Mat-Su Basin Salmon Habitat Partnership

  • Partnership
    • Who We Are
    • Why We Exist
    • Our Strategy
    • Current Focus
  • Mat-Su
    • The Basin
    • Our Community
    • Fisheries
  • What We Do
    • Project Funding
      • Project Stories
      • Waters to Watch
        • 2022 Deshka River
        • 2021 Eklutna River
        • 2019 Alexander Creek Watershed
        • 2015 Alexander Creek Watershed
        • 2014 Montana Creek
        • 2013 Big Lake
        • 2011 Cottonwood Creek
        • 2010 Wasilla Creek
    • Salmon Symposium
      • 2024 Symposium
      • 2023 Symposium
      • 2022 Symposium
      • 2021 Symposium
      • 2020 Symposium
      • 2019 Symposium
      • 2018 Symposium
      • 2017 Symposium
      • 2016 Symposium
      • 2015 Symposium
      • 2014 Symposium
      • 2013 Symposium
      • 2012 Symposium
      • 2011 Symposium
      • 2010 Symposium
      • 2009 Symposium
    • Summer Site Tours
      • 2023 Site Tour
      • 2022 Site Tour
      • 2021 Site Tour
      • 2019 Site Tour
      • 2018 Site Tour
      • 2017 Site Tour
      • 2016 Site Tour
      • 2015 Site Tour
  • Your Help
  • Resources
    • Project Mapper
    • Funding
    • Studies and Reports
    • Strategic Planning Documents
    • Steering Committee Meeting Notes
    • Partnership Operations
  • Contact
  • Blog

August 20, 2013 by admin

Welcome Newest Partnership Members!

Alaska Salmon Alliance
Arni Thomson and Crew of the Wizard. Fall 2011The Alaska Samon Alliance (ASA), is a 501(c)6 fisheries trade organization representing seafood processors and commercial fishermen of the Kenai Peninsula.  ASA believes that wild Alaska Salmon are part of the cultural fabric of our state.  They are woven into our past, our present and our future. 
The Alaska Salmon Alliance is focused on public education, promoting the value of scientifically based salmon management to preserve habitats and create predictable harvests for all salmon users in the Cook Inlet region.  ASA promotes long-term sustainability and is a source for accurate information about the salmon industry. We advocate for a thoughtful, process-oriented allocation of Cook Inlet salmon for the benefit of all Alaska. 
Learn more by visiting the Alaska Salmon Alliance website.
“After attending a Symposium in 2010, I knew joining the Mat-Su Salmon Partnership was the right thing to do.  It is a grassroots practical and reasonable organization dedicated to the preservation of salmon stocks in perpetuity.”     – Arni Thomson, Executive Director ASA
 
Tyonek Tribal Conservation District
Tyonek TCD fish pssg work 2013 (3)TTCD is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to conserve, enhance, and encourage the wise use of the natural resources within our District, which shares its boundaries with Game Management Unit 16B.
In 2005, Tyonek took a historic step and became the first village in Alaska to start a Tribal Conservation District. The Tyonek Tribal Conservation District was formed through a mutual agreement between the Native Village of Tyonek (NVT), the Tyonek Native Corporation (TNC), and the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). TTCD is a non-regulatory entity that provides technical and financial assistance to District landowners to achieve their conservation goals.
Since hiring staff in 2011, TTCD has been involved in a variety of projects. In 2012, TTCD began developing a Natural Resource Assessment and Project Implementation Plan, funded through the US Fish and Wildlife Service’s Alaska Coastal Program. Also in 2012, TTCD worked with USFWS, ADF&G, the Kenai Peninsula Fish Habitat Partnership, and the Native Village of Tyonek to install a fish friendly culvert on Indian Creek in the Tyonek area.
Learn more about Tyonek Tribal Conservation District by visiting ttcd.org.
“The Tyonek Tribal Conservation District (TTCD) is excited to be a new member of the Mat-Su Basin Salmon Habitat Partnership.”    – Christy Cincotta, Executive Director Tyonek TCD
 Click here to see other Partnership organizations, or become a member by filling out a brief application.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

August 20, 2013 by admin

Great Land Trust Celebrates Completion of Coastal Conservation Easements!

By Kim Sollien ~ Great Land Trust staff & Steering Committee member of the Mat-Su Salmon Habitat Partnership.

