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Quinault Division of Natural Resources (QDNR)
The Quinault Division of Natural Resources is responsible for the care, protection and sustainability of the 208,000-acre Quinault Indian Nation located on the southwestern corner of Washington's Olympic Peninsula, cradled between the snow-capped Olympic Mountains and the mighty northern Pacific Ocean.
The Quinault Division of Natural Resources manages and watches over the natural resources on the Quinault Indian Nation lands and within the tribe's Usual and Accustomed Area. Timber harvesting and fishing are managed for sustainable production and balanced with the needs of fish, wildlife and other living beings to leave a long-term legacy for future generations. Cultural resources such as "the canoe stand", an area of exceptionally large cedar trees that is maintained for future canoe-builders, are respected.
The Quinault Division of Natural Resources manages natural resources on the lands of the Quinault Indian Nation's Usual and Accustomed area including the ocean. The natural environment and its resources are deeply intertwined with the culture and economy of the Quinault. The traditional tribal worldview is that the people are a part of nature, not apart from nature. "Place-based" people have developed an intimate relationship with their specific natural environment through history. Their physical, mental, social and spiritual health is directly and uniquely related to the health of the ecosystems of the lands and waters they inhabit.
With a team of almost 90 professional scientists, field technicians, program managers, administrators and support personnel, QDNR oversees timber stewardship and harvest, freshwater and ocean fisheries, wildlife, cultural resource protection, sand and gravel production, and air and water quality. The Division also maintains tribal enrollment and provides review to other agencies related to cultural resources. The Geographic Information System (GIS) is housed within QDNR and provides data management, mapping and remote-sensing services to the Division and other Quinault programs.
For more information:
A Primer on Timber Sale Process and Forest Growth Management (PDF)
This is my land
From the time of the first moon
Till the time of the last sun
It was given to my people.
Wha-neh Wha-heh, the great giver of life
Made me out of the earth of this land
He said, “You are the land, and the land is you.”
I take good care of this land,
For I am part of it
God gave it to me
This is my land
- Clarence Pickernell, Quinault
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Building a healthy, thriving and sustainable community
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Quinault No Crude Oil Protest
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Trucks hauling logs in 1939
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Boots on the ground
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Maintaining and preventing future infestation problems
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Restoring the Quinault River system to support healthy runs of prized blueback salmon
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Building and maintaining sustainable roads
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Maintaining enforcement patrols to protect the environment
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Creating sustainable forests for the future
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Fish hatcheries play a vital role for sustainable fish populations
- 1 A group of people carrying a canoe
- 2 People in capes protesting on the beach
- 3 Trucks hauling logs in 1939
- 4 View of boots on rocky ground
- 5 A green crab in the sand
- 6 River running between rocky slopes and outcrops
- 7 A grave road going across a bridge
- 8 A person on a beach walking towards a wagon and shovels
- 9 Forests and green space
- 10 Aerial view of the fish hatchery
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Dave Bingaman
QDNR Director
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Eric North
Forest Manager
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Joe Schumacker
Marine Resources Scientist, Interim Science Section Manager
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Cleve Jackson
Fisheries Policy Spokesperson
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Lauren Macfarland
Environmental Protection Manager
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Tyler Jurasin
Operations Section Manager