Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Calmer Waters

Navigating the future of Lake Coeur d’Alene’s Cougar Bay.

Kevin Taylor
Coeur d'Alene's Cougar Bay
Coeur d'Alene's Cougar Bay
Coeur d'Alene's Cougar Bay

An apparent fight over the future of Lake Coeur d’Alene’s Cougar Bay may not be as bare-knuckled as it first appears.

The brewing dispute pits advocates for wildlife and quiet water against the full-throttle hordes of power boaters and jet skiers who might invade the bay after a maze of old log pilings and booms are removed by state decree.

There’s been plenty of prickly minutiae in the past year: The Idaho Department of Lands (IDL) twice giving the brush-off to local conservancy groups; a lawsuit filed by those groups against IDL; Lake City mogul Duane Hagadone spending millions to expand a nearby marina; and a contractor hired to pull pilings out of the mud between the marina and the bay, as if they were so many bad teeth.

With rancor and distrust at toxic levels, Nick Snyder, director of Kootenai County’s Department of Waterways and Parks, was invited last week to speak about Cougar Bay at the monthly meeting of the Kootenai Environmental Alliance (KEA), at the Iron Horse restaurant.

Before a standing-room-only crowd, Snyder patiently explained that the pilings removed to date were navigational hazards in the mouth of the Spokane River and that once Waterways and Parks cleared the mouth of the bay, that would be it.

“We don’t have any plans other than what’s been permitted,” he said. The permit from IDL calls for a line of buoys across the mouth of the bay to mark — for the first time, visibly — the location of the no-wake zone, and to place three buoys for boats to tie up overnight inside the no-wake zone.

The remaining phalanx of pilings and booms (a legacy of Coeur d’Alene’s past as a sawmill town) would remain, serving as a de facto barrier for keeping powerboats from buzzing the bay. A clearly marked no-wake zone will allow marine deputies to ticket any jet skiers who motor into the bay from the adjacent Blackwell Island marina.

Cougar Bay, shallow and weedy in its extremities, is an important and rare spot where conservationists have worked tirelessly to preserve access, wetlands and wildlife on popular Lake Coeur d’Alene.

Statistically, “99.4 percent of the lake is available to open boating.

The rest of it is Cougar Bay,” says Scott Reed, who helped form the Cougar Bay Osprey Protective Association, Inc., which is suing IDL. Reed says he was encouraged to hear Snyder explicitly say that the bulk of the pilings will remain in the bay — something that was more ambiguous previously — and that he is suddenly “quite optimistic about being able to work out some kind of agreement with the county.”

“Two doors are open,” Reed says. One that’s opened at least a crack is the prospect of negotiations between the KEA and the county to agree on maintaining quiet water in Cougar Bay. The other, he says, “is our particular lawsuit” against IDL. An initial court date is scheduled for late this month.

On Monday, Snyder said, “We are planning another meeting. Once I hear a proposal, we can move it forward.

“It’s a unique bay. There is a lot of interest there,” he adds. “We need to make sure everybody’s interest is addressed, whether you are a paddler, an angler, hunter or osprey enthusiast.”

Also in News

Calling for Help

A frantic 911 call lands Christopher Parker in a jail cell instead of a hospital, and leads to his death

Jacob Jones |
Wednesday, May 22,2013

Let 'Em Vote

Spokane City Council won’t sue to keep initiatives off of the fall ballot; plus, a new UW-WSU rivalry

Heidi Groover, Deanna Pan, Daniel Walters |
Wednesday, May 22,2013

Reefer Rules

Washington state takes a first pass at marijuana market regulations

Heidi Groover, Lisa Waananen |
Wednesday, May 22,2013

Disorderly Conduct

Three Spokane law enforcement officers are placed on leave over misconduct investigations

Jacob Jones |
Wednesday, May 22,2013

Uneven Cuts

Most elements of health care were shielded from the sequester — but not the Indian Health Service

Daniel Walters |
Wednesday, May 22,2013

Also By Kevin Taylor

Election 2010

Red Tide

As in the rest of the country, a Republican wave washes over the Inland Northwest.

Kevin Taylor, Joel Smith, Daniel Walters, Nicholas Deshais |
Wednesday, November 10,2010

Downtown Dilemma

Kevin Taylor |
Wednesday, July 18,2007

A Delicate Proposition

Envision Spokane's Prop 4 could either revolutionize Spokane or destroy it. Depends who you ask.

Kevin Taylor |
Thursday, September 24,2009

Homeless Rising

A grim economy means 'a whole new world' on the streets.

Kevin Taylor |
Wednesday, November 17,2010

In Progress

Prosecutor Steve Tucker again raises concerns about the juvenile justice system; plus, a city attorney is accused of violating civil rights.

Kevin Taylor, Nicholas Deshais |
Wednesday, September 29,2010


 
 
Close
Close
Close