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A 5-Part Series part 5 part 4 part 3 part 2 part 1
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
OUR TROUBLED SOUND
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Pollution in Seattle
ZoomPaul Joseph Brown / P-I
Vast amounts of pollution generated by the region's 4 million people -- heavy metals, petroleum byproducts from motor vehicles, pesticides, septic tank waste, pet feces and more -- wash into waterways in stormwater runoff.

Puget Sound.

It's a blue and shimmering treasure. A postcard-perfect reason for living here. It's a treasure we have plundered.

Billions of gallons of raw sewage and some of the most toxic material imaginable have been dumped into the waters of Puget Sound, ravaging what was once one of the world's richer ecosystems. We have overfished, destroyed shoreline habitat and poisoned beloved killer whales.

And the destruction continues.

What can we do?

This special report from the Seattle Post-Intelligencer addresses five different aspects of the problem, from the marked decline of local marine life to current efforts to restore the Sound to health.

(Originally published over five days in November 2002)

- Meet the people behind the project

 
- Polluted waters

- A cesspool of pollution
- Expert embarks on mission
- To-do list long -- and old
- Navy botched cleanup
- Sediment reveals history
- Permitted to pollute (PDF)
- Top 10 violators (PDF)

 
- Extinction or bust

- Ecosystem imperils life
- A way of life disappears
- Exotics imperil native species
- 'It's time to protect resource'
- PCBs in Sound fish (PDF)

 
- Ruinous runoff

- Pollutants in stormwater
- Sewage overflows a problem
- An odd fish story
- Broadview's 'super' solution
- Septic tanks' unseen threat
- Dairies threaten shellfish beds
- Even air is contaminated
- Bellevue's pioneering guardian

 
- Maritime mess

- Threat of big oil spill looms
- Improving prevention, response
- Spills and near-misses
- Regulation Alaska-style
- Too cozy with Coast Guard?
- The legacy of Maggie vs. Dixy
- Risks from a Sound spill (PDF)

 
- Turning things around

- Many working to restore Sound
- Lessons from Chesapeake Bay
- SF Bay wetlands recovered
- Reserves key to fish recovery
- Saving creek was his Rx
- Who's saving the Sound
- Preventing stormwater pollution
- Effects of 'bulkheading' (PDF)

 
- Further developments
- Our coverage continues ...
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