaters and provide tributaries to this river. Between river and barn, notice restoration marsh is also holding water.

The western end of the Salt River near Ferndale. The cofferdam and levee were breached between the phase one excavation and the Eel River on October 9, 2013 and the River became tidal again in the lowest section of the restoration. [Photo and much of the caption by Ellin Beltz]

Projects located in the Emerald Counties have been marked in red in the press release below.

Press release from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife:

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) [yester]day announced the selection of 24 projects to receive funding from its Water Quality, Supply and Infrastructure Improvement Act of 2014 (Prop. 1) Restoration Grant Programs.

The awards, totaling $27.8 million, were made under CDFW’s 2018 Prop. 1 Restoration Grant Programs Resiliency, Recovery and Response Proposal Solicitation Notice.

Of the $27.8 million, approximately $23.9 million was awarded through the Watershed Restoration Grant Program to projects of statewide importance outside of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, and approximately $3.9 million awarded through the Delta Water Quality and Ecosystem Restoration Grant Program to projects that directly benefit the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.

The awarded projects represent priorities outlined in the 2018 Solicitation, as well as the California Water Action Plan. The 2018 solicitation included a specific focus on large-scale wildfire response and Central Valley salmon resilience and recovery.

“CDFW has maintained an adaptive priority-setting approach each year under our Prop. 1 grant program, and we are pleased to fund a number of projects this year that support fire recovery as well as continuing restoration actions,” CDFW Director Charlton H. Bonham said. “We are proud to have funded over 100 on-the-ground projects in the four years since the implementation of Prop. 1. These are projects that will continue to deliver benefits to our fish and wildlife, and the habitats where they thrive.”

Projects approved for funding through the Watershed Restoration Grant Program include:

Implementation Projects 

  • Restoring Ecosystem Function in the Upper Salt River Watershed ($1,131,333 to Humboldt County Resource Conservation District [Map of the Salt River here]
  • Upper Truckee River and Marsh Restoration Project ($1,700,066 to California Tahoe Conservancy)
  • Martis Wildlife Area Restoration Project ($3,280,656 to Truckee River Watershed Council)
  • El Capitan Creek Fish Passage Restoration Implementation ($1,179,473 to California Department of Parks and Recreation)
  • Rubber Dam No. 1 System Fish Passage Improvements Project ($5,000,0000 to Alameda County Water District)
  • East Creek Restoration Project ($316,803 to Plumas Corporation)
  • Reidy Creek Restoration and Beautification Project ($380,873 to The Escondido Creek Conservancy)
  • The Road to Recovery: Redwood Complex Fire Restoration – Implementation ($656,902 to Mendocino County)
  • Post Fire Forest Management and Sediment Reduction for Coho Recovery ($1,423,107 to Sonoma Resource Conservation District)
  • Grasslands Floodplain Restoration Implementation Project ($1,342,718 to American Rivers)
  • Robin’s Nest Fire Recovery and Habitat Restoration Project ($301,600 to Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority)
  • West Stanislaus Irrigation District Fish Screen Project ($2,250,000 to West Stanislaus Irrigation District)
  • San Francisco Estuary Invasive Spartina Removal and Tidal Marsh Restoration Project, Phase II ($2,200,000 to California State Coastal Conservancy)
  • Multi-benefit Floodplain Restoration at Dos Rios Ranch and Steenstrup Slough ($1,588,911 to River Partners)

Planning Projects 

  • San Ysidro Creek Debris Basin Capacity Improvement Project ($139,744 to Santa Barbara County Flood Control and Water Conservation District)
  • Cold Springs Debris Basin Capacity Improvement Project ($139,744 to Santa Barbara County Flood Control & Water Conservation District)
  • Romero Creek Debris Basin Capacity Improvement Project ($139,744 to Santa Barbara County Flood Control and Water Conservation District)
  • Mapping, Assessment and Planning for Recovery and Resiliency in Fire-Damaged Watersheds in the Thomas Fire and Whittier Fire Recovery Zones ($382,223 to Santa Barbara Botanic Garden)
  • The Road to Recovery: Redwood Complex Fire Restoration – Planning ($88,382 to Mendocino County)
  • Dos Pueblos Creek Restoration Designs ($222,104 to Earth Island Institute)

