Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program
SOW Report
Contract 74313 REL 51: 1984-021-00 EXP JOHN DAY HABITAT ENHANCEMENT
Project Number:
Title:
John Day Habitat Enhancement
BPA PM:
Stage:
Implementation
Area:
Province Subbasin %
Columbia Plateau John Day 100.00%
Contract Number:
74313 REL 51
Contract Title:
1984-021-00 EXP JOHN DAY HABITAT ENHANCEMENT
Contract Continuation:
Previous: Next:
74313 REL 26: 1984-021-00 EXP JOHN DAY HABITAT ENHANCEMENT
  • 74313 REL 75: 1984-021-00 EXP JOHN DAY HABITAT ENHANCEMENT
Contract Status:
Closed
Contract Description:
This project was initiated on July 1, 1984 and allows for initial landowner contacts, agreement development, project design, budgeting, and implementation for anadromous fish habitat improvement on privately owned lands within the John Day Basin.  

The purpose of the John Day Fish Habitat Enhancement Program is to enhance production of indigenous wild stocks of spring chinook and summer steelhead within the subbasin through habitat protection, enhancement, and fish passage improvements. The initial Cooperative Agreements with landowners are for a term of 15 years to try and give the riparian vegetation time to get established enough to be stable if and when domestic livestock is allowed back into the riparian areas.  From observations  landowners have kept up the maintenance on the original riparian fences on approximately 90% of the expired Cooperative Agreements.  In high priority areas the program has renewed/rebuilt and/or maintained riparian protection fences for an additional 10 years.  The riparian buffer widths vary, but the averaged minimum is approximately 30 feet above the ordinary high water line. The Fish Habitat Program goals are to improve as much riparian vegetation in the 15 year Cooperative Agreement that is signed by each landowner.  The restoration of vegetation tropically results in the restoration of natural stream processes and other factors such as bank/channel stability, temperature, macro/micro invertebrates, sediment transportation, magnitude of water runoff, water quality, and fisheries health.

Under this contract we will coordinate with 5 landowners (Marx, Phillips, ODFW, USFS, and Pryor) and construct approximately 7.2 miles of riparian protection fence to protect 115 acres and 4.00 miles of stream. The riparian fences will include approximately 35 gates and 6 watergaps at the sites identified below:
• Build 2.00 miles of riparian fence on Wind Creek a tributary of the South Fork John Day River. (Phillips property)
• Build 2.25 miles of riparian fence on SF Murderers Creek, a tributary of the South Fork John Day River (USFS property).
• Build 1.20 miles of riparian fence on Mac Creek, a tributary of the Lower John Day River (Marx Property).
• Build 1.75 miles riparian fence on the Murderers Creek (ODFW property).
• Sign a cooperative agreement to maintain 0.5 miles of riparian fence on the north side of Long Creek, the south side was built in 2018 (Neal property).
• Complete BDA design on Hay Creek with Gilliam SWCD (Pryor property).
• Install approximately 10 BDA's on and 1.5 miles of Hay Creek (Pryor property).
• Design BDA and Instream structures on Tex Creek, SFWSCD will provide technical assistance cost share (ODFW property).
• Design Murderers Creek's instream structures and floodplain reconnection project with BOR (ODFW property).

Considerable time is spent coordinating with landowners on the Cooperative Agreement, fence alignment, gates, and water gap locations. Fish habitat staff stake structure locations and GPS the locations prior to landowner approval. The GPS coordinates are then given to Grant Soil and Water Conservation District (GSWCD) to map the riparian fence layout. GSWCD advertises the opportunity to bid on the project in the local newspaper, set up the bid packets, and determine whether each contractor is qualified and has the proper licensing, bonding and insurance requirements for the project. Cultural surveys are arranged with BPA environmental compliance personnel. A pre-bid tour of the project area is given to the contractors so they can view the terrain, fence layout, and design including all structures. Sealed bids are submitted to GSWCD by interested contractors by the due date specified on the bid packet and the project is then awarded to the lowest qualified bidder. The project time frame is established depending on the length of the project, (typically we allow 3 weeks for each mile of fence to be constructed). ODFW fish habitat personnel, habitat biologist/ senior technician oversee the progress and quality of the work. In some cases materials will also be delivered by ODFW personnel to save on contractor time/money and for program efficiency. At the end of the project the Fish Habitat personnel will complete a final walk through of the project and problem areas will be flagged and corrected by the contractor before final payment is requested and paid by GSWCD through a sub contract. Because the fish habitat program has to maintain the project for 15 years, the specifications to the riparian fence construction are closely monitored. Photopoints are established at the beginning of each project and then retaken every three years.

The John Day Fish Habitat Program also has under contract the Grant County Weed Department. Fish habitat personnel when on riparian project sites keep an eye out for noxious weeds on the counties top ten weed list. A small budget has been set aside to spray approximately 70 acres on projects currently under cooperative agreements. This has been a great benefit to our program to be able to spray weeds within the riparian area, if nothing else to show landowners that weeds can be maintained even in high dispersal areas.

