On July 29, 2020, Electron Hydro, the company that owns and operates the dam, experienced an industrial accident in which crumb rubber debris was released into the Puyallup River. Astro-turf used as part of a cofferdam broke loose from the HDPE liner and was spilled into the river. The company took immediate action to rectify the spill. In early May 2023, a Pierce County Superior Court Judge had approved a $1 million settlement in a criminal lawsuit brought by the state Attorney General’s Office over a 2020 spill of rubber into the Puyallup River during a construction project at the old wooden dam. The financial penalties for Electron Hydro were approved over the discharge of rubber that was torn loose from
artificial turf the company used during a construction project. Chunks of the turf padding, made of ground-up tire rubber that is toxic to fish when ingested, were found as far as downriver after it was used without a permit to line a water-diversion channel. Electron Hydro Chief Operating Officer Thom Fischer pleaded guilty to a gross criminal misdemeanor and received a suspended jail sentence. The $1 million settlement included $745,000 in restitution to the Puyallup Tribal Fisheries and $255,000 in fines paid to Pierce County. In addition to the settlement with the Attorney General’s Office, Electron Hydro in 2021 was fined $501,000 by the state Department of Ecology for polluting the river. The company also installed a rock wall in 2020 which was supposed to be removed in 2021. Electron Hydro was ordered by the court in February 2024 to remove the center portion of the rock dam during the summer. The court ruled that the barrier harmed steelhead trout, Chinook salmon, and bull trout, which are protected under the
Endangered Species Act. ==References==