*Topic Covered2: community involvement
What defines our current practice of river restoration in the Pacific Northwest?
Year: 2022 Presenter/s: Gardner Johnston Symposium Session: 2022 – 02 Big Challenges Need Adaptive Management Topics covered: community involvement, fish-salmon, floodplain, lessons learned, riparian, and stream ABSTRACTThe first National Stream
Lost in Translation: Insights from WSDOT in Communication in Fish Passage Projects
Year: 2022 Presenter/s: Piper Petit Symposium Session: 2022 – 04 Stream Restoration from the (WSDOT) Transportation Perspective Topics covered: community involvement, fish passage, instream structure (culvert/bridge/dam), and lessons learned ABSTRACTFish
Invited Speaker: Bryan Mercier (Grand Ronde), NW Regional Director Bureau of Indian Affairs
Year: 2022 Presenter/s: Bryan Mercier Symposium Session: 2022 – 00- Invited Speaker Topics covered: climate change, community involvement, and environmental justice ABSTRACTTribal Leadership in Fish and Wildlife Management Indigenous Tribes
Tribal Stewardship and Ridge-to-River Restoration of the Lower Klamath and Blue Creek Sanctuary
Year: 2022 Presenter/s: Sarah Beesley Symposium Session: 2022 – 08 Beyond Dam Removal: Ecological Restoration of the Klamath Basin Topics covered: climate change, community involvement, environmental justice, fish-salmon, fish-steelhead, floodplain,
Restoring Fire Processes in the Klamath Mountains to Protect and Restore Critical Salmon Habitat
Year: 2022 Presenter/s: Will Harling Symposium Session: 2022 – 08 Beyond Dam Removal: Ecological Restoration of the Klamath Basin Topics covered: climate change, community involvement, fish-cutthroat, fish-salmon, risk and resilience,
Post Dam Removal Restoration of the Klamath Reservoirs: Channel, Riparian & Upland Ecology Planning
Year: 2022 Presenter/s: Joshua Chenoweth Symposium Session: 2022 – 08 Beyond Dam Removal: Ecological Restoration of the Klamath Basin Topics covered: adaptive management and monitoring, community involvement, instream structure (culvert/bridge/dam),
Pre-Dam Removal Topographic Base-Line Data Collection on the Klamath River – Collaboration in Action
Year: 2020 Presenter/s: David (DJ) Bandrowski Symposium Session: 2020 – 11 Dam removal in the Pacific Northwest Topics covered: beavers, community involvement, fish passage, floodplain, hydraulics, instream structure (culvert/bridge/dam), riparian,
From Source Assessment to Implementation Success – Water Cleanup Planning and the East Fork Lewis Ri
Year: 2020 Presenter/s: Jennifer Riedmayer Symposium Session: 2020 – 09 A watershed in transition: Salmon recovery in the East Fork Lewis River Topics covered: adaptive management and monitoring, beavers, community
Adaptively Managing the WA Lower Columbia River Recovery Plan: Linking Salmon and Landscape-Scale Th
Year: 2020 Presenter/s: Amelia Johnson Symposium Session: 2020 – 09 A watershed in transition: Salmon recovery in the East Fork Lewis River Topics covered: adaptive management and monitoring, beavers, community
Modernizing the Columbia River Treaty – Opportunities and Challenges
Year: 2020 Presenter/s: Kathy Eichenberger Symposium Session: 2020 – 00 Invited Speaker Topics covered: beavers, canada, climate change, community involvement, and permits ABSTRACTThe Columbia River Treaty was ratified in 1964

