Nicole Rasmussen, water quality biologist for the Quileute Tribe (right), and Meghan Adamire, conservation planner for Clallam Conservation District, standing along the edge of the Quillayute River with the Hermison Road restoration project in the background. (Submitted photo)

Nicole Rasmussen, water quality biologist for the Quileute Tribe (right), and Meghan Adamire, conservation planner for Clallam Conservation District, standing along the edge of the Quillayute River with the Hermison Road restoration project in the background. (Submitted photo)

Quileute Tribe, Clallam Conservation District receive award

LA PUSH — Clallam Conservation District and the Quileute Tribe were recently honored by the Washington Association of Conservation Districts with the 2020 Conservation District Tribal Partnership Award.

The Tribal Partnership Award is presented to a conservation district and a Native American tribe each year for demonstrating a relationship that offers an example of regional conservation of natural resources for the betterment of all, the association said in a press release.

Nicole Rasmussen, water quality biologist for the Quileute Tribe, and Joe Holtrop, executive director for Clallam Conservation District, accepted the award on behalf of their organizations during the Washington Association of Conservation Districts (WACD) annual meeting, held virtually in early December.

The award was presented for their partnership on the Hermison Road Project, which involves restoration of a 180-foot wide, nearly 7-acre riparian forest buffer along the Quillayute River.

Quileute Tribal land will be enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP), which will provide financial assistance for the project.

Nearly 3,500 native trees and shrubs will be planted to provide habitat and shade in a river system that supports some of Washington’s strongest remaining runs of chinook, coho, steelhead and other salmonids.

This is the second WACD Tribal Partnership Award that Clallam Conservation District has received. In 2015, the district and the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe were recipients of the award.

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