2030 Fish passage project delivery plans
Find the sites in our 2030 fish passage delivery plan.
We continue our work to comply with the requirements of a U.S. District Court injunction to correct barriers to salmon and steelhead, and open 90 percent of blocked habitat by 2030. We update our Fish Passage project delivery plans quarterly or sooner based on significant project issues or new information.
Delivery plans lists and maps
Find lists and maps of planned projects in our 2030 delivery plan. We will make updates as we get more information. To view these on our interactive map, turn each delivery plan layer on or off. Plan documents are from August 28, 2024.
View the full project delivery plan (PDF 378KB), or view this list in county groupings below.
Whatcom and Skagit counties
- Project delivery plan sites for Whatcom and Skagit counties in a table (PDF 107KB)
King, Snohomish and Island counties
- Project delivery plan sites for King, Snohomish and Island in a table (PDF 174KB)
Pierce, Thurston, Lewis and Pacific counties
- Project delivery plan sites for Pierce, Thurston, Lewis and Pacific counties in a table (PDF 97KB)
Grays, Jefferson, Mason, Kitsap and Clallam counties
- Project delivery plan sites for Grays, Jefferson, Mason, Kitsap, and Clallam counties in a table (PDF 177KB)
How we prioritize fish passage work
We correct fish barriers as stand-alone projects or as part of larger transportation projects in alignment with both the permanent injunction and the Governor’s budget. We prioritize stand-alone projects, included in our delivery plan for compliance with the injunction, based on many factors, including:
- Habitat Gain – We prioritize barrier corrections that open the most habitat soonest to get these benefits to fish fastest.
- Partnership Opportunities – We consider nearby barriers owned by cities, locals and private parties to partner on correcting multiple barriers at the same time.
- Culvert Condition – We prioritize culverts that are failing structurally.
- Downstream Barriers – We place a high value on correcting culverts with no or few downstream barriers in order to provide immediate benefits to fish.
- Geographic Bundling & Public Impacts – In areas where there are many barriers along state highways it can be beneficial to group the correction efforts into one “bundle.” This may help reduce traffic delays, impacts to neighbors and can open more habitat together in a watershed.
- Tribal Input – Working with tribes is extremely important for fish passage projects, and input from tribes on priorities is valued.
- Project Readiness – Planning and prioritizing projects that are ready to deliver gives planners and designers more time to work on complicated projects.
- Public Impacts – We always consider the effects to the public for our fish passage projects. Bundling projects helps avoid repeated road closures and construction impacts to adjacent neighbors.
No single factor determines when a project is corrected. Each of these factors weighed together determine how WSDOT prioritizes projects.
166,800 electric vehicle
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87 wetland compensation sites
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25,000 safe animal crossings
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