The Alliance for Puget Sound Shorelines

Working with partners to protect and restore Washington’s remarkable inland sea

Puget Sound’s 2,500 miles of shoreline—bluffs, beaches, tidelands, and estuaries—are vital and vibrant. Ecologically, they’re key to the Sound’s overall health; those many miles provide a range of habitats and dynamic processes that support the Sound’s far-reaching web of life. The shorelines are also important to people, connecting us to an inland sea that is at the heart of the region’s cultural, social, and economic identity.

Because of this vital importance, three leading conservation groups—People For Puget Sound, The Trust for Public Land, and The Nature Conservancy—launched a three-year, $80 million campaign in June, 2006 to protect and restore Puget Sound’s ecologically rich shorelines and ensure they’re available for people to enjoy for generations to come. The three groups, in a groundbreaking new partnership called the Alliance for Puget Sound Shorelines, have pledged to restore and protect hundreds of miles of shoreline and create several new parks. The effort was launched with a $3 million leadership gift from The Russell Family Foundation.

The work of these three groups can be summed up in just a couple of words: Mud Up. MudUp is a campaign to get people involved in the numerous volunteer clean up and education events happening in the Puget Sound region, from pulling invasive weeds in Anacortes to taking in the tidepools and story telling on Vashon Island. With more Puget Sound residents actively engaged and educated aobut the many issues threatening the health of Puget Sound, the Alliance envisions a public truly dedicated to the clean up and protection of Puget Sound's shorelines.

The Alliance is working closely with other civic and political leaders who are also committed to restoring Puget Sound’s health. Several important efforts are underway—most notably, Governor Gregoire’s Puget Sound Initiative and the creation of the Puget Sound Partnership, a new state agency charged with restoring the Sound to health by 2020. By working collaboratively, the Alliance hopes that its three-year campaign and these other efforts can lay the groundwork for what could ultimately be a long-term, multi-billion-dollar campaign, putting the effort to save Puget Sound on par with other large-scale estuarine restoration projects, such as those currently underway in the Chesapeake Bay and the Everglades.

    

In every outthrust headland, in every curving beach, in every grain of sand there is the story of the earth.
—Rachel Carson

 
The Alliance For Puget Sound Shorelines
911 Western Ave, Suite 580
Seattle, WA 98104
jdaly@shorelinealliance.org
A collaboration of:

 

The Alliance for Puget Sound Shorelines would like to recognize The Russell Family Foundation (www.trff.org) for its generous support of our work to protect and restore the shorelines of Puget Sound.