Puget Sound Gets Sweeping New Protections as Washington Targets Pollution
Washington has established itself as a national leader in marine protection with the creation of a Vessel Sewage No Discharge Zone for Puget Sound, a sweeping prohibition that covers 2,300 square miles of marine waters plus Lake Washington and Lake Union. Director of Ecology Maia Bellon signed the final rule in early April, joining more than 90 other no-discharge zones nationwide but marking the first in Washington state and the entire Pacific Northwest. The rule, which took effect May 10, prohibits ships and boats from discharging raw or partially treated sewage into waters that support critical shellfish beds and recreational areas. The designation came after six years of public process and tens of thousands of supportive comments from environmental groups and residents.
The no-discharge zone addresses one of the most preventable sources of pollution threatening Puget Sound's fragile ecosystem. Even small amounts of sewage discharge over shellfish beds can trigger harvest closures that ripple through the region's economy and public health. The rule represents a critical piece of the state's larger Puget Sound Action Agenda, complementing existing investments in on-site septic systems, stormwater management, and agricultural runoff control. Enforcement will be handled jointly by the Department of Ecology and the U.S. Coast Guard, with penalties imposed for violations.
Beyond vessel sewage, state lawmakers have targeted another major threat to salmon and waterways: the chemical 6PPD found in car and truck tires. Legislation passed in 2024 adds 6PPD to the "Safer Products for Washington" list, requiring manufacturers to develop safer alternatives. Environmental advocates like Puget Soundkeeper Foundation are pushing to accelerate the transition to 2030 or earlier, recognizing that tire runoff from roads directly contaminates rivers and streams where salmon depend on clean water to survive.
The legislative package reflects Washington's broader environmental ambition. Lawmakers also strengthened environmental enforcement by expanding courts' ability to impose fines for damages from water pollution, air pollution, and hazardous waste violations. Additional protections include prohibition of octopus farming in state waters and tougher penalties for illegal dumping in forests, paired with funding for cleanup efforts. These measures collectively signal that Olympia is treating Puget Sound protection not as a single initiative but as a systemic overhaul of how the state manages its most valuable natural resource.
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