Restoration Strategy and Implementation
This session highlights collaboration and how resources can be leveraged to achieve restoration goals and harmony amongst landowners, regulators and practitioners. Seven projects will touch on topics including navigating private land ownership, land acquisitions, water rights, regulations, dam removal, and mitigation and ultimately how multiple interests can come together to support salmonid restoration throughout the Santa Clara River, Napa River, Sacramento River, and the Klamath Mountains and Klamath River in California.
Pickell's Dam Removal: Directing Mitigation Resources to High Value Species Recovery Actions. Jeff Lewis, Valley Water
Sulphur Creek Fish Passage Restoration (Part 2) – Lesson Learned from Implementation and Post Project Monitoring. Aaron Sutherlin, WRA
Acquiring Land – a Foundation for Large-Scale Habitat Restoration and Salmon Recovery. Maggie Blankinship, River Partners
Utilizing Private Capital to Advance Large-scale Floodplain Restoration at the Butte Sink Mitigation Bank. Ashley Zavagno, WRA
A Collaboration for Fish, Farms, and Neighbors: Scott River Restoration Farmers Ditch Company Project. Travis James, Yurok Tribe
Like an Ecosystem, Good Restoration Planning is a Web. Betsy Stapleton, Scott River Watershed Council
From Fragmented to Functional – A Multi-Disciplinary Approach to Restoration on the Little Shasta River. Adrienne Chanette, American Rivers