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Retired Biologist Leaves Legacy of Gains for Salmon Across Central Washington

June 23, 2021 โ€” The following was released by NOAA Fisheries:

Dale Bambrick jokes he has seen the world, or at least as much as you can see between Issaquah and Ellensburg. He retired in May after 20 years leading NOAA Fisheriesโ€™ Ellensburg Office, and delivering critical gains for salmon and steelhead across Central Washington.

โ€œI have never seen someone so committed to the resource, who was willing to say what was important and work so hard to make things happen,โ€ said Barry Thom, Regional Administrator for NOAA Fisheriesโ€™ West Coast Region. โ€œI have always appreciated Daleโ€™s commitment and his humor to get us through some pretty tough issues.โ€

Dale Bambrick spent 37 years protecting and improving habitat and more to recover salmon in central Washington. Dale grew up in Issaquah and then crossed the mountains to attend Central Washington University in Ellensburg. He started as an art major, but with the encouragement of a professor he switched to biology.

In 1983 Daleโ€™s advisor encouraged him to pursue a doctorate at Oregon State University. Instead, he accepted an offer from Grant County Public Utility District to join its environmental division. There he studied strategies to improve the survival of fish passing through dams, such as guidance nets that funnel fish toward safer passage routes. He also pondered the future: Should he be a teacher, a fish biologist, or go to graduate school?

In 1988 Dale left Grant County to work for the Yakama Nationโ€™s fisheries division, starting as a habitat biologist. Three years later he became Environmental Director, building a strong team. He helped lay the foundations for habitat conservation plans in the upper Columbia, assuring improvements for salmon. He developed the fisheries portion of the Yakama Nationโ€™s Forest Management Plan. He also helped shape state water policy, returning more water to streams for fish.

Read the full release here

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