Edmonds Council supports retaining property tax dollars; learns city likely to miss Comp Plan deadline

The council also learned during Tuesday’s remote meeting that due to planning and development department staffing shortages and other factors, Edmonds is likely to miss the state-mandated deadline for completing its 2024 Comprehensive Plan update.

September 17, 2024

Letter to the editor: ‘No’ on Alternative 6 for Unocal site cleanup

Posted: September 14, 2024

Editor:

Out of an original list of six alternatives for the Unocal site cleanup, the Washington State Department of Ecology narrowed the list to two: Alternative 4 would call for the most thorough cleanup by excavation and removal of contaminated soil that still remains on the site. Alternative 6 leaves the remaining contaminated soil in place. Chevron, the parent company of Unocal, has selected Alternative 6 as the preferred option.

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Reader View: Comprehensive Plan — Adopt minimum state requirements to retain Edmonds’ charm

By Karen Haase Herrick
Posted: August 28, 2024

As previously stated by the Alliance of Citizens for Edmonds (ACE), repeatedly stated by Edmonds residents and the chair of the city’s Architectural Design Board (MEN comment), “the City should not be allowing anything in the Comp Plan that is not required.”

Continue reading “Reader View: Comprehensive Plan — Adopt minimum state requirements to retain Edmonds’ charm”

Ecology: Edmonds school needs to find source of PFAS

Link to full Everett Herald article

EDMONDS — The state Department of Ecology is advising the Edmonds School District to “take immediate corrective action” to reduce dangerous forever chemicals in Madrona K-8 School’s stormwater management system, after local water officials and a consulting firm both found contamination.

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, are found in hundreds of products, including nonstick cookware and firefighting foams. When people are exposed, PFAS can increase risks of certain cancers and weaken the body’s immune system.

The chemicals are not affecting the school’s drinking water. But environmental activists and leadership at the Olympic View Water and Sewer District are concerned PFAS will seep into the Deer Creek aquifer that supplies drinking water to homes in Edmonds, Woodway and parts of unincorporated Snohomish County.

In a letter sent earlier this month, officials with Ecology’s Water Quality Program recommended the school district locate the source of the PFAS. If the school district cannot find the source, Ecology proposed using “additional or alternative” stormwater treatment methods known to remove PFAS from runoff.

Removing PFAS from stormwater is an emerging area of research, Ecology spokesperson Colleen Keltz said in an email. But if needed, the school district could use a filter or soil mixture with granular activated carbon to address contamination, she said.

Madrona’s stormwater system uses underground injection control wells — structures that allow fluids to flow into the ground, typically under the force of gravity. The wells are layered with sand and rock to filter out pollutants. After passing through a metal screen at the bottom, the water disperses into the ground.

The Deer Creek aquifer is like “an underground river” beneath the school campus, said Taine Wilton, director of capital projects for the Edmonds School District, in a previous interview with The Daily Herald. The underground wells hover 40 to 50 feet above the aquifer, with layers of silt in between.

Still, in an interview earlier this month, Bob Danson, general manager at Olympic View, said he is concerned the wells “will actually dump stormwater into the aquifer.”

School district staff are reviewing and determining next steps, said spokesperson Curtis Campbell. He did not have information on how much the school district may pay for a new stormwater treatment system.

Ecology has not set a deadline for the school district to complete its recommendations.

“But we have been working with them on this issue and will continue to work with them to ensure that progress is made,” Keltz said.

Almost two years ago, Olympic View detected PFAS in Madrona’s stormwater system.

Olympic View notified the school district, and one year later, the Seattle-based consulting firm Shannon & Wilson tested for PFAS to verify the results. The firm found two PFAS chemicals: PFOA at 22 parts per trillion and PFOS at about 8 parts per trillion.

Joe Scordino, president of the newly-formed Edmonds Environmental Council, said the situation with Madrona affirms locals’ concerns about the city of Edmonds using underground injection control wells in critical aquifer recharge areas, or places where aquifers are particularly vulnerable to contamination.

Ta’Leah Van Sistine: 425-339-3460; taleah.vansistine@heraldnet.com; Twitter: @TaLeahRoseV.

Open letter to Olympic View Water customers concerning your water

August, 2024

Dear Woodway residents, South Edmonds residents, and Friends of the Environment:

YOUR “pure drinking water” is at stake. The City of Edmonds recently passed a CARA (Critical Aquifer Recharge Area) code that could compromise the exposed aquifer storage layer that recharges and contains YOUR drinking water. Sounds complicated? It is – as aquifer is a very unique soil. This flawed code allows new development and redevelopment to use UIC (Underground Injection Control) wells that would inject potentially contaminated stormwater runoff into the ground. If you are a member of Olympic View Water and Sewer District (OVWSD),

YOUR PURE DRINKING WATER is at risk. Everyone living in Woodway should be alarmed as this development may contaminate your water that drains to the “pristine” Deer Creek watershed.

