A Pierce County resident told the council during the community forum on Aug. 5 that the county should explore establishing a marine resource council to coordinate near‑shore monitoring, stewardship and policy recommendations. The speaker, Chris Clark of Glen Cove, said Pierce County’s roughly 200 miles of shoreline create economic and ecological obligations that the county currently lacks a dedicated body to manage.
Clark described local shoreline pressures—population growth, shoreline development, climate change and water‑quality concerns—and said neighboring counties have conservation districts and marine resource councils that provide coordinated stewardship, research and policy advice. He asked the council to investigate creation of a Pierce County marine resource council under the statute he cited (transcript: “RCW 3 6.125 0.1”), offered to volunteer to help with formation steps and asked staff to follow up about next steps and contacts.
Council members did not take formal action in the meeting but the chair invited the speaker to follow up with council staff and suggested members who work on environmental and shoreline issues may be interested in further conversations.