Projects approved for funding through the Delta Water Quality and Ecosystem Restoration Grant Program include: 

Scientific Studies

  • Eyes and Ears: Using Lens and Otolith Isotopes to Quantify Critical Rearing Habitats for Salmon Viability ($838,279 to University of California, Davis)
  • Cyanobacterial Harmful Algal Bloom Toxins in Freshwater and Estuarine Invertebrates: Implications for Managed Species, Their Communities, and Human Health Risks ($612,115 to Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board)
  • Pathogen Screening and Health Status of Outmigrating Chinook Salmon in the California Delta ($733,884 to University of California, Davis)
  • High Resolution Temporal and Spatial Mapping of Mercury in Surface Waters of the San Francisco Bay Delta ($1,708,808 to University of California, Merced)

General information about CDFW’s Prop. 1 Restoration Grant Programs, as well as a schedule of locations and dates for workshops, once available, can be found at www.wildlife.ca.gov/grants.

Funding for these projects comes from Prop. 1 bond funds, a portion of which are allocated annually through the California State Budget Act. More information about Prop. 1 is on the California Natural Resources Agency website.

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9 Comments
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Crusty
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Crusty
5 years ago

Hooray. Now how’s about the problem The Klamath and Trinity dams The fish lived after all the mining and logging and over fishing.
It’s those dam dams are what’s killing our fish

Geoffrey davis
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Geoffrey davis
5 years ago
Reply to  Crusty

What about the Eel? bring that dam down.

Mr. Bear
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Mr. Bear
5 years ago
Reply to  Geoffrey davis

I agree it should come down but that diversion is just a tiny fraction of the Eel river’s flow

Flatgirl
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Flatgirl
5 years ago

Can we get a grant to fix the roads please. It seems so weird to restore something we ruined, but cannot maintain stuff we actually use & need

PollyP
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PollyP
5 years ago

The whole point of the Salt River work is to keep from ruining anything more with flooding!! Including route 211 and all the houses, barns, fields and cows surrounding it.

Mobius Dancer
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Mobius Dancer
5 years ago

A year or so ago I spoke to a couple of kids out by Port Kenyon. Lived there all their lives, they told me.
They had no idea that Port Kenyon was – for a few years – an active seaport along this stretch of coast, as the tides reached up the Eel to Port Kenyon on the Salt River.
Had a post office between 1886 and 1899 and from 1903 to 1913. Eventually the town disappeared with repeated floods and the Salt River silting up. There was also a sawmill.
Page 22 of this PDF starts discussing the European history of that location. Indigenous history is given in the pages preceding it, as it should.
https://humboldtgov.org/Archive/ViewFile/Item/810

the misadventures of bunjee
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the misadventures of bunjee
5 years ago
Reply to  Mobius Dancer

’64 flood ruined Camp Weott that was out on the river. Some of my relatives used to visit it. Clipper ships used to make it to the cannery at Pt. Kenyon.
http://library.humboldt.edu/humco/holdings/photodetail.php?S=port%20kenyon&CS=All%20Collections&RS=ALL%20Regions&PS=Any%20Photographer&ST=ALL%20words&SW=&C=8&R=6

There’s a boat partially sunk in the harbor of Gold Beach, OR that I’ve seen in photos tied up at Pt. Kenyon, the Mary D Hume.
http://library.humboldt.edu/humco/holdings/photodetail.php?S=port%20kenyon&CS=All%20Collections&RS=ALL%20Regions&PS=Any%20Photographer&ST=ALL%20words&SW=&C=8&R=5

https://www.abandonedspaces.com/wrecks/marydhume-wreck.html

Lots of old and interesting stories. All gone now.

Mr. Bear
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Mr. Bear
5 years ago

Cool boats but I don’t think they qualify as clipper ships

Jeffersonian
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Jeffersonian
5 years ago

Won’t benefit at all