Edmonds City Council was not provided BAS (Best Available Science) regarding the current Federal Regulatory Standards for PFAS (Per-and polyfluoroalkyl or “forever chemical”) which has already been noted at Madrona School. Read the August 8, 2024 Everett Herald news article titled “PFAS found near Edmonds school sparks concerns about wells” to understand. It’s an eye-opener https://www.heraldnet.com/news/pfas-found-near-edmonds-school-sparks-concerns-about-wells/!

To compound the issue, the City had not yet completed the necessary environmental documents for the City’s Comprehensive Plan update. Without the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (expected to be presented to Council 8/22/24), any decisions about how the City will mitigate the impact of development is unknown.

With Washington State’s push for density and the flawed CARA code process, seven citizens that respect BAS formed a non-profit organization to challenge this code decision to the Growth Management Board. This grass-roots group, Edmonds Environmental Council (EEC), has hired a preeminent environmental attorney in the State of Washington, David Bricklin, of Bricklin and Newman. The firm has filed an appeal with the Growth Management

Hearings Board and requested a free mediator since EEC understands the City’s DISTRESSED financial situation and the high cost of attorneys. A mediator has been assigned to the case and will run parallel with the appeal.

The EEC’s mission is to work with local, regional and state governments to educate them on unintended environmental consequences of government actions that don’t look at ALL the variables of the environment or infrastructure. We are not opposed to ‘responsible’ development and redevelopment, but we are opposed when unrestricted development is allowed that risks hazards to human health and potentially irreversible damage to our environment. Sometimes the environment and growth (zoning) are at odds and BAS NEEDS to now play a key role. It is a very complex appeal.

Folks, this is a serious matter. The PFAS threats are obvious and the quality of OUR drinking water is at risk unless we band together. We suggest changing the code to prohibit UIC wells in CARAs until the science of PFAS is better known and State and Federal laws are implemented. Unfortunately, the City said no and so here we are!

We need your donations to support these important issues. For as little as $20 you can become a member and get regular updates. The timeline may go out 180 days. So, join the fight to preserve pure drinking water.
Contact: Edmonds.Enviro.Council@gmail.com for details or visit edmondsenvironmentalcouncil.org.

Sincerely,

Joe Scordino, President and Diane Buckshnis, Vice President

Edmonds Environmental Council (https://edmondsenvironmentalcouncil.org)

PFAS found near Edmonds school sparks concerns about wells

Madrona K8 School under construction

Link to Everett Herald article

EDMONDS — The state Department of Ecology is investigating contamination near Madrona K-8 School, after a consulting firm found so-called “forever chemicals” in the school’s stormwater management system.

Continue reading “PFAS found near Edmonds school sparks concerns about wells”

Letter to the editor: City must reverse critical aquifer recharge area decision

Posted: June 29, 2024

Link to My Edmonds News article

Editor:

The City of Edmonds has just adopted a new critical aquifer recharge area (CARA) ordinance in spite of scientific evidence from the Olympic Water District about the presence of forever chemicals (PFAS) in stormwater. The changed CARA code will allow contaminated stormwater to infiltrate into the Deer Creek drinking water aquifer in southern Edmonds.

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Future stewards lend a hand to baby salmon

My Edmonds News
Posted: May 27, 2024

Last week marked the final releases this year of “baby” coho salmon from Edmonds’ Willow Creek Salmon Hatchery into local streams to help the salmon populations in Puget Sound. On hand to help were community volunteers including future stewards of the environment and even Edmonds Mayor Mike Rosen.

Lucy-and-Theo-Kopp-take-special-care-in-releasing-salmon-into-lower-Shell-Creek
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Council approves city code regarding critical aquifer recharge areas, hears fire service options

Posted: April 17, 2024

Link to My Edmonds News article

Councilmembers and Mayor Mike Rosen listen to William Sturgeon of Fitch and Associates present an assessment of options for future fire services.

Two major pieces of business before the Edmonds City Council Tuesday night were whether to approve a city code amendment regarding critical aquifer recharge areas (CARAs) and to learn more about the city’s options for fire and emergency medical services.

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Washington will move to tougher federal limits on ‘forever chemicals’ in tap water

By: Bill Lucia
Washington State Standard
April 10, 2024

Link to article

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency finalized the rules Wednesday. The state established a program targeting the hazardous chemicals in drinking water in 2021.

 (Getty Images)

Washington regulators will adopt a drinking water standard the federal government issued Wednesday that’s meant to limit people’s exposure to a class of harmful chemicals used for decades in firefighting foam and manufacturing.

Continue reading “Washington will move to tougher federal limits on ‘forever chemicals’ in tap water”