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Clark County Clean Water Commission adopts four 2025 priorities, asks members to join subgroups
Summary
The Clark County Clean Water Commission voted unanimously to adopt four primary priorities for 2025 — nutrient management/nonpoint-source pollution, climate resilience/temperature, a stormwater management action plan focused on Lower Salmon Creek, and adaptive management for rate-study implementation — plus an overarching public-engagement goal.
The Clark County Clean Water Commission on Feb. 12 voted unanimously to adopt its 2025 work-plan priorities, asking commissioners to self-select into subgroups to support implementation and to prepare for a spring work session with the Clark County Council.
The commission approved a package of priorities that staff summarized as: (1) nutrient management and nonpoint-source pollution reduction, (2) climate resilience and water-temperature issues, (3) completion and implementation of a stormwater management action plan (SMAP) with a likely focus on the Lower Salmon Creek watershed, and (4) adaptive management tied to the stormwater rate study and its implementation. Staff and commissioners also agreed to treat public engagement and outreach — including symposiums, watershed listening sessions and an…
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