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http://www.kenaiwetlands.net/
Wetlands
are regulated under section 404 of the Clean Water Act. Wetlands
are also more difficult and costly to build on than dry ground,
and provide valuable habitat, water quality and flood control functions.
Kenai wetlands are mostly in good shape, providing good habitat,
water quality and flood control. Maintenance is cheaper and easier
than repair. "If it ain't broke don't fix it." Kenai wetlands
ain't broke, and we'd like to keep them that way. In order to do
that, a project was begun to help understand where wetlands are,
then to guide the development of best management practices in order
to maintain valuable wetland functions.
The first part of the project was to classify and map the wetlands
on the western Kenai Lowlands. The second part is to make the map
easy to access to all. Those parts have been accomplished and a
new "wetland management tool" in the form of a map is
now available on the Kenai Borough's Interactive Parcel Viewer website.
There, users with a web browser and internet connection can zoom
to maps of parcels, satellite images, aerial photographs, and wetlands.
Parcels are linked to data such as ownership, owner's names and
addresses and assessed value. Wetlands are linked to photographs
and detailed descriptions. This website is used extensively by prospective
landowners and the realtor community.

Satellite
Imagery Viewer
Nearly 10,000 privately owned vacant parcels less than 5 acres are
situated at least in part on mapped wetlands. Wetlands are not always
obvious. Many building projects are delayed, and corners are cut
when the builders are surprised to discover wet ground upon initial
excavation. These surprises can lead to cutting corners as expenses
exceed budgets, and cut corners lead to future problems. Surprises
and problems can be avoided from the start if builders know where
wetlands are.
The next step is to evaluate and document wetland functions. We
are completing a project using Alaska Department of Fish and Game's
Anadromous Waters Catalog and the detailed wetland map to describe
known silver salmon habitat, likely habitat and possible habitat.
A second project documenting and evaluating wetland habitat functions
is using a GIS analysis and expert interviews to assign caribou
calving and sandhill crane nesting habitat functions to wetlands.
Hydrological and other functions are in our plans for the future."
Feel
free to contact Mike
Gracz with
questions or for more information about this project.
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