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NBIS has partnered with Salmon-Safe to engage Puget Sound area urban landowners in preserving the health of our waterways through innovations in stormwater and landscape management practices. Through NBIS’ Salmon-Safe Urban Initiative, companies and institutions are finding new strategies for addressing urgent regional goals -- conserving water, protecting salmon and stream habitat, and reducing pollutants entering the watersheds of Puget Sound.
NBIS invites companies to join this growing network of land owners receiving Salmon-Safe certification and extending their impact along critical watersheds.
Campuses & Businesses Certified to date through NBIS’ Urban Initiative
Program expansion goals include landowners in key watershed areas that drain to Puget Sound through the Lake Washington watershed and the Duwamish River.
Join us in making Puget Sound waterways safe for salmon returning to their traditional spawning grounds.
Every river is a highway, and, unfortunately, every highway is a river.
FACT: The Puget Sound Partnership has targeted stormwater as the killer that we must curb if we are to save our treasured Puget Sound Salmon runs.
FACT: Despite intensive restoration activities for more than a decade in urban and suburban streams in and around Seattle, salmon entering these waters are dead within hours because of the toxic soup that bombards them.
FACT: A three-year study led by the Northwest Fisheries Science Center and Seattle Public Utilities documented that 75% to 89% of female coho salmon returning to Longfellow Creek in West Seattle died before spawning.

1. Application and Certification Agreement
Applicant provides brief information about their operation and related project contact information and commits to the program inspection process and fees, regardless of certification decision outcome.
2. Assessment by Certification Team
System-wide Assessment–Applicant presents to the team an overview of management practices, as detailed in the Certification Standards.
Site Visits–Certification team conducts official visits to verify implementation of practices at sites.
3. Certification
Salmon-Safe presents a report on the assessment and lists any preconditions, conditions and recommendations regarding certification. If the organization accepts the terms of certification an endorsement contract is completed including terms of use of the Salmon-Safe logo.
Annual verification – An overview of system-wide performance focusing on any significant changes to management practices, as well as verification of satisfactory progress towards meeting any outstanding conditions for certification.
Recertification – Recertification – Recertification, including system-wide reassessment and site verification visits, occurs every five years based upon a new certification agreement and payment of program fees.
Download the Salmon-Safe Urban Standards
Support for the NBIS/Salmon-Safe Urban Initiative is provided by:

Photos are from the Washington Fish and Wildlife Department’s website
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