Commercial Shellfishing Reopens on Vaughn Bay
By PJ Callahan, KP News
The Key Peninsula community has the Vaughn Bay
residents, Puyallup Tribe of Indians,
Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department and the
Washington State Department of Health to thank
for a large portion of Vaughn Bay reopening to
commercial shellfishing after decades of
closure. The state Department of Health recently
gave about 104 acres on the west and north sides
of Vaughn Bay the green light based on marine
water sampling, pollution investigations and
surface water sampling by Tacoma-Pierce County
Health Department and Pierce County Public Works
and Utilities.

A view of Vaughn Bay, which has been
reopened to commercial
shellfishing. Photo by Karina Whitmarsh |
In a press release issued by the state
Department of Health, Maryanne Guichard,
director of the Shellfish and Water Protection
office, said, “This has been a long time coming.
It’s the result of hard work by Pierce County
and local residents. I’m optimistic we can build
on this success if we continue the good field
work and have the community’s support on these
issues.”
Bill Cleland, public health advisor with the
Shellfish and Protection Office, said the
Puyallup Tribe requested the evaluation of
Vaughn Bay for commercial production of
shellfish. “Previously, it was classified as
prohibited, so we didn’t even monitor it,”he
said. Based on the Puyallup Tribe’s request, the
state Department of Health began taking water
samples and conducting a sanitary survey.
According to Cleland, one key to the success of
the effort to reopen the bay to shellfishing was
the willingness of the residents surrounding the
bay to have their septic systems tested with a
more extensive dye. “In some areas, people won’t
let the health department near their septic
systems, much less let them put in a dye
tablet,” Cleland said. “We had a very high
percentage [around 75 percent] of folks who
cooperated, thanks to public meetings that were
held to inform the public what was up. It was
those kinds of efforts that lead to improved
water quality there.” Cleland also explained
that failing septic systems that previously
impacted the bay have been repaired or replaced
over time, which is primarily what has helped
clean up the bay.
Cleland stressed the importance of ongoing field
work to ensure water quality. “In all of our
shellfish growing areas, we continually monitor
water quality,” he said. “Our crews are
continuously trying to identify potential new
sources not orignally recognized. We keep an eye
on shorelines that might indicate future
problems, such as forested hillsides being
prepared for development.”
The eastern portion of Vaughn Bay will remain
closed to shellfish harvesting until
contamination sources can be identified and
corrected. According to Cleland, that portion is
impacted by a couple of creeks that come into
the bay and have higher counts due to wildlife
in the watershed.