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KittitasCountyCWPP_September2022_Amendment-combined
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2022-10-04 10:00 AM - Commissioners' Agenda
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KittitasCountyCWPP_September2022_Amendment-combined
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Last modified
9/29/2022 1:04:27 PM
Creation date
9/29/2022 12:58:41 PM
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Meeting
Date
10/4/2022
Meeting title
Commissioners' Agenda
Location
Commissioners' Auditorium
Address
205 West 5th Room 109 - Ellensburg
Meeting type
Regular
Meeting document type
Supporting documentation
Supplemental fields
Item
Request to Approve a Resolution Amending the 2018 Community Wildfire Protection Plan and to authorize the Chairman's Signature on the Adoption Page with Amendment
Order
6
Placement
Consent Agenda
Row ID
94348
Type
Resolution
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<br /> <br /> <br />Community Wildfire Protection Plan 9 September 2018 <br />3 Kittitas County Local Environment <br />3.1.1 Overview <br />Kittitas County is located in central Washington and bound by the Cascade Mountains to the west <br />and the Columbia River to the east. More than 70% of the County is publicly owned. <br />Approximately two thirds of the public lands are managed by federal agencies including the USFS <br />(Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest) and the U.S. Army (Yakima Training Center). The remaining <br />one third of publicly owned land is split primarily between DNR and the Washington Department of <br />Fish and Wildlife (WDFW). Private lands are highly influenced by the availability of irrigation water in <br />Kittitas County. Like the rest of the Yakima River watershed, irrigation infrastructure including <br />reservoirs and delivery systems, maintained by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, irrigation districts, <br />and companies, provide water to agricultural lands allowing for significant crop production. <br />Additionally, private lands are influenced by significant winds, especially in the Kittitas Valley. <br />Kittitas County includes portions of three watersheds, which are known as Water Resource Inventory <br />Areas (WRIAs). Most of Kittitas County is within the Upper Yakima (WRIA 39), which drains into the <br />Yakima River, and a small portion of the eastern county is in the Alkali-Squilchuck (WRIA 40), which drains <br />into the Columbia River. Additionally, a small portion of the county is within the Naches (WRIA 38). <br /> Kittitas County Conservation District
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