Since 2002, as an active member of the Mat-Su Basin Salmon Habitat Partnership, Great Land Trust (GLT) has concentrated much of its conservation efforts on coastal wetlands and estuarine habitats within Upper Knik Arm.  This strategic effort has been guided by the 2008 Mat-Su Salmon Partnership Strategic Action Plan. As a result of our focused efforts, GLT and Mat-Su Salmon Partnership partners including the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Environmental Protection Agency, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Mat-Su Borough, The Conservation Fund, The Nature Conservancy, Pacific Coast Joint Venture, and many others have helped to permanently conserve 8 of the 19 undeveloped estuaries in Upper Knik Arm totaling over 6,000 acres of coastal habitat important for all five species of pacific salmon.  Conserving estuarine and nearshore habitat is one of GLT’s (and the partnership’s) top priorities because of their essential importance to salmon.

The projects below are a summary of GLT’s most recent coastal conservation efforts:

O'Brien Crk Mom Pop Corvair '63 (3)
Mr. & Mrs. Harbeson at their homestead in 1963.
Photo credit: Harbeson family

Historic O’Brien Creek Estuary Conservation Easement 2013

On March 7, 2013, GLT and the Harbeson, Chapman, and Barlow families celebrated a new conservation easement with a party. Together, we toasted with sparkling cider, hugs, and a few proud tears. With the families’ final signatures, we were able to preserve their 30-acre homestead, including O’Brien Creek Estuary, for generations to come.

In early 2010, GLT began working to conserve their historic homestead in honor of their parents. Over the past three years, we had many visits with the family to draft the conservation easement and listen to their stories of homesteading. They regaled us with numerous wildlife encounters, seeing baby Beluga whales frolicking at the mouth of O’Brien Creek and stickleback fish marooned in puddles on the flats, as well as many touching memories of their parents. We are so thankful for the opportunity to get to know this special family and to help honor their parents with the conservation of the family homestead.

The O’Brien Creek property lies on the northeastern banks of Knik Arm, near the old Knik Townsite, and offers expansive views of the Inlet and the Chugach Mountains.  The property was identified by GLT in 2010 following a GIS-based parcel prioritization that highlighted privately owned parcels in the Mat-Su Borough with estuarine habitat.  The property ranked in the top 100 parcels out of over 100,000 parcels assessed for their conservation value. The property includes 20 acres of coastal wetlands, intertidal mudflats, salt marsh and portions of O’Brien Creek known to provide migration, spawning, and juvenile rearing habitat for Coho salmon. Funding for this project was contributed by the National Fish Habitat Partnership, National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, and the Mat-Su Borough. This property is private and not open to the public but still provides important habitat for fish and wildlife that move through its boundaries and provide public benefits.

 

eklutna river estuary
Eklutna River Estuary
Photo credit: Carl Johnson

Fire Creek and Eklutna River Estuary Conservation Easement 2012

In the Fall 2012, GLT completed the Fire Creek and Eklutna River conservation easement covering a spectacular eight mile section of coastline totaling 1,355 acres along the Eastern shoreline of Knik Arm containing the Fire Creek, Mink Creek, Edmonds Creek, Mirror Creek, Eklutna River estuaries.  The conservation of this area protects important spawning and rearing habitat for all five species of salmon as well as provides habitat for federally endangered Cook Inlet Beluga Whales.  The coastal wetlands on the parcels also provide important habitat for hundreds of nesting and migratory birds and serve as an important wildlife corridor along the coast.

Together with the 2011 Knik River Islands Conservation Easement, GLT Eklutna, Inc. with support from Mat-Su Basin Salmon Habitat Partnership, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Army Corps of Engineers, NOAA Fisheries, AK Dept of Fish and Game, and Cook Inlet Regional Inc., have conserved 6,144 acres of important fish and wildlife habitat in Upper Knik Arm.

