Corps awards Clover Island contract: construction to begin this fall on ecosystem restoration project

By Noe GonzalezJuly 28, 2021

Kennewick, Wash. –The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Walla Walla District (Corps) on Monday, awarded a $4 million construction contract to TDX Power Services, LLC to restore Clover Island’s aquatic and riparian habitat to benefit endangered salmonids.

The Corps and its partner, the Port of Kennewick, have been engaged since 2015 in developing aquatic and riparian habitat along the north shore of Clover Island, a 16-acre man-made island located on the Columbia River in Kennewick, Washington.
 Photo courtesy of Kim Fetrow from Port of Kennewick.
Kennewick, Wash. –The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Walla Walla District (Corps) on Monday, awarded a $4 million construction contract to TDX Power Services, LLC to restore Clover Island’s aquatic and riparian habitat to benefit endangered salmonids.

The Corps and its partner, the Port of Kennewick, have been engaged since 2015 in developing aquatic and riparian habitat along the north shore of Clover Island, a 16-acre man-made island located on the Columbia River in Kennewick, Washington.
Photo courtesy of Kim Fetrow from Port of Kennewick. (Photo Credit: U.S. Army)
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Kennewick, Wash. –The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Walla Walla District (Corps) on Monday, awarded a $4 million construction contract to TDX Power Services, LLC to restore Clover Island’s aquatic and riparian habitat to benefit endangered salmonids.

The Corps and its partner, the Port of Kennewick, have been engaged since 2015 in developing aquatic and riparian habitat along the north shore of Clover Island, a 16-acre man-made island located on the Columbia River in Kennewick, Washington.

This project seeks to improve the habitat important to four Endangered Species Act listed salmonid species (upper Columbia River spring-run chinook salmon, upper Columbia River steelhead, middle Columbia River steelhead, and bull trout), as well as provide benefits to other birds, wildlife, and aquatic species at Clover Island.

As the riparian vegetation grows, it is expected to attract food sources (insects) for juvenile salmon to feed, and to provide shade that cools water temperatures along the north shoreline where juvenile salmon will rest and feed as they migrate to the ocean.

“Scheduled for construction under this contract are the creation of a shallow water bench for the benefit of out-migrating juvenile salmon; development of riparian and emergent wetland habitat also for the benefit of salmon as well as other birds, wildlife, and aquatic species; and the construction of recreation features for public access.” said Rebecca Kalamasz, the project manager for the Corps.

“It is great to work on a project that provides benefits to the environment and also improves the quality of life in the local area, and now that the planning and design phases are completed, and we have the funds available, this ecosystem restoration project will move into the construction phase this fall,” she said.

The project is cost-shared between the Corps and the Port of Kennewick, with funding also contributed by the City of Kennewick, Benton County, and a grant from the state of Washington.