Project Detail |
As part of the states fish recovery efforts, WSDOT has made it a priority to reconnect waterways where roads act as barriers. In Western Washington, that means replacing culverts and building hundreds of fish-passable structures under state highways by 2030 to create more habitat which is essential for meeting fish recovery goals.
Starting in mid-2023, WSDOT will build larger fish passages to restore natural stream conditions in Skunk Creek and an unnamed tributary to Skunk Creek where they cross under SR 202 and Southeast Fish Hatchery Road near Fall City. WSDOT will also build two more structures to carry an unnamed tributary to the Snoqualmie River and an unnamed tributary to Horseshoe Lake under SR 203 near Carnation. |