At the closing ceremony on November 4th 2012, Curtis Mc Queen, CEO of Eklutna, Inc. spoke about their corporation’s interest in working with GLT. He shared that as an organization, they hold two perspectives when evaluating potential projects. He said they always acknowledge that their corporation, as the largest landowner in the Municipality of Anchorage, has a responsibility to their shareholders to develop their lands and to create jobs.  They understand that their activities are an important economic driver for the region’s growth. He also shared that as tribal people, they see the need to uphold their traditional and cultural values to care for the lands and habitats they have been given. He said that the partnership with GLT on the conservation easements for these lands allowed them to satisfy both perspectives as this particular project conserves lands historically and culturally important to their shareholders and the Native Village of Eklutna, while also generating revenue for the Corporation.The easement allows the property to continue to be used by Eklutna, Inc. Shareholders for traditional and recreational uses and will be open to the public through special land use permits issued by Eklutna, Inc.

 

Great Land Trust is a non-profit land conservation organization whose mission is to work with willing landowners and other partners to conserve  Southcentral Alaska’s Lands and Waters.  GLT is one of 50 member organizations that make up the Mat-Su Basin Salmon Habitat Partnership, who collectively believe that thriving fish, healthy habitats and vibrant communities can co-exist in the Matanuska and Susitna River drainages of Southcentral Alaska. To learn more about the work of GLT please visit http://www.greatlandtrust.org/. To learn more about the Mat-Su Salmon Partnership go to https://matsusalmon.org/dev.

 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

August 16, 2013 by admin

Mat-Su Salmon Symposium

Join us November 13th and 14th, 2013 for the sixth annual Mat-Su Salmon Science and Conservation Symposium!

 This year’s theme will be healthy salmon, healthy communities. Keynote speaker will be David Batker, Co-founder, Executive Director and Chief Economist of Earth Economics. The Mat-Su Salmon Science and Conservation Symposium is an annual forum to share information about salmon and their habitat in the Mat-Su Basin. Presentations span a wide range of topics – fish passage restoration projects on Mat-Su streams and assessment of their benefits to salmon; studies about geology, erosion, and salmon distribution on the Matanuska River; wetlands mapping and management; green Infrastructure planning; salmon distribution throughout the Mat-Su Basin; conservation of public lands; and more!

New location!: Palmer Community Center (Depot), 610 S. Valley Way, Palmer, Alaska.

Presentation and poster abstract submissions due by September 30th.

Please note: General registration deadline has been extended to Monday October 28th.

No cost to attend.  Lunch and snacks provided. 

Learn more at https://matsusalmon.org/what-we-do/science-symposium/2013-2/

Filed Under: Mat-Su Salmon Science & Conservation Symposium, News, Uncategorized

August 1, 2013 by admin

Please Review Draft Partnership Strategic Action Plan

In 2008 the Mat-Su Salmon Partnership developed its Strategic Action Plan to identify the Partnership’s long-term goals and strategies and to provide a tool the Partnership could use to prioritize projects related to fish habitat goals in the Mat-Su basin. In the last five years, much has happen in the Mat-Su Basin, and the Partnership has been busy addressing the priorities of the 2008 plan (find out more at https://matsusalmon.org/sample-page/our-strategy/).  In the last year, partners have reviewed the plan and drafted an updated strategy to conserve salmon habitat in the Mat-Su.

We need your thoughts on what the Partnership can do achieve our vision of thriving fish, healthy habitats, and vital communities in the Mat-Su.

 Please review the draft Strategic Action Plan and send your comments to corinne_smith@tnc.org by August 30th.

 

Filed Under: Dates and Updates, News, Uncategorized

July 31, 2013 by admin

Mat-Su Project Funding

 

The Mat-Su Salmon Habitat Partnership, a National Fish Habitat Partnership, is offering funds in support of conservation activities and priorities, as identified in the Mat-Su Salmon Partnership Strategic Action Plan.

Project descriptions are due via email by close of business on September 6, 2013. 

Learn more on our website at  https://matsusalmon.org/what-we-do/types-of-projects/

Filed Under: Dates and Updates, News

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 16
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • Next Page »

Join us April 21-22, 2025 at the BP Energy Center, Anchorage. The intent of the symposium is to support healthy fisheries, people and economies on the Kenai Peninsula and in the Mat-Su by better connecting people and organizations working on salmon watershed stewardship in the region, particularly Kenai and Mat-Su fish habitat partnerships. Register here, […]

Connecting Across Tikahtnu: Kenai & Mat-Su Joint Fish Habitat Partnerships Meeting

Angler Conservation Funding Opportunity

Funding Opportunity!

Subscribe for Monthly Partnership Updates!

* indicates required

Connect with us

Copyright © 2025 · Executive Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in