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HENRY
CREEK CULVERT MAY TURN INTO A COVERED BRIDGE: The culvert on Henry Creek,
located in the Village of Rhododendron, is officially an orphan. Installed
on East Henry Creek Avenue after a wooden bridge was removed, it has been
a major source of headaches to biologists and fish conservationists, not
to mention to the Salmon and Steelhead whose migration passage it blocked
and interfered with for some forty years. However, none of the agencies
who supposedly installed it are claiming responsibility. Neither the
Clackamas County Road Department, which plows Henry Creek Avenue during
the Winter snows, nor the U.S. Forest Service, who administers adjacent
land for the public, claim to have any knowledge for installing it or
maintaining it. Due to the listing of several Salmon and Steelhead
species, as governmental entities they are required to maintain passage
for fish. However, nearly a decade ago the Cascade
Geographic Society did respond to the fish passage problems associated
with the culvert, and installed and maintained a project to facilitate
fish passage. In addition, the organization has conducted enhancement for
downstream migration at this same location.
Recently the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife identified culverts in
the Sandy River Basin that were considered problems for anadromous fish.
And, although the Henry Creek Culvert Fish Passage Project is currently
functioning, the agency has given it a "priority" status. Future
major flooding could cause problems and require additional repairs.
With no governmental entity claiming any ownership or maintenance
responsibility for the Henry Creek culvert, there is a strong likelihood
of funding being available to improve on fish passage at this site. Money
could be used for conducting some additional engineering to help improve
on the Cascade Geographic Society's Henry Creek Culvert Fish Passage
Project, as well as for some in-stream modifications.
However, just before we went to press, the future of the Henry Creek
culvert took an interesting twist. After careful study of Henry Creek, it
was determined that the best things for fish and wildlife was to pull out
the culvert and replace it with a bridge. Anything that we were to do to
enhance the culvert would accommodate adult anadromous fish only, but not
juveniles, which means that the stream would still be blocked to young
endangered Steelhead and Salmon. In addition, the culvert would also
continue blocking the migration of wildlife in and out of Rhododendron
Meadow and to other habitat, which would not be the case with a bridge.
So the plan now is to have Clackamas County construct a bridge over Henry
Creek, but not your run-of-the-mill bridge; a covered one! Cascade
Geographic Society would work as a partner and, if need be, secure any
extra funds through a federal Community Development grant. The return of a
covered bridge would be historically correct for the Mount Hood Area,
which lost all of its covered bridges many decades ago. TOP
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