Water Conservation IS River Protection

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Water Conservation IS River Protection

On Monday night, May 23rd, the City Council of Spokane passed a landmark ordinance - C36209 - that codified a water conservation and drought response plan for the City of Spokane. The ordinance was vetoed by Mayor Woodward and the veto was overridden by the Spokane City Council on June 6th of 2022. Spokane is entering a new era with regards to valuing our municipal water as potential river flows. We are now understanding that over-consumption has profoundly negative and lasting impacts on the Spokane River during critical low-flow periods of the long hot summers of Eastern Washington and drought years.

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Protect Your River: Ask the City Council of Spokane to Support Water Conservation and Drought response Planning

Please sign the letter at the link below and tell Spokane’s City Council members that you support stronger water conservation measures and a drought response plan that will sustain our river flows. SIGN HERE

Wise use of water is river protection. Some Background:

Average daily (SVRP Aquifer) water use in the City of Spokane is 202 gallons per person. The average American only uses 82 gallons per day. Under us all, the Spokane Valley-Rathdrum Prairie Aquifer (SVRPA) is connected to the Spokane River. Many reaches of the Spokane River depend on the contributions of the aquifer for cold clean water that supports river flow. The peak demand for this use occurs in the summer for irrigating grass. This is when our Spokane River needs this water the most. In the summer when residential water use is five times higher than other times of the year, our use actually competes with the River for this water. Our use impacts river flow. Drought conditions in 2015, 2021, and likely this summer should serve as a wake-up call that Spokane needs to cut water waste and set more ambitious water conservation goals with a serious drought response plan.

Water use in City of Spokane

Water Waste inside the City of Spokane

Water Waste in the City of Spokane - Aquifer water on the sidewalks

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Crayfish Study Results

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Crayfish Study Results

During the summer of 2021, community scientists from the Spokane area joined scientists from the University of Idaho and the Spokane Riverkeeper to capture and analyze crayfish from the Spokane River and Hangman Creek for mercury content. We found that crayfish from the Spokane River have very low mercury content, below the recommended threshold for consumption. Hangman Creek crayfish had slightly higher mercury content and are also safe to eat.

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Coming Home: Supporting Salmon Recovery Efforts is a Core mission of the Spokane Riverkeeper

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Coming Home: Supporting Salmon Recovery Efforts is a Core mission of the Spokane Riverkeeper

It is all about coming Home. This year, as your Spokane Riverkeeper, I will be continuing to discuss the importance of clean, cold water and the maintenance of river flows through the lens of chinook salmon recovery. We will continue the conversation with you all - our supporters - as well as ongoing internal discussions with those working hard directly on salmon recovery. The intersection of River protection and salmon recovery cannot be overstated. Not that long ago, salmon were a pillar of your River, the communities who lived with them, and the Rivers that depended on their bodies for sustenance. Upon their return home, they will again support the future of our Rivers and our communities.


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Airway Heights Requests New Water Right in SVRP Aquifer

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Airway Heights Requests New Water Right in SVRP Aquifer

It is becoming clear that with climate change, over-consumption and pressure from groundwater pumping, that water shortages during the summer are a profound new threat to the health of the Spokane River. Clean water becomes more vulnerable every day and our river is at risk.

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2021 Community Science Turbidity/Sediment Study

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2021 Community Science Turbidity/Sediment Study

The Spokane Riverkeeper partnered with Spokane Falls Trout Unlimited and local community scientists for a fourth year, to measure the effect of Hangman Creek’s annual sediment plume on water clarity (turbidity) in the Spokane River. During the winter and spring of 2021 27 community scientists performed 121 sampling events, collecting 411 water samples from the Spokane River and Hangman Creek. These samples were analyzed for turbidity and compared against state standards.


Results show nine turbidity violations over the course of the study in the Spokane River due to Hangman Creek. These results suggest that turbid water, even in a low flow year, is impacting the Spokane River to a degree that fish habitat and other values are degraded.


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2021 Water Temperature Report

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2021 Water Temperature Report

This report summarizes how a warming planet is affecting our river, its tributaries, and ecosystems. We discuss the policies intended to maintain healthy river temperatures, how these policies should be implemented, and how our community can make changes to benefit the river that contributes so much to our watershed.

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Hydrological Drought - the River tells the story

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Hydrological Drought - the River tells the story

Spokane is currently facing a drought, but what does that mean for the Spokane River? We are already seeing low river flows and high water temperatures, unhealthy for native fish populations and the river ecosystem. Drought also impacts how we use and see the river, limiting opportunities to kayak, float, or fish, and slowing rapids by one-half to one-third of normal spring and summer flow rates. Read and learn more about the different types of drought, how drought impacts Spokane and the river, and what we can do locally to improve river flows in such a dry summer.

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Irrigation best practices

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Irrigation best practices

Spokane residents use close to 5 times more water July to September than during other times of the year. Most of this peak demand comes from watering our lawns and gardens during the summer. Here are some irrigation guidelines to conserve water for our river.

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Midsummer Water Temperature Report

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Midsummer Water Temperature Report

Spokane Riverkeeper has been monitoring temperatures in the Spokane River since 2015, and this summer marks some of the highest water temperatures we’ve seen in the last six years. Portions of the river that rely solely on surface water are being transformed by increasingly hot summers and drought conditions for eastern Washington. Although river reaches that have cold groundwater influxes are more resilient, large volumes of superheated surface water can raise their temperatures above state standards. This phenomenon threatens populations of native trout that are already in a precarious position and whose populations are very low.

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How Spokane can become a water wise city

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How Spokane can become a water wise city

Last week, we saw record high temperatures up to 111° Fahrenheit. Increasing stressors, like rising temperatures and droughts associated with climate change, in combination with population growth and land development are all threatening the health of our river. The Spokane Valley-Rathdrum Prairie Aquifer contains about 10 trillion gallons of water (Spokane County Water Resources, n.d.). One would assume we have an endless water supply, why should we be worried about conservation? Most of our water use occurs in the spring and summer months, when outdoor irrigation is highest. In 2019, outdoor residential water use was 553 gallons per day per household compared to indoor water use of 113 gallons per day (City of Spokane Water Department, 2020). The city reports delivering up to 180 million gallons of water per day (City of Spokane Public Works & Utilities, n.d.). The aquifer and our river are connected. The aquifer actually contributes 59% of the water moving through the river every year (Spokane County Water Resources, 2020). Higher rates of water use lead to lower levels in the aquifer, and less water for our river.

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What water conservation means for the Spokane River

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What water conservation means for the Spokane River

Over 600,000 people depend on the Spokane Valley Rathdrum Prairie aquifer for water. We know that the Spokane River is connected to the aquifer and is the largest source of recharge for our water supply. Our aquifer also contributes water to the river. Being good stewards of the river and all its wildlife means reducing water consumption, especially during the summer months when river flows are lowest. Water from this year’s snowpack was below average and this spring has been unusually dry. Spokane is currently facing moderate to severe drought conditions, and it is only June 10th!

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Lower Snake River Dam Removal: The devil's in the details

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Lower Snake River Dam Removal: The devil's in the details

Make no mistake about it, the Spokane Riverkeeper supports Lower Snake River dam removal. We believe it is our last best chance to bring the historic run of salmon back to a river once teeming with them. The plan put forward by Congressman Mike Simpson from rural Idaho, provides energy towards this goal. However, the environmental concessions included in his plan give us deep concerns. We urge our Washington Congressional Leaders to get involved and negotiate a plan that does not comprise our bedrock environmental laws. Please read our letter to Congressman Simpson to understand the breadth of our concerns. (photo from https://simpson.house.gov/salmon/)

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