Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program
SOW Report
Contract 75493: 2010-077-00 EXP TUCANNON (WDFW) ADMIN: PA 6-9 MANAGE PA-13 DESIGN
Project Number:
Title:
Tucannon River Programmatic Habitat Project
BPA PM:
Stage:
Implementation
Area:
Province Subbasin %
Columbia Plateau Tucannon 100.00%
Contract Number:
75493
Contract Title:
2010-077-00 EXP TUCANNON (WDFW) ADMIN: PA 6-9 MANAGE PA-13 DESIGN
Contract Continuation:
Previous: Next:
72044: 2010-077-00 EXP TUCANNON (WDFW) ADMIN: PA-13 (DESIGN), CONST-PREP
  • 74314 REL 52: 2010-077-00 EXP TUCANNON (WDFW) ADMIN: (PA-13) DESIGN & PRE-CONST
Contract Status:
Closed
Contract Description:
Background:  The Tucannon River basin is located in Southeast Washington State in Columbia and Garfield counties.  The system-wide restoration objective for the Tucannon River is to improve habitat conditions for Endangered Species Act (ESA) listed species (Snake River Spring Chinook and Steelhead) for all life history stages.  It is expected that improved habitat conditions will lead to an increase in the abundance of listed species returning to the river.  Increasing abundance will lead to de-listing of the species, which is the overall recovery goal for the system.  Previous efforts (CCD 2004; SRSRB 2006) have identified the habitat-limiting factors associated with the decline of ESA-listed populations.  

The Tucannon River Geomorphic Assessment & Habitat Restoration Study (Anchor QEA, April 2011) identified and prioritized stream reaches and restoration actions which would best improve habitat for salmonids.  Focusing on the high priority areas for Tucannon spring Chinook, the Columbia Conservation District (CCD) coordinated the development of a habitat restoration plan for the Tucannon River from RM-20 upstream to RM-50; the District continued to work with the Snake River Salmon Recovery Board (SRSRB), through the Tucannon River Programmatic Habitat project, and extended the restoration plan from RM-20 downstream to the confluence of the Snake River.  This Conceptual Restoration Plan (Anchor QEA, November 2011) has prioritized projects into three Tiers (1-3) based on the projected effects of implementation as a benefit to Snake River spring Chinook, cost-efficiency relative to those benefits, and the feasibility of construction.
____________________________________________________________________________________
Overview:  The Snake River Salmon Recovery Board (SRSRB) manages the Tucannon River Programmatic Habitat Project (2010-077-00) through a parent contract for the operations support, management organization, implementation assistance, and reporting described in this summary.  The goal of the Tucannon River programmatic is to restore habitat function and channel processes in the spring Chinook priority restoration reaches of the Tucannon River, leading to improved population productivity and abundance.  

This BPA support contract will facilitate the development of future projects and the refinement of the work plan as well as soliciting project sponsors for implementation.  WDFW will partner with SRSRB to implement projects; this contract continues the WDFW role anticipated in the Tucannon Habitat Programmatic Project: to help perform project selection, implementation management, monitoring planning, data collection, outreach, and other tasks where WDFW can provide expertise; and to be an implementer of the on-the-ground project construction activities for projects identified in the work plan.

Current Emphasis:  Under this contract WDFW will lead the implementation supervision for: pre-construction site preparation, and implementation of Project Area 6-9, scheduled for the summer of 2017.  The PA 6-9 project actions were identified as a high priority for habitat improvements (Anchor QEA, Nov 2011), and will focus on increasing large wood debris complexity and floodplain connectivity, the highest priority actions for spring Chinook in the Tucannon.  A description of the project area with respect to existing natural processes and habitat conditions is provided in the Design Report, along with the specific physical and biological objectives that the proposed restoration features are expected to achieve.  In addition, the project’s contribution to the overall watershed-scale restoration plan is described. Construction considerations and best management practices are included for the proposed treatment actions.

WDFW will also will advance preliminary design (initiated under contract #68874), permitting, and pre-construction activities for habitat restoration at Project Area13, conceptually described in the restoration plan (Anchor QEA, Nov 2011) as a priority action for improving spring Chinook, by focusing on increasing channel length, improving shape, channel complexity, and floodplain connectivity.  This is a unique opportunity for the Programmatic habitat effort in that significant channel length improvements and floodplain connectivity are possible at this site.  A complementary project, funded by a legislative capital project grant (WA) and managed by WDFW, is underway to reconfigure an existing fish weir and trap and adjacent impoundment (Rainbow Lake) to reduce the impoundment footprint in the floodplain scheduled for implementation in 2017.  Combined, the two projects create an opportunity for a larger floodplain reactivation and connection in the PA-13 project reach.  WDFW, independently and through the programmatic, is engaged in design considerations and leading the development of the Rainbow Lake capital project, to maximize effectiveness and the opportunities represented by the two closely-related projects; WDFW’s intention is to be ready by late 2017 for implementation of the PA-13 design in the summer of 2018.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
Management Considerations: The initiation and subsequent management of restoration actions in each identified Project Area within the Tucannon Programmatic occurs generally on a four-year project-cycle overlap.  Each individual project is scheduled and completed across four major elements or sequenced stages:
-- Design, risk review, clearances and permitting,
-- Pre-construction activities (material staging and site preparation),
-- Construction (design implementation), and
-- Reclamation, or site restoration and the remediation of construction impacts.  

Generally, year-one will include design and permitting; year-two will be material acquisition/pre-construction preparation/ logistics considerations; year-three is the construction of the design, and the spring of year-four is reclamation work and the re-planting of impacted areas.  Therefore, multiple projects will be progressing simultaneously and not sequentially; and the construction of one project will occur in each year over the duration of the Habitat Programmatic Project. Permits need to be in place prior to all pre-construction activities.  The Tucannon River In-Water Work Window is July 15th through August 20th for all the stream reaches located on WDFW public lands.  Site plantings (design features) and reclamation (impact remediation) will occur the spring following the project construction.  Tree planting during the late fall–early spring is the critical period for plant survival, because the area has limited annual precipitation (approximately 12”-13”), mostly occurring in the winter and spring months.
Account Type(s):
Expense
Contract Start Date:
04/01/2017
Contract End Date:
06/30/2018
Current Contract Value:
$149,180
Expenditures:
$149,180

* Expenditures data includes accruals and are based on data through 31-Mar-2024.

BPA CO:
Env. Compliance Lead:
Work Order Task(s):
Contract Type:
Contract (IGC)
Pricing Method:
Cost Reimbursement (CNF)
Click the map to see this Contract’s location details.

No photos have been uploaded yet for this Contract.

Full Name Organization Write Permission Contact Role Email Work Phone
Kris Buelow Snake River Salmon Recovery Board Yes Technical Contact kris@snakeriverboard.org (509) 392-3858
Daniel Gambetta Bonneville Power Administration Yes Env. Compliance Lead dagambetta@bpa.gov (503) 230-3493
Michael Garrity Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) No Interested Party michael.garrity@dfw.wa.gov (360) 810-0877
Jonathan Goodman Bonneville Power Administration Yes Technical Contact jdgoodman@bpa.gov (503) 230-4764
Stephanie Green Bonneville Power Administration Yes Contracting Officer sagreen@bpa.gov (360) 418-2710
Janice Jackson Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) No Administrative Contact janice.jackson@dfw.wa.gov (360) 902-2444
David Karl Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) Yes Contract Manager karldbk@dfw.wa.gov (509) 527-4138
Douglas Knapp Bonneville Power Administration Yes Technical Contact ddknapp@bpa.gov (503) 230-3285
Andre L'Heureux Bonneville Power Administration Yes COR allheureux@bpa.gov (503) 230-4482
Peter Lofy Bonneville Power Administration Yes F&W Approver ptlofy@bpa.gov (503) 230-4193
Steve Martin Snake River Salmon Recovery Board No Supervisor steve@snakeriverboard.org (509) 386-4748
Christopher Roper Bonneville Power Administration No CO Assistant cproper@bpa.gov (503) 230-3514
Tybee Sheidler Bonneville Power Administration No CO Assistant tasheidler@bpa.gov (503) 230-3820
Mark Wachtel Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) No Supervisor wachtmlw@dfw.wa.gov (509) 892-7860
Elham Zolmajd-Haghighi Bonneville Power Administration No CO Assistant ezolmajd-haghighi@bpa.gov (503) 230-7414


Viewing of Work Statement Elements

Deliverable Title WSE Sort Letter, Number, Title Start End Complete
Effective implementation management and timely contract administration A: 119. Habitat Project Implementation Management and Contract Administration 06/30/2018 06/29/2018
Documentation and assistance for environmental and cultural resource clearances B: 165. Compliance documentation and clearance for riparian and stream habitat enhancement projects 06/30/2018 06/29/2018
Construction Management Complete C: 100. Materials Management, Field Engineering, Construction Oversight 12/31/2017 12/31/2017
Review final design report, construction or site plan, and cost-estimate D: 175. PA-6 thru 9: Finalize Design Specifications and Engineering for Channel Complexity Project 06/30/2017 05/31/2017
Upload design products (attach) in Pisces: 30-60% Design (PA-13); develop final designs (80-100%) E: 175. PA-13: Design Specifications & Engineering: Salmonid Habitat Complexity Improvement Project 06/30/2018 06/29/2018

Viewing of Implementation Metrics
Viewing of Environmental Metrics Customize

Primary Focal Species Work Statement Elements
Chinook (O. tshawytscha) - Snake River Spring/Summer ESU (Threatened)
  • 2 instances of WE 175 Produce Design
  • 1 instance of WE 100 Construction Management
Steelhead (O. mykiss) - Snake River DPS (Threatened)
  • 2 instances of WE 175 Produce Design
  • 1 instance of WE 100 Construction Management

Sort WE ID WE Title NEPA NOAA USFWS NHPA Has Provisions Inadvertent Discovery Completed
A 119 Habitat Project Implementation Management and Contract Administration 04/01/2017
B 165 Compliance documentation and clearance for riparian and stream habitat enhancement projects 04/01/2017
C 100 Materials Management, Field Engineering, Construction Oversight 04/01/2017
D 175 PA-6 thru 9: Finalize Design Specifications and Engineering for Channel Complexity Project 04/01/2017
E 175 PA-13: Design Specifications & Engineering: Salmonid Habitat Complexity Improvement Project 04/01/2017
F 185 Periodic Status Reports for BPA 04/01/2017
G 132 Report encompassed in yearly Programmatic reporting for Tucannon Habitat Projects [#2010-077-00] 04/01/2017