The John Day Fish Habitat Enhancement Program maintains the riparian projects for the term of 15 years. Currently there are approximately 290 miles or riparian fence associated with 69 different landowners in 11 different counties,  Gilliam, Grant, Wheeler, Crook, Harney, Jefferson, Morrow, Sherman, Umatilla, Union, and Wasco. For example, We currently have 9 projects in Gilliam county that we maintain from our main headquarters in John Day, Oregon. Just to get from John Day to Condon takes approximately three hours, then to get to half of the project sites is another hour. On these days it takes two maybe three program personnel, and ATV's to cover as much ground as possible to get a single project area maintained and put back into workable order. These are usually long days depending on wildlife, Spring run-off damage and numbers of trees that have fallen during wind storms or fire damaged areas during the summer months. There are typically trees/rocks that have fallen on project fences and structures that need fixing. In the summer months there are occasionally flash floods that go through an area which requires attention to the watergaps and mainline fences as well. Program personnel have learned to cover more ground by dropping one person off and have them walk through sections that are only accessible by foot and then drive down a mile or so leave the ATV and leap frog to the lower end. This saves time so personnel can work in one direction and not have to back track. The program keeps track of where each day maintenance has been completed and if additional materials is need on the next visit it is written down. The program has two full time positions, one 6 month (Half 6 months fish Habitat and half 6 months Screens and Passage), one 5 month permanent seasonal position, and a 4 month secretarial position.

The Fish Habitat Program coordinates with many different agencies. The projects in Gilliam county partner with GSWCD,  projects in Wheeler are associated with Wheeler Soil and Water Conservation District, and the John Day Fish Habitat Program also works with the Tribal entities of both Umatilla and Warm Springs Tribes.
Account Type(s):
Expense
Contract Start Date:
03/01/2019
Contract End Date:
02/29/2020
Current Contract Value:
$522,470
Expenditures:
$522,470

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

BPA COR:
Env. Compliance Lead:
Work Order Task(s):
Contract Type:
Release
Pricing Method:
Cost Reimbursement (CNF)
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Viewing of Work Statement Elements

Deliverable Title WSE Sort Letter, Number, Title Start End Complete
Program Management A: 119. Program Management 02/29/2020 02/29/2020
EC for the Fish Habitat Program B: 165. Environmental Compliance 02/29/2020 02/29/2020
Select Project Sites C: 114. Select Project Sites 02/29/2020 02/29/2020
Maintenance of Riparian Projects D: 186. Maintain Riparian Fence 02/29/2020 02/29/2020
Herbicide Application E: 198. Herbicide Application 12/01/2019 12/01/2019
15 Year Cooperative Agreement on Neal Property - Long Creek F: 92. Neal Property - Long Creek 07/08/2019
Riparian Fence Installation G: 40. ODFW Property - Murderers Creek 11/01/2019 09/10/2019
Riparian Fence Installation H: 40. Phillips Property - Wind Creek 12/01/2019 12/31/2019
Riparian Fence Installation I: 40. USFS Property - SF Murderers Creek 08/30/2019 08/30/2019
Riparian Fence Installation J: 40. Richard Marx Property - Mac Creek 12/01/2019 12/31/2019
BDA /In stream structure designs for Murderers Creek K: 175. Murderers Creek Designs 02/29/2020 02/29/2020
BDA/Instream work designs for Tex Creek L: 175. Tex Creek Instream work/BDA Designs 02/29/2020 02/29/2020
BDA designs for Hay Creek M: 175. Hay Creek BDA Designs 07/31/2019 07/31/2019
Ten BDA's installed N: 29. Hay Creek complexity 10/31/2019 10/31/2019
Completed Annual Report O: 132. Submit Progress Report for the Period (March 1, 2018) to (February 28, 2019) 07/18/2019 07/18/2019

Viewing of Implementation Metrics
Viewing of Environmental Metrics Customize

Primary Focal Species Work Statement Elements
Chinook (O. tshawytscha) - Mid-Columbia River Spring ESU
  • 1 instance of WE 198 Maintain Vegetation
  • 1 instance of WE 186 Operate and Maintain Habitat/Passage/Structure
Steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) - All Populations
  • 1 instance of WE 29 Increase Aquatic and/or Floodplain Complexity
Steelhead (O. mykiss) - Middle Columbia River DPS (Threatened)
  • 1 instance of WE 198 Maintain Vegetation
  • 1 instance of WE 186 Operate and Maintain Habitat/Passage/Structure
  • 4 instances of WE 40 Install Fence
  • 1 instance of WE 92 Lease Land
  • 1 instance of WE 114 Identify and Select Projects
  • 3 instances of WE 175 Produce Design

Sort WE ID WE Title NEPA NOAA USFWS NHPA Has Provisions Inadvertent Discovery Completed
A 119 Program Management 03/01/2019
B 165 Environmental Compliance 03/01/2019
C 114 Select Project Sites 03/01/2019
D 186 Maintain Riparian Fence 03/01/2019
E 198 Herbicide Application 03/01/2019
F 92 Neal Property - Long Creek 03/01/2019
G 40 ODFW Property - Murderers Creek 08/22/2019
H 40 Phillips Property - Wind Creek 09/30/2019
I 40 USFS Property - SF Murderers Creek 08/22/2019
J 40 Richard Marx Property - Mac Creek 09/30/2019
K 175 Murderers Creek Designs 03/01/2019
L 175 Tex Creek Instream work/BDA Designs 03/01/2019
M 175 Hay Creek BDA Designs 10/07/2019
N 29 Hay Creek complexity 10/07/2019
O 132 Submit Progress Report for the Period (March 1, 2018) to (February 28, 2019) 03/01/2019
P 185 Periodic Status Reports for BPA 03